Watch: Beachgoers in awe as great white shark ambushes seal

Beachgoers in Provincetown, Mass., watched in awe Wednesday as a great white shark ambushed a seal just beyond the shore.

Beachgoers in Provincetown, Mass., watched in awe Wednesday as a great white shark ambushed a seal just beyond the shore.

The Atlantic White Shark Conservancy shared the footage to Facebook, crediting Matt and Shannon Scully, explaining that the “predation” occurred at 1 p.m. off Race Point Beach.

The shark appears to have been spotted before it launched its surface attack, creating a giant foamy splash. In the footage a woman asks, “Did you guys see it?” just before the eruption, which inspires more commentary.

White sharks prey on gray seals during the summer and early fall off Cape Cod, and one person observed in the comments section that nobody was swimming at the time of Wednesday’s attack:

“People are getting smarter, as you notice, nobody in their right mind would swim in the waters on the outer Cape!”

Reads another comment: “That water drops off deep. You are neck deep in five steps. It’s ‘Jaws’ paradise.”

Scientists make the most of the white shark feeding season by tagging sharks, usually from July into early November, to learn more about their habits and movements.

–Image and video courtesy of Matt and Shannon Scully

Could Cape Cod Country Club become a solar farm? That’s what the owner is asking.

The course, which first opened in 1928 as the Coonamessett, was designed by Devereux Emmet and Alfred H. Tull.

FALMOUTH, Massachusetts — A proposal is before the Planning Board to convert an almost 100-year old golf course in Hatchville into a solar farm.

In a letter read into the record at the Planning Board’s Feb. 23 meeting, David Friel, owner of Cape Cod Country Club on Theatre Drive, cited less business over the last decade has led him to pursue alternate uses for the property.

“The expansion of golf courses on the Cape over the past decade or two and the reduction in the number of golfers nationwide has forced me, from a financial viability standpoint, to consider other land use options for the Cape Cod Country Club,” he said.

Since the beginning of 2019, Cape Cod Country Club has been exploring the different uses for the property, and Amp Energy, a renewable energy company, expressed interest in leasing the property for a large-scale solar farm.

If the permitting process goes as planned, Amp Energy would put out between 27 to 30 megawatts of energy while using about 80 of the course’s 150 acres for the farm. It would also donate a portion of the land to the town for conservation purposes.

Once complete, the solar farm could account for one-sixth to one-seventh of the entire town’s electrical needs, Bob Ament, the attorney representing Amp Energy, told the board.

But that is only if the town’s current regulations change.

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Amp Energy currently cannot develop an array large enough to make the project financially viable. Proposed articles going before the town meeting this spring will amend the town’s official zoning map to include the parcel of land in the large-scale ground-mounted solar overlay district.

The amendments would allow Amp Energy to use a greater percentage of the land and allow for more trees to be cleared, although the representatives of the project noted they plan to replant trees on a different part of the property.

The current bylaw prohibits the use of 26 acres of the property, which abuts conservation land.  Evan Turner, a representative for Amp Energy, told the Planning Board that the solar farm would also double as a pollinator meadow.

The amendments, if passed, would give Amp Energy greater flexibility on where to install the panels and would create more of a buffer between the solar farm and the road. Turner said berms would be created and trees would block the view of the farm, which would be in the interior part of the property on the golf course’s fairways.

The project would be similar to one Amp Energy did last year on Cotuit Road in Sandwich, where they conserved the property as part of the solar permit, Turner said.

A couple of groups, including the 300 Committee Land Trust and the Cape Cod Climate Change Collaborative, spoke during the Feb. 23 meeting in opposition to an article that would allow up to 20% of the property to be deforested for a solar array.

The Planning Board continued its hearing on the articles to Tuesday.

Friel said in his letter that if those articles do not pass and Amp Energy cannot make the project financially viable, the club will pursue a housing development on the property. The course would be the second on the Cape to propose a conversion to housing. In Hyannis, a proposal is before the Cape Cod Commission to site a 312-unit apartment complex at Twin Brooks Golf Course.

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“There is no likely or even barely likely circumstance that the property remains a golf course or remains an open space,” Turner said.

But some are fighting to save the course.

Kevin Van Cleef, a Somerville resident and avid golfer who grew up in Sandwich, called the golf course his favorite place. He said it should be preserved, especially due to its history.

The course, which first opened in 1928 as the Coonamessett, was designed by Devereux Emmet and Alfred H. Tull. Emmet was a renowned architect and there are just 31 of his golf courses still operating, Van Cleef said. Most of those golf courses are private, while Cape Cod Country Club is public.

“Emmet is one of the most popular designers in golf,” Van Cleef said. “Getting rid of this would be like getting rid of a Van Gogh painting.”

“Cape Cod is a major vacation destination for the East Coast,” he added. “There’s a lot of people here to play golf. To take another place away where the public can play will be really tough.”

Van Cleef also questioned Friel’s claim that there’s been a decline in business. Every time he goes, it is “slammed,” he said.

Golf also has served as a safe recreational activity during the global pandemic, he said. According to the National Golf Foundation, the number of active golfers in the United States grew by half a million to 24.8 million in 2020, making for the most significant year-over-year net increase since 2003.

“I think there’s so much untapped potential and it would be such a shame to lose this place,” Van Cleef said.

Contact Jessica Hill at jhill@capecodonline.com. Follow her on Twitter: @jess_hillyeah.

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Great white shark ‘fly-by’ results in rare double hookup

A prominent South Carolina sportfishing captain tagged his first great white shark of 2021 Thursday after he and a client hooked the same shark almost simultaneously.

A prominent South Carolina sportfishing captain tagged his first great white shark of 2021 Thursday after he and a client hooked the same shark almost simultaneously.

“While we weren’t watching we had this girl come up and crush both baits on a fly-by and we landed her on two rods,” Chip Michalove, of Outcast Sportfishing, wrote on Instagram. “Exhausting day, as it was just myself and Pavel Vykopel, and he’s got a blown-out rotator cuff.”

Michalove, with Vykopel’s help, placed two scientific tags on the 12-foot shark before setting the apex predator free.

The white sharks that Michalove targets each winter migrate into South Carolina waters after the summer and fall feeding season off Cape Cod, Mass. However, they’ve been difficult to locate this year.

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“We’re already halfway through the season and it’s different,” Michalove told For The Win Outdoors. “The water in Cape Cod was unusually warm in the fall so it delayed the migration. Then, finally when they arrived it was 20- to 30-mph winds every day.”

Michalove and Vykopel made several moves before finding suitable conditions for setting up a chum slick. They were fishing with false albacore when the 12-foot white shark gobbled both baits to propel them into battle mode.

They had the shark alongside the boat in only 20 minutes.

Michalove, who runs out of Hilton Head, said this was the first white shark he has caught at this specific location.

“Now we’ve landed white sharks in 5 different spots off South Carolina, we’re getting better at figuring them out every winter.” he said.

–Images courtesy of Chip Michalove/Outcast Sportfishing

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Watch: Great white shark hunts seal just feet from beachgoers

Graphic video footage captured Thursday off Provincetown, Mass., serves as a vivid reminder that great white sharks will swim into very shallow water in pursuit of prey.

Graphic video footage captured Thursday off Provincetown, Mass., is a vivid reminder that great white sharks will swim into very shallow water in pursuit of prey.

The footage, captured by Corey Nunes and shared to Facebook by the Atlantic White Shark Conservancy, shows a white shark devouring a seal just feet from shore at Race Point Beach. (Viewers are cautioned that blood appears briefly in the footage.)

“This is another good reminder that white sharks hunt in shallow waters off [Cape Cod] and, based on tagging data, we know that October is a peak season month for white shark activity off the Cape,” the Conservancy wrote in its description.

https://www.facebook.com/atlanticwhiteshark/posts/3426123937468897

The first video shows the shark herding the seal almost against the shore as onlookers react with laughter and awe. “I’m outta here! I’m outta here!” one of them says jokingly, apparently because the action is so close.

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The second video is more of the same, with the predation resuming a bit farther from shore.

Great white sharks congregate off Cape Cod seasonally to prey on seals. Tagging-based research by the Massachusetts Division of Marine Fisheries, in partnership with the Atlantic White Shark Conservancy, began in mid-June.

However, peak activity is late summer through early fall. Last year, scientists tagged a record 50 great white sharks, beginning with the tagging of 15 sharks in July and ending with the tagging of seven sharks in November.

–Generic white shark fin image is courtesy of ©Pete Thomas

Huge great white shark swims close by; ‘Don’t go in the water!’

Cape Cod is known for great white shark sightings as a colony of seals in the region makes for an enticing menu for the apex predator. Video shows the latest sighting.

Cape Cod is known for great white shark sightings as a colony of seals in the region makes for an enticing menu for the apex predator.

Some sightings are spectacular. Some are simply amazing because of the proximity of the sighting, such as the one on Labor Day near Race Point Beach in Provincetown.

The huge dorsal fin of a great white shark was spotted as it swam back and forth for about 10 minutes, and as close as 10 feet from shore, according to Tamzen Tortolani McKenzie, who captured video of the sighting. It was shared by MassLive on YouTube.

“The morning started calm, quiet and overcast,” McKenzie wrote on Facebook. “Often the seals hang by the shore, but today was different. The dogs and screaming kids couldn’t spook them off. A good friend Peter said, ‘They are not moving because there’s a shark out there.’”

Sure enough, an hour later a great white shark made its presence known to beach-goers, its dorsal fin rising above the water line.

In the video you can hear a girl’s voice shout, “Don’t go in the water!”

“Pretty amazing!” McKenzie wrote. “And no injuries! It was quite a sight to see!”

She thought the shark was up to 14-feet long and upwards of 4-feet wide. Whatever the measurements, it’s safe to say that the dorsal fin indicated it was huge, and there was good reason the seals were hiding out near shore.

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Apparently, great white shark sightings have been constant in the region.

MassLive reported that “the shark season on Cape Cod this summer has been a busy one, with great white sharks seen regularly off shore near Orleans, Plymouth, Provincetown, Truro, Wellfleet and elsewhere.”

Stay out of the water, indeed.

Photos of seals along shoreline and the great white shark swimming close by courtesy of Tamzen Tortolani McKenzie.

Great white sharks arrive, research begins off Cape Cod

The tagging of three great white sharks Wednesday off Cape Cod marked an early start to the 2020 research season.

The tagging of three great white sharks Wednesday off Cape Cod marked an early start to the 2020 research season.

The sharks were feeding on a whale carcass off Monomoy Island when they were tagged by Dr. Greg Skomal of the Massachusetts Division of Marine Fisheries, in partnership with the Atlantic White Shark Conservancy.

Great white sharks begin to arrive off Cape Cod in June, to prey on gray seals, but peak shark activity is late summer though early fall.

Last year, scientists tagged a record 50 white sharks, beginning with the tagging of 15 sharks in July and ending with the tagging of seven sharks in November.

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The seasonal influx of white sharks coincides with the start of the Cape Cod tourism season, creating a dangerous situation. (Last summer, shark sightings prompted several temporary beach closures.)

The current research project, which began last year, focuses on white shark movements and behaviors off Cape Cod. Mass Live reports that scientists are hoping that data can be used to minimize potential shark-human encounters.

According to NBC Boston, another white shark was spotted from the air on Wednesday afternoon. The shark was estimated to measure about 15 feet.

–Images showing white sharks off Cape Cod on Wednesday are courtesy of the Atlantic White Shark Conservancy