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The Great White SharkAbout 8km off the coast at Gansbaai are 2 islands - Dyer island, home to a breeding colony of Jackass Penguins, and Geyser Island which is a breeding ground for the Cape Fur Seal.
Go ahead and do it - Take the Great White trip from Cape Town! Dyer Island is a nature reserve and cannot be accessed by the general public, but tourists can go aboard one of the boats of the shark dive operators. They depart from Kleinbaai (just outside Gansbaai) on Danger Point Peninsula. Give someone the gift of a Great White shark cage diving experience. You can watch the sharks from the boat, but the truly adventurous elect to be placed inside a steel cage and get lowered into the water beside the boat. Actually, it's quite safe, but it's one helluva adrenaline rush!
Most of the shark viewing and cage diving operations take place during the winter months (April to October), in and around Shark Alley. During summer (November to March) the location shifts closer to the beach, where it appears that sharks go to mate and give birth. This time is regarded as the low-season, as great white sharks are clearly less interested in feeding and are seldom are as numerous and active as during winter. This is also the ime when the seals breed, so there are plenty of drowned pups around, making it less easy to lure the Great Whites to the boats. Operators provide all the required diving equipment including wetsuits. It's best to bring along warm clothes, bathing costumes, a hat and sunscreen, plus photographic equipment. Pack these in a small, easily manageable bag. If you are prone to seasickness, take a motion-sickness tablet at least an hour before departure. This a strictly regulated industry, with only a few operators having been granted a license to engage in this activity. The trip to the diving grounds at Dyer Island is only six nautical miles from the launch site at Kleinbaai (just outside Gansbaai), and the journey takes 15-20 minutes. Once the site has been reached the vessels are anchored for 4-5 hours. Being a surface feeder, Great White Shark activity takes place on or very close to the surface, so watching them from a boat is the way to go - let alone slipping into a cage for an even better view. Attracting the Great White Chum consists of minced tuna meat, mashed sardines and fish oil which is mixed with sea water in a drum aboard the boat. It's a potent smelling mixture which is then ladled back into the sea to create a chum slick which drifts slowly away from the boat. Then, pieces of fish are attached to a float and a rope and pulled away from the sharks. The South African cage-diving industry is not allowed by law to feed the sharks, and although the intention is to use the bait solely as a lure, it does get taken on occasion. This method of chumming followed by a lure exploits the Great White's extremely acute sense of smell which enables it to detect small concentrations of blood and then home in on the source by turning into the current. The shark will constantly swim and criss cross the odour corridor till it finds the bait. With a little patience, the chances of a Great White approaching the boat are high, providing a unique viewing experience for those aboard. The dive The diving cages are designed to float and are
made of a sturdy galvanized steel mesh protruding above the water's surface
to allow the divers to come up at any time. A lid prevents sharks from
slipping in at the top and the use of surface air supply or SCUBA is optional. When feeding actively around the boat, the sharks may occasionally brush their tail against the cage, but they will not attack the cage. Being curious, they will often come right up to the cage to take look at the diver. Talk about being eyeballed! It's a wonderful experience where can not only watch these maginificent creatures, but observe them in hunting mode.
Is it a good thing? The shark viewing operators feel this viewpoint is unfair, and that the matter warrants a great deal more research in order to determine whether the sharks' behaviour is indeed altered in any way. On the positive side there is no doubt that shark viewing has contributed greatly to the conservation of these creatures. There is far more money to be made from an alive shark than a dead one! |
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Join this tour for the underwater
experience of a lifetime as you scuba dive or snorkel with the
Great White Sharks of South Africa! Take the opportunity during
your stay in Cape Town to travel to the channels around Dyer Island
and get up close and personal with the animal on top of the ocean's
food chain. In South Africa, we are privileged to have access to great white sharks ... if you know where to go, and when. White Shark Projects is without doubt the most successful white shark diving organisation in the world.
White Shark Discovery invites you to Discover, Observe and Dive with Great White Sharks at Dyer Island / Geyser Rock nearby Gansbaai - The World Capital of the Great White Shark.
When a large wave unceremoniously dumped an enormous shark onto the rocks less than three metres away from eleven-year-old author, the young boy, was terrified. Fascinated by this thrashing monster from the deep, the author's obsession with sharks was triggered and so began a lifelong association with these predators. Initially intent killing sharks, the author earned a reputation as a ruthless and successful shark hunter, and slaughtered many Great Whites. But after an encounter with a formidable shark, dubbed 'The Submarine', which refused to die, the author converted from a hunter to a dedicated marine conservationist. No longer believing them to be killing machines, he ceased his attempts to destroy them and began to turn his energies into preserving these magnificent creatures. He is dedicated to educating people about the importance of sharks to our oceans at large. This title is testament to his unwavering commitment to this end. A lady named Nicole ... No one knew where Nicole went to when not at Dyer Island, so she was tagged with a passive archival tag which would record and store information on her position, depth and water temperature. The tag would detach itself at a predetermined date, float to the surface, and send the stored data to a satellite. This happened ninety-nine days later - with astounding results: Nicole had gone from Dyer Island to Australia, a journey of 11 000km! She returned to Dyer Island six months later, having travelled a total of 22 000km.
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