View Full Version : 3 SHARK attacks in 2 days!!
long stroke
12th January 2009, 04:51 PM
Farout:o and i was swimming and surfing both those days:eek:
one great white attack in tasie, a bull shark attack somewhere else i'm not shore where;)
And today another bull shark attack in lake Illawarra.
TIM.
cewilson
12th January 2009, 05:11 PM
That's rare for Tassie. I did all of my suba training down there without a problem. Poor bugger - unlucky I reckon.
BMKal
12th January 2009, 05:45 PM
Must be global warming !!!!!!!!!!!! :angel::angel::angel:
Panda
12th January 2009, 05:46 PM
Jaws revenge! :eek:
tony
12th January 2009, 05:47 PM
the sharks have had enough and are geting a bit of pay back...:eek:
T
Chucaro
12th January 2009, 05:48 PM
Must be global warming !!!!!!!!!!!! :angel::angel::angel:
......or lack of their natural food because over fishing :angel:
BMKal
12th January 2009, 05:49 PM
There was an article in Saturday's West Australian" about some mob over in Sydney or somewhere who wanted all fish to be re-named "kittens of the sea" so that people would stop catching and eating them.
Methinks the lunatics are running the asylum.
Just came to mind when I saw your avatar Panda.
bblaze
12th January 2009, 06:13 PM
That's rare for Tassie. I did all of my suba training down there without a problem. Poor bugger - unlucky I reckon.
attacks in tassie maybe fairly rare (also think of population in relation to attacks) but there are a lot of pointers out there (and in close). I remember burleying for mako's a few years ago when game fishing and we always raised more whites than mako's. Biggest was over 6 meters, in over 1000m of water in a 6m boat. Had one that was called "montagu tom", took the rear quarter out of a rare horse being swum in 6 foot of water by a guy in a 10 foot tinnie powered by super human oarpower. This one was over 6 meters.
cheers
blaze
350RRC
12th January 2009, 06:14 PM
......or lack of their natural food because over fishing :angel:
Hi,
If you are talking commercial, this is unlikely. There are about 600 different commercial fisheries in Aus and less than about 10 of these would have sustainability issues IMHO.
Improved environmental awareness and best practice in the commercial sector has resulted in a larger shark population that will continue to increase.
The human population is also increasing (1400 a week in Brackistan) and most are living close-ish to the coast.
This combo is guaranteed to lead to more frequent 'interactions'.
cheers, DL
DiscoTDI
12th January 2009, 10:09 PM
Its simple really, stay out of the water and you wont get eaten, we learnt that in NQ many moons ago. :p:D
Powered by vBulletin® Version 4.2.4 Copyright © 2026 vBulletin Solutions, Inc. All rights reserved.