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- From: RFLNG@CLEMSON.CLEMSON.EDU (Reef Fish (Large Nassau Grouper) )
- Newsgroups: rec.scuba
- Subject: Nassau Shark Dives (LONG)
- Date: 27 Jan 1993 19:37:48 -0600
- Organization: UTexas Mail-to-News Gateway
- Lines: 195
- Sender: daemon@cs.utexas.edu
- Message-ID: <9301280137.AA15654@deepthought.cs.utexas.edu>
- NNTP-Posting-Host: cs.utexas.edu
-
- An article in IN DEPTH (June, 1991) about Stuart Cove's Nassau Undersea
- Adventure (NUA) bull-shark dive enticed me to take a weekend trip to Nassau
- mostly to do that dive (2/1/92). Unfortunately, the bull shark dive (which
- was scheduled only once a week then) was aborted by rough seas on the day
- we booked it, and was substituted by the much tamer dive with the Silkies.
- I reported that dive in Scuba-L (2/7/92).
-
- Last week, my buddy (wife) and I booked essentially the same trip (same
- flights, hotel, dives) to try to do the bull-shark once again. Our booked
- shark dive was AGAIN aborted, for the same weather reason, and this time
- substituted by the Caribbean reef shark dive instead, at the same site the
- Silkies were last year|
-
- Let me first repeat the paragraph from last year about the different shark
- dives there, and update the info:
-
- > NUA conducts 3 different shark dives: Silkies ($70 for a 1-tank, at the
- > Runway Reef which used to be the site for roving LARGE stingrays; now the
- > site for silkies, black-tips, and an occasional hammerhead); Bull-shark
- > ($70, what the IN-DEPTH article termed "real sharks", and the pettable
- > silkies, at a more remote site); and Tiger sharks ($500 for two, with cage,
- > in May-July).
-
- NUA is now Dive South Ocean (DSO), at a different location, with a different
- team of staff and management, except Captain/DM Roscoe (who's been there
- several years; and Stuart Cove who is still the owner, though no longer
- there in person).
-
- There're now 4 different shark dives: Silkies (moved to the Shark Buoy);
- the Caribbean reef sharks (C. perezi) now at the Runway, vacated by the
- 10-foot stingrays and silkies; the bull sharks (C. leucas), still near the
- deep walls, about 12 miles from shore; and Tiger sharks from cages. The
- Silkies, Reef, and Bull dives are now $75 for a 1-tank dive.
-
- The latest issue (Feb. 1993) of Skin Diver has an article that is fairly
- accurate and up-to-date about the Stuart Cove operation and shark dives.
-
- Now back to sharks. The Runway reef is only about 5 minutes from the DSO
- dock. For the reef shark dive, an approx. 2 cu.ft. crate of chum (grouper
- chucks) was dropped at the anchor ... divers then form a semi-circle, on
- their knees, at about 50' depth, around the crate (two plastic milk-bottle
- crates fastered by a nylon rope) while it's still closed, about 10 ft.
- away. The shark-feeding DM then descended, with multipurpose metal stick/
- spear in hand -- to open crate to expose chum, spear chum to feed sharks,
- to beat sharks away if they try to eat feeder, or to stab shark (as one of
- the DMs did a few months ago) when one was his hands was in a shark's
- mouth. They (the chum servers) now wear steel mesh sleeves on both arms,
- from hands to shoulders.
-
- The reef sharks are definitely much more aggressive and dangerous than the
- silkies. DMs fed silkies waving fish in bare hands and the silkies (last
- year) were such well-mannered dinner guests that they did not attempt to
- bite their feed even once until it was released from hand ... and then they
- were often beaten out by groupers in grabbing the released fish chunks.
-
- Not so the reef sharks. The DM was already spooked by them before our dive
- -- he was quite new at the game and I had already heard him mutter that the
- sharks were trying to bite him during those dives. Perhaps that was why
- his metal stick seemed extraordinarily long and he had great difficulty
- using it to open the fish crate. While he struggled with the stick, now
- trying to poke the crate open, now trying to keep the sharks away from his
- body and limbs, the two reef sharks (6-footers, one of them was unmistakably
- the one in the photo on page 89 of the SDM because of the fish hook on the
- side of its mouth) which had been circling the chum crate for awhile and
- were getting VERY impatient with the bumbling host, finally decided to help
- themselves with the servings ... as a result, hook-face had its hook
- tangled on the nylon rope and took crates, chum, and all with it ... end of
- THIS shark dive before it really began|
-
- Unless the weight of the crate and chum pulled the hook from that shark's
- jaw, the animal seen on p. 89 of Feb. 1993 SDM was history as of 1/23/93.
- The DM (whose hand had gone through one shark mouth) said the shark might
- roam the area with the crate on its face for awhile before it becomes a
- meal for other sharks. What a shame|
-
- Since the bull sharks sometimes come in that site, the video photographer
- was telling everyone that hook-face was a bull (perhaps to lessen our
- disappointment over the aborted bull-shark dive; and then the aborted
- reef-shark dive), even though I gently reminded him that I thought either
- it wasn't a bull, else an anorexic one having had a nose-job and cosmetic
- surgery done to its dorsal fin. (Not in those exact words :-)) However,
- most of the divers on that dive couldn't tell a nurse shark from a bull or
- tiger, were quite happy to have dived with sharks. In retrospect, I think
- that was probably the REAL reason for not having done the bull shark dive
- 12 miles from shore (choppy sea was just an excuse); but I decided not to
- make a fuss of it ... just wrote the experience off to a combination of bad
- timing and bad luck. Two years in a row?? Yuck|| At least I've now done
- the silkies and the reef-shark dives (well, part of the latter anyway).
-
- Our rotten luck finally turned, on our last day of diving on this trip, on
- which we booked a regular morning two-tank dive. It wasn't until we were
- about to get on the dive boat that we were told a group of Europeans (pros
- in dive equipments) just came from DEMA and made an impromptu charter of
- a boat (the day before) to do the bull shark dive, at Bull Shark Alley,
- 12 miles off shore. The DSO management, without us asking, put us on that
- dive (and without charging extra for it -- which we would have gladly paid
- extra for), and we were the only ones so switched from the regular two-tank
- group of divers. Well, whether it was because the shop realized we had
- missing our booked bull-shark dives two years in a row, or whatever, we
- were thrilled at the opportunity and unexpected GOOD LUCK, for a change.
-
- The site was along the shelf dropping 6000 ft. off into the Tongue of the
- Ocean. The SDM article described an old site, in 50 feet of water, named
- Bull Shark Wall, where the IN DEPTH article (1991) made a big deal of that
- as the "secret site". The site we went to was a two-step ledge ... we
- gathered on the sand-flat, low-profile reef, named Bull Shark Alley, at
- 75-80 feet, to watch the feeding. That ledge has a dropoff to a narrow
- shelf at 130 feet, and then to 6000+ feet. The bulls and reef sharks (and
- an occasional 12-foot hammerhead which came on this occasion though we
- didn't see it; and on rare occasions, a 15-ft tiger) come up from the deep,
- conditioned by the sound of the boat (and later smell and taste of chum).
-
- We were thoroughly briefed about our kneeling formation, keeping our hands
- tugged away, and just close our eyes if the bulls get too close (from a
- couple of feet to brushing bodies, and they DID) and they would disappear
- (and they DID) since they were much more interested in the cut-up groupers
- than divers with dive-skins and wetsuits| We would retreat (DM banging on
- tank) only if an unexpected tiger shark shows up. Our DM was the one whose
- hand was shark-bitten a few months ago.
-
- Unlike the other silkies- and reef-shark dives where the chum crate was
- dropped with the anchor (to attract sharks) before divers descend, we
- descended along the anchor line to already-circling bull sharks and reef
- sharks and two huge black groupers long before any chum was introduced.
- Presumably they heard the boat, and that was sufficient cue for them. The
- groupers/jewfish were holding their own among sharks ... easily 120-150
- pounders, according to my visual estimation of their sizes by recalling the
- size and weight of the famous late-Sweet-Lips of Grand Cayman. One of them
- had a big scar on its body ... curtesy of one of the bull sharks a few
- months ago, according to the shark-bitten DM.
-
- After the last diver had descended (one couple took nearly 10 minutes
- before they made it down| while we were sucking air at nearly 80 ft
- watching a parade of a dozen sharks, two large groupers, and I still don't
- know why, several large yellow snappers -- each not large enough to make
- two bites of feed for either the sharks or groupers), the DM came down with
- his crate of grouper- chum, dangling on a THIRTY-FOOT rope| He was of
- course wearing steel-mesh sleeves, and spear in hand. He was taking no
- chances, because the sharks were getting quite excited circling the crate
- as he descended, and soon they were whipping up sand near the semi-circle
- where we knelt, swimming back and forth, occasionally biting the crate,
- before the DM had it opened by his metal stick. The shark-induced
- sand-storm made visibility range from 50 feet to 10 feet or less. I had to
- replay the video tape of the entire dive several times before I realize
- some of the actions behind my back and all around (seen only by the video
- photographer's camera).
-
- Suddenly the two groupers swam away (one behind the other) at speeds I had
- not seen save for large barracudas grocery shopping. They swam past
- a couple of feet from where my wife was kneeling, and she said their tail
- fins were so powerful that she felt like a large truck had driven by ...
- she was almost more impressed by THAT than the spectacle of bull- and other
- sharks at arm's length away. It was not until the dive was over that the
- DM said he saw a hammerhead at a distance, and that he could usually tell
- from the behavior of the groupers and sharks long before he saw any hammer
- heads. The hammerhead never come for the food, but if it only moved CLOSER,
- even the bull-sharks are spooked and scared away. That was an interesting
- revelation of shark behavior and pecking order, especially because I had
- dived with schools of hammerheads months ago and found them to be so docile
- and shy| They still appear to be shy -- to DIVERS -- but apparently they
- scare the you-know-whats out of other sharks and pelagics, at least in the
- Bahamas|
-
- The 78-ft depth was soon taking its toll in approaching no-decomp limits
- on our computers ... we would have stayed longer, and so would the bulls
- and other sharks, if we had not begun departing, after about 40 minutes
- total BT. The experience of the entire group showed, as no one seemed low
- on air (on 80 AL filled to 3000 psi) after 40 minutes of excitement at
- nearly 80 ft. And nearly everyone began to move in sync in departure,
- probably all prompted by the no-decomp limits rather than air supply. It
- would have been "inconvenient", to say the least, if someone needed to
- leave prematurely while the bull sharks were still busy feeding| After a
- longish safety stop and 1000 psi to spare, I logged 78' for 52 min. on this
- exciting dive.
-
- Now that I've done all three of the no-cage shark dives in Nassau, I doubt
- if I'll make special efforts to repeat any of those dives. As exciting as
- the bull-shark dive was, the excitement was diminished by the realization
- that the sharks were bribed. I found chance encounters with sharks in
- their natural environments more interesting and rewarding than having to
- chum them.
-
- Shark-diving in Nassau seems changing rapidly, in locations as well as
- types of sharks, and how they're fed and the dives conducted, based on only
- what I saw within a year. Some of the "facts" in the Feb '93 SDM article
- are already obsolete| As we prepared to depart the Nassau airport, one of
- the inspectors recognized us (our dive bags) and struck up a conversation
- with us after we cleared customs, since he was a scuba enthusiast himself.
- He asked if we heard one of shark feeders was bitten in the hand ... we
- said sure, we dove with him| And the inspector then said there's now talk
- in the Bahamas (may be it was only Nassau?) about banning the type of shark
- dives in which the sharks are fed. So, if any of these shark dives
- interests you, you'd better do it soon before they are banned|
-
- -- Bob.
-