![]() |
thats got to hurt!!!!
|
Hey!! There's a couple of gang bangers shooting at each other in the street, lets all run outside and check it out.
boat or no boat, if I saw a GWS attacking a seal I would stay away. |
Just curious when the date was of this occurence. Quite a spectacle.
|
Wonder if they were in PV?
|
Quote:
LOL JK |
I am glad I was not in my yak watching that up close.
|
I wish a GWS would have come put the hurt on the bloody sea dog that kept snaking my greenbacks at La Jolla yesterday!
|
"don't swear, we are going to get this on TV":D kids are throwing down some F-bombs
|
looks just like the experience in malibu
this summer , about the same size shark . 12 -14 ' ?
|
Quote:
last week i think. that dog looks so sad. haha. i like how they pull away just as it gains some hope. never seen the GWS feeding out there but have come across some. i did see a BIG tiger eat a sea turtle and a couple hammers destroy some tarpon. |
That's a big Mako. You don't even have to see the shark, the nature of the attack and the feeding behavior is enough.Whites attack midsection using their mass and huge jaws to give a crushing blow that kills quickly. They also generally hunt close to shore. Makos attack at speed rip the back end off crippling their prey then circle until it bleeds out, I'm local and have fished sharks right there. The area, the type of attack, that shark is obviously a big Mako, no doubt about it.
|
Couple vids of the same feeding behavior from across the channel at Catalina..
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4jdqITF5hBo http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GcK557ZlkfY |
CRIII-KY!!!!!!!
|
Quote:
check out the beginning and 1:40-1:46 . dorsal is almost perfect triangle and has a huge tail. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VaQlbLLNwT8 |
Quote:
I can't see enough of the Dorsal to make a identification. You have to see them on profile and all the dorsal shots have too much of an angle. The tail shots are great though: http://img593.imageshack.us/img593/5311/gesp.jpg Tails are really huge on larger makos. http://www.riverandreef.com/articlel...atsstripey.jpg Note the notch at the upper lobe of the Caudal fin (tail). in this 1300 pound Mako (the current record for So. Cal.) http://images.nationalgeographic.com...32_600x450.jpg Here's some from smaller Makos: http://www.elasmodiver.com/Sharkive%..._Shark_331.jpg http://www.orangebeach.ws/2007/News/...Shark_Tail.jpg White sharks have a much more pronounced upper lobe. http://www.bio.davidson.edu/dorcas/a...te-FIN-026.jpg http://static.ddmcdn.com/gif/great-white-shark-1.jpg http://images.nationalgeographic.com...54_990x742.jpg http://farm2.staticflickr.com/1210/5...9bf64b15_z.jpg There's a clear difference and the PV shark definitely has the tail of a large local Mako. I used to live at King Harbor roughly six to eight miles away and chummed sharks right there hundreds of times. That's actually where I first learned how to fish Makos over twenty years ago, doing night chum trips in a small skiff. They are right on top of the outside high spot in the video, and I've fished there. It's the only place I know where you can actually anchor and chum up Makos on a consistent basis. I've seen more Makos right there then I can count and some very big ones. The large ones come through in early June and back through usually in late September or October. It could be a White but I'd say it's highly unlikely. I've never seen one there, and it's also the wrong time of year. I was pretty sure before but the second video puts it over the top. Known Mako territory, the right time of year for a Mako that size, it's behavior and now the tail are all matches for a large mako. I'd not only say it's a huge mako but judging from the tail it looks like a real monster, possibly even a record breaker. Jim |
All times are GMT -8. The time now is 11:50 PM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.11
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, vBulletin Solutions Inc.
© 2002 Big Water's Edge. All rights reserved.