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.

Watch: Shark attacks fishing boat 8 times, leaves ‘astronomical’ damage

Video footage shows a bull shark doing damage to a fishing boat off the Florida coast. “I was shaking like an earthquake,” angler said.

A fisherman said he was “shaking like an earthquake” when a bull shark suddenly attacked his boat while his group attempted to catch cobia off the Florida coast.

Joshua Jorgensen, the originator of YouTube’s BlacktipH Fishing show based in Palm Beach Gardens, captured aerial footage of what amounted to eight attacks.

In the video, he explained the encounter:

“I was flying my drone at the beach and spotted two huge cobia swimming with a bull shark. Cobia is one of the best tasting fish in the ocean. So I called my buddy Carl, and he raced over to try catch them.

“I was following his boat with my drone and then all of a sudden the shark attacked his engines.”

Jorgensen posted the video to Instagram. (Note: On some servers, you might have to click the link to view.)

 

View this post on Instagram

 

A post shared by BlacktipH (@blacktiph)

“The shark attacked the boat five times, swam away and then came back for more,” Jorgensen said in the video. “In total, the shark attacked Carl’s boat eight times.”

Also on FTW Outdoors: Boy fishing from pool noodle lands big bass, but it ends in heartbreak (video)

“We’re thinking, you know, maybe he grabbed the propeller,” Carl said in the video. “We weren’t expecting the damage that we had when we got back to the dock, and it was just astronomical. The whole middle of the engine’s completely ripped out. The trim tab’s broken.

“And I didn’t think a shark could actually shake a boat like that. The boat was shaking like a bag of popcorn. Like literally, I was shaking like an earthquake. I was like, what’s going on? I went back there and I noticed it was a shark doing it. I’m like, are you kidding me? This is like a ride from Universal Studios.”

Some commenters on Instagram suggested that the bull shark was protecting the cobia, inferring that they were his for the eating not the fishermen’s.

Another commenter simply stated, “Bull sharks really have anger management issues.”

18-year-old Louisiana baseball star may have been attacked by shark

Robbins’ teammates and friends have held a vigil for him in Baton Rouge.

Cameron Robbins, a baseball star in Louisiana, had just graduated high school and was preparing to go to LSU in the fall. To celebrate, he went on a sunset cruise in the Bahamas on a tourist ship called the Blackbeard’s Revenge, where another passenger apparently dared him to jump overboard.

According to an account by Inside Edition, Robbins jumped. When the boat crew threw a life preserver down to him, Robbins reportedly swam away from it and disappeared moments later. That’s led to speculation a shark may have attacked the teen.

“A life preserver was tossed in the water after he jumped off the ship, but he swam away from it. And the next moment, he was gone. There is speculation Cameron may have been trying to get away from a shark after video captured a shadowy image in the water. A shark sighting could also explain why the Louisiana teenager simply vanished in the water.”

Robbins’ teammates and friends have held a vigil for him in Baton Rouge.

More baseball stories

Watch: HS team nails runner at second base via misdirection

NY HS team wins championship on dropped third strike

Watch: Huge shark attacks startled angler’s kayak off Oahu

A Hawaii angler on Friday survived a harrowing encounter with a large shark that attacked his kayak as he fished off Oahu. The frightening moment was caught on video.

A Hawaii angler on Friday survived a harrowing encounter with a large shark that attacked his kayak as he fished off Oahu.

Scott Haraguchi captured the dramatic incident with a Go Pro video camera that was still running after he had landed a fish. (The footage is posted below.)

ALSO: Yellowstone bison stampede like a scene from ‘old westerns’

Viewers can see the shark materialize off the bow a moment before it slams and bites the side of the kayak. Haraguchi kicks at the predator and immediately screams “Tiger shark!” as a warning to his nearby fishing companion.

[mm-video type=video id=01h0t7nnqmjced2gxg31 playlist_id=01g3929z3xrgcfk7jg player_id=none image=https://images2.minutemediacdn.com/image/upload/video/thumbnail/mmplus/01h0t7nnqmjced2gxg31/01h0t7nnqmjced2gxg31-5568dee8a45a1135deffb91704477a41.jpg]

The encounter occurred off Kualoa in Windward Oahu, not far from where a large tiger shark was spotted the next day.

Haraguchi, who was not injured, explained via YouTube that he heard a “whooshing” sound just before he saw the shark. “I looked up and saw a wide brown thing on the side of the kayak,” he recalled. “I thought it was a turtle at first.”

Tiger sharks, which can measure nearly 20 feet, commonly prey on green sea turtles.

But according to KITV 4, Haraguchi spotted an injured seal shortly after the shark attacked his kayak. He theorized that the shark mistook the kayak for the seal.

Honolulu surfer in serious condition after shark attack

A 58-year-old surfer was hospitalized in serious condition Sunday after a shark bit his right leg at Kewalo Basin in Honolulu.

A 58-year-old surfer was hospitalized in serious condition Sunday after a large shark bit his right leg at Kewalo Basin in Honolulu.

KHON2 reports that friends of the surfer might have saved his life by using a surfboard leash as a tourniquet. The man, a regular at the surfing spot, was transported to a nearby trauma center after the dawn incident.

The Hawaii Department of Land and Natural Resources stated in a news release that an 8-foot tiger shark was believed responsible for biting the surfer.

The DNLR added: “When others came to the man’s aid they report that a shark returned and was acting aggressively.”

A dive boat with 30 passengers left the area soon after being told about the incident.

Warning signs were posted and the area was ordered closed to swimming and surfing until at least noon Monday.

Bull shark caught, released near site of fatal attack in Australia

An angler in Perth, Australia, caught and released a 10-foot bull shark Wednesday about a mile from the site of a recent fatal shark attack on a jet skier.

An angler in Western Australia has caught and released a 10-foot bull shark near the site of a recent fatal shark attack on a jet skier.

Kai Boyle, 21, posted images to social media showing him posing with the “Swan River Bull Shark” he landed late Wednesday at the East Fremantle boat ramp.

After the catch, Boyle shoved the shark into the river and watched it swim away.  He stated on Facebook that an earlier post had been “taken down for abuse, but why not let people know what’s in the Swan River?”

Last Saturday, Stella Berry, 16, was fatally attacked at Fremantle after jumping into the river from her jet ski. Boyle’s catch occurred about a mile from that location.

According to 9News, Boyle’s catch and a confirmed shark sighting on Thursday prompted a search for the shark. News Perth tweeted that beaches along the Swan River “are in the process of being closed.”

The attack on Berry was the first fatal shark attack in the river in 100 years.

RELATED: Amid cold snap, ‘frozen shark’ discovered on Cape Cod beach

Bull sharks, found in tropical and subtropical waters around the world, can be found in saltwater and freshwater.

According to the International Shark Attack File, bull sharks are responsible for at least 100 unprovoked attacks on humans, including 27 fatal attacks.

The Florida Museum states on its website:

“It is considered by many to be the most dangerous shark in the world. It’s large size, proclivity for freshwater, abundance and proximity to human populations, particularly in the tropics, makes it more of a potential threat than is either the white shark or the tiger shark.”

–Image courtesy of Kai Boyle

[listicle id=2011921]

Search ends for Maui snorkeler who vanished after shark sighting

Authorities in Hawaii have called off the search for a 60-year-old woman a day after she went missing while snorkeling in an area where a large shark had been sighted

Authorities in Hawaii have called off the search for a 60-year-old woman a day after she went missing while snorkeling in an area where a large shark had been sighted.

The unidentified woman was snorkeling with her husband at Keawakapu Point in south Maui and went missing just before noon Thursday.

According to the Hawaii Department of Land and Natural Resources, the husband and other witnesses saw the shark about 50 yards offshore. It was believed to be a tiger shark measuring 10 to 12 feet.

ALSO: Great white sharks now a tourist attraction at popular San Diego beach

“The woman’s husband reported while the couple was snorkeling he saw a shark swim by but could not see his wife,” the DLNR stated in a news release issued Friday. “The shark swam by several times before the man returned to shore and reported his wife missing.”

A vast multi-agency search ensued Thursday and into Friday, but officers failed to find evidence that a large shark was still in the area.

The couple had been visiting from Washington State. The DLNR stated that it does not disclose identities of individuals involved in shark encounters.

The news release concluded: “DLNR, Maui County, and other agencies and individuals involved in the search extend their condolences to the family and friends of the missing woman.”

–Generic image shows a Maui beach

[listicle id=1990072]

Woman bitten by presumed great white shark off Del Mar, Ca

A 50-year-old woman was bitten by a shark while swimming Friday morning at Del Mar, Calif., prompting authorities to close the beach to surfing and swimming.

A 50-year-old woman was bitten by a shark Friday morning while swimming in Del Mar, Calif., prompting authorities to close the area to surfing and swimming.

The unidentified woman was bitten on the upper thigh and treated by lifeguards before being taken to a hospital, where she was listed in stable condition.

According to NBC News, lifeguards used a float tube and swim fins to assist the woman.

RELATED: In San Diego, a dead great white shark and a plea to anglers

The San Diego Union-Tribune reported that lifeguards saw the woman and her companion waving their arms to request assistance.

The incident occurred near 17th Street at about 10 a.m.

It was not immediately clear what type of shark bit the woman, but the several juvenile great white sharks have been feeding in the area, just beyond the surf, for weeks.

Last Sunday, the carcass of an 8-foot white shark was discovered on the beach at Torrey Pines State Natural Reserve and Beach, just south of Del Mar.

The shark is believed to have died of wounds caused by fishing activity.

The beach closure at 17th Street will remain in effect until 9 a.m. Sunday.

–Image shows the coastline of Del Mar as seen from Torrey Pines State Beach. Credit: ©Pete Thomas

Spearfisherman fights off shark attack; ‘thought it was my last day’

A spearfisherman feared for his life when a shark charged and bit him in the leg, forcing him to fight off the attack with his speargun.

A spearfisherman in Australia “thought it was my last day” Sunday when a bull shark charged and bit him in the leg, forcing him to fight off the attack with his speargun.

Phillip Brown, 24, was fishing for barramundi near Rocky Island off Yarrabah when he came face to face with the shark after exploring a cave 10-feet deep, according to TropicNow (a news agency in Cairns) and the Australian Broadcasting Corp.

https://www.facebook.com/TropicNow/posts/3117598161857034

“We sort of both got a fright from each other, but I was still a long way from the rocks, so I tried to swim a bit faster to the rock,” he told TropicNow.

“I knew what was going to happen; he’s a bull shark, he’s going to have a go at me.

“As I just grabbed the rock, it came up from behind and grabbed my leg.

“I just felt a big, numb jerk. It twisted, popped my knee out the socket. If I didn’t have the dislocated knee, I think he probably would have ripped it off.

“I stabbed him on top of the head with the spear gun and he took off, but he kept circling around because I was losing a lot of blood.”

But by then, Brown was in ankle-deep water where two friends and two nephews came to his rescue, using an anchor rope as a tourniquet around his thigh and a shirt tied to his lower leg to stem the flow of blood.

They carried him to the boat and transported him to a hospital in his hometown of Yarrabah where he was initially treated before being airlifted to Cairns Hospital where he underwent surgery. The extent of his injuries was unclear.

Also on FTW Outdoors: Backpacker has standoff with cougar, birds come to her rescue (video)

“I thought it was my last day,” he told TropicNow. “I thought I was going to lose my leg or lose my life.”

The traumatic experience has not deterred him from going spearfishing again.

“I go a lot of places diving — Batt Reef, Tongue Reef, all the outer reefs,” he told ABC.

“And then I get torn up at home, right in my own front yard — it was just the wrong place at the wrong time I guess.

“I’ll be going back diving, but I won’t be diving back at home. I’ll just go back out to the reefs, in the clear water.”

Photo of sharks courtesy of Wikipedia Commons.

Great white shark tracked to ‘infamous’ California surfing beach

A great white shark has been hanging out near shore at a popular California surfing destination known for shark attacks.

A great white shark has been hanging out near shore at a popular California surfing destination known for shark attacks.

Michael Domeier of the Marine Conservation Science Institute stated via Instagram Friday that the female white shark was positioned off “infamous” Surf Beach at Vandenberg Air Force Base near Lompoc.

Fatal shark attacks occurred in that area, north of Santa Barbara, almost exactly two years apart in October 2010 and 2012. A nonfatal attack, also attributed to a great white shark, occurred in 2014. (Surf Beach is open to the public.)

The tagged white shark currently off Surf Beach is named Betty White. She was a sub-adult 12-foot female when she was tagged off Southern California in 2020.

ALSO ON FTW OUTDOORS: Rare battle between rhino and buffalo caught on video

Dozens of sharks tagged by the MCSI can be tracked via the group’s Expedition White Shark app.

The app on Friday and Saturday showed Betty White on land near Lompoc.

Domeier, MCSI president and executive director, explained that the peculiar  positioning “just demonstrates the imprecision of location estimates that are based on the Doppler Effect.”

Still, the sight of a yellow dorsal fin marker well inland inspired attempts at humor beneath Domeier’s post.

“You sure Betty wasn’t hitting up the Starbucks in Albertsons?” one person commented.

To which Domeier replied: “Or maybe looking for a CA dispensary before heading back to [Hawaii].”

–Generic white shark image courtesy of ©Pete Thomas