Watch: Tiger shark attacks kayak, angler thinks he knows why

Scott Haraguchi documented the assault on his vessel and offers a theory as to why the shark became aggressive.

An angler who survived a harrowing tiger shark attack on his kayak last May has shared footage of the encounter along with a possible explanation for the attack.

Scott Haraguchi had reeled in a grouper while fishing with a buddy off Kualoa, Oahu. He did not bleed the grouper and does not believe scent was a factor in the shark ramming his kayak.

Minutes later, as shown in the footage, the tiger shark surfaces off Haraguchi’s bow and slams into his kayak.

“There was a lot of speculation as to why a tiger shark would run full speed into a kayak,” Haraguchi stated via Instagram. “Hopefully this answers all those questions.”

Haraguchi captured the scene with a mounted GoPro that was documenting his fishing exploits. He told FTW Outdoors days afterward that the shark might have mistaken his kayak for a seal.

But in the footage he offers a different theory.

“The shark approaches the front of there kayak as if to ram it or scare it, instead of eat it,” Haraguchi begins. “And as it slides up the side of the kayak he realizes that it’s not tasting a seal or a whale, or something alive.”

Slow-motion footage, however, shows the large shark chomping on the kayak with much of its body out of the water.

Haraguchi and his companion remained in the area “with our limbs out of the water” for several minutes and eventually spotted a wounded seal, which Haraguchi points to in the footage.

He concluded: “I believe that the shark rammed me thinking that I was competition for its seal kill. What do you guys think?”

It’s impossible to know but tiger sharks, which can measure 20 feet, commonly prey on seals, turtles, fish, mollusks, and other critters.

They’re also implicated in the vast majority of shark attacks on humans in Hawaiian waters.

Hawaii freediver happily endures whale shark ‘attack’; video

Kara Pedersen was spearfishing off Oahu’s Waianae coast last weekend when her dive partner yelled, “Shark!” It turned out to be a giant whale shark that “plowed right into me.”

Kara Pedersen was spearfishing off Oahu’s Waianae coast last week when her dive partner yelled, “Shark!”

Pedersen looked up, expecting to see a dangerous tiger shark. But it was a much larger whale shark that apparently did not see her.

“When I looked up there was a massive whale shark right behind him and headed straight towards me,” Pedersen, a veteran freediver, told For The Win Outdoors. “I didn’t have enough time to swim out of the way and it just plowed right into me, pushing me onto its back.

“It was simultaneously one of the coolest and scariest moments of my life. To feel the force of an animal so big was pretty surreal.” (See Pedersen’s video below and on Instagram.)

Whale shark sightings off Waianae are rare so it was a wonderful surprise for Pedersen and Steve Murphy to be able to swim alongside the plankton-eating gentle giant for several minutes.

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The footage, jokingly titled, “Shark Attack,” shows a portion of the encounter that occurred after Pedersen and Murphy had been tossed a GoPro from the dive boat.

Interestingly, the whale shark seemed to interact with both freedivers (no scuba gear), especially Pedersen, as Galapagos sharks lingered a bit farther away.

Whale shark swims toward the camera. Photo: Kara Pedersen

Pedersen’s boyfriend, Rob Ryan, was on the boat cleaning a fish that he had speared before the whale shark appeared, perhaps explaining the shark activity.

Of the initial collision, Pedersen said, “Luckily, they are harmless animals and I was able to push off and get out of the way of its tail.

“Surprisingly though, she kept swimming back towards me and made several close passes. I think she really liked my Waihana wetsuit and how I blended into the environment.”

Whale sharks are the planet’s largest fish and can measure nearly 40 feet and weigh 20,000 pounds. They feed by swimming through plankton blooms with their mouths open.

Pedersen said swimming with a whale shark had always been on her bucket list and added: “But this encounter exceeded our expectations.”

Oahu beach closed as tiger sharks feast on whale carcass

Tiger sharks have been feasting on a humpback whale carcass beyond a popular Oahu beach and lifeguards have warned people to stay out of the water.

Tiger sharks have been feasting on a humpback whale carcass beyond a popular Oahu beach and lifeguards have warned people to stay out of the water.

The carcass was discovered Tuesday about 300 yards from shore at Waimanalo Bay Beach Park. Honolulu Ocean Safety Division lifeguards counted at least three tiger sharks estimated to measure 12-13 feet.

The accompanying footage, captured by the Hawaii Department of Land and Natural Resources and edited by Maui Now, shows the sharks circling and feeding on the carcass.

“Throughout the day the carcass seems to be drifting closer to the beach, at one point an estimated 100 to 150 yards from shore,” the DNLR stated in a news release issued late Tuesday. “In addition to warning signs lifeguards and officers from the DLNR Division of Conservation and Resources Enforcement (DOCARE) are stationed on the beach or patrolling it to ensure people do not enter the water.”

ALSO ON FTW OUTDOORS: Watch as blue whale ‘explodes out of the sea like a submarine’

The carcass is in decay and portions that washed up on the beach were scavenged by dogs, so lifeguards were cautioning people to keep their pets “on leashes and away from the material so they don’t get sick.”

Beachgoers also were asked not to collect whale flesh or any parts that might wash ashore.

As of late Tuesday, the DNLR had not determined whether to let the carcass wash ashore or tow it to sea. It was unclear when the shark warnings would be lifted.

Click here to watch the DNLR’s full-length video.

Jet-skiers go airborne in mad dash to avoid big wave; one injured

Nearly two dozen jet-skiers, caught in no-man’s land, were sent scrambling to avoid getting pummeled by a big wave. Video shows the madness.

Nearly two dozen jet-skiers, caught in no-man’s land while photographing or acting as safety teams for big-wave surfers, were sent scrambling to avoid getting pummeled by a big wave with several of them eventually soaring over the big breaker.

Surfline called it “Jet-Ski Mayhem on Super Swell Saturday.”

The incident occurred during an XXL surfing session at Oahu’s outer reefs where Hawaii was seeing its biggest swell of the year.

The group of jet-skiers glided over one wave only to be confronted with a larger one that was fast approaching. Some turned toward shore, but most opened the throttle and headed into the wave, hoping to clear it before it broke on them.

Highseas_Media captured the “mayhem” via drone:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=93DeYIjUXu8&feature=emb_logo

Photographer Ryan Moss, who was injured, was a passenger on a black jet-ski manned by South Carolina pro Cam Richards when the craziness unfolded. Moss told Surfline what happened:

“The whole morning was absolutely beautiful and insane. I had never seen waves like that on Oahu…That set came and really caught everyone off guard. I hurried to put my camera away in my dry bag and then I told Cam to just ‘go.’

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“I just remember feeling weightless and it taking a really long time to come down. I didn’t realize how fast Cam sent us over the lip of that thing. There was no handle on the ski, so I couldn’t stand up and hold on and hope my legs would have absorbed some of the impact. So, I was just sitting on the back with a death grip on the leather seat. Next thing I know I hear a loud thud. It felt like the ski buckled in half. Along with that, my back sent a shooting pain and tingling feeling from my waist down to my feet. I remember saying, ‘[expletive, expletive, expletive] I’m paralyzed.’ I legitimately thought I was.”

With the jet-ski stalled out and not restarting, he rolled off the jet-ski with his dry bag, in which his camera was stored, and “luckily” made it over the next wave, though his dry bag didn’t. He was then picked up by another jet-skier and was eventually transported to a Honolulu hospital after North Shore lifeguards attended to him.

“They were able to establish that I did have feeling and range of motion in my feet and legs,” Moss told Surfline. “That was the biggest relief.”

He told Surfline that the diagnosis is a 50 percent compression fracture of the L4, along with some minor fractures in his spine and ribs that are not serious.

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