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Smokey1226
04-25-2008, 11:39 AM
Some guy in Cali just died due to shark attack. 66years old....What a shitty way to die!

lasttimearound
04-25-2008, 11:41 AM
thats when you hope to god for a heart attack

Smokey1226
04-25-2008, 11:43 AM
Thats kinda what i was thinking too.

Car Guy
04-25-2008, 12:17 PM
I'm thinking that you wouldn't feel a thing because you'd have so much adrenaline pumping through your body, and by the time it stops flowing your dead.....:goof






:3gears: :3gears: :3gears:

Prince Valiant
04-25-2008, 03:12 PM
SOLANA BEACH – Several North County beaches were closed Friday morning after a man was killed in a shark attack north of Fletcher Cove, officials said.
Dave Martin, 66, was attacked as he was swimming about 150 yards offshore shortly after 7 a.m., officials said.

A helicopter initially was sent to take Martin to a hospital, but he was pronounced dead at a lifeguard station.

Witnesses told lifeguards that a “big gray shark” attacked Martin, biting both his legs, said Solana Beach Marine Safety Capt. Craig Miller.

Martin was swimming with a group of about 10 others, heading north from Fletcher Cove, near Tide Park, when the attack occurred. The group regularly swims in the area. All the swimmers were wearing wet suits.

Miller said two of the swimmers were about 20 yards ahead of the victim when he was attacked. They heard him screaming, went to his aid and brought him to shore, he said.

Encinitas Lifeguard Lt. Paul Chapman, who went to Fletcher Cove after the attack, said the victim's legs had suffered deep jagged lacerations, from the upper thighs to the lower shin, with a bite radius of about 22 inches.

“Wherever that thing is right now,” Chapman said, “it's pretty good-sized.”

Shark attacks are extremely rare in Southern California.

“I can't remember a shark ever being in this area before,” Miller said.

Officials closed beaches in Solana Beach, Del Mar and Encinitas after the attack.

Lifeguards in two vehicles were patrolling Solana Beach's 1.7 miles of coastline and a sheriff's helicopter flew overhead Friday morning, telling people to stay out of the water.

Beach closure signs also were posted.

“This is a tragic situation for Solana Beach and the surrounding areas and the county of San Diego,” said Solana Beach Mayor Joe Kellejian.

Kellejian urged the public to listen to safety officers and to stay out of the water.

“It just doesn't happen. A shark attack is unheard of,” said Solana Beach Deputy Fire Chief Dismas Abelman.

In Encinitas, the city just north of Solana Beach, extra lifeguards were called in and they cleared the water as a precaution, warning surfers face-to-face not to go out.

“We're keeping the water clear and informing people that they shouldn't be in the water,” Chapman said. “A couple people have chosen to go in the water and surf at Swami's and one at Beacons, against our advice.”

Chapman said that seals and sea lions have been beaching themselves in the area – he said a crew from Sea World was on its way to rescue one as he spoke. Such beachings are a possible sign of a large predator in the coastal waters.



Advertisement“Those are signs that say this isn't the place to go,” Chapman said. “We have one person fatally wounded and we have sea life exiting the water. It's better to say out of the water and give it time.”
He also said a juvenile great white shark washed up on a nearby beach a few weeks before.

Officials are trying to determine how long beaches should be closed. Solana Beach may close its beaches as long as 72 hours, Miller said. If swimmers ignore the ban, he said, sheriff's deputies would be called to enforce the order.

The swimmers who were with the victim were taken to a community center to be debriefed, Abelman said.

A Coast Guard helicopter was sent to the area. The crew helped clear the area and spotters were trying to “spot the culprit,” said Coast Guard Petty Officer Clinton Dotson.

So far, no San Diego beaches have been closed, San Diego lifeguard Lt. Nick Lerma said. “It happened a significant distance from us, so we're sort of status quo,” Lerma said.

The state lifeguards who patrol Carlsbad's shoreline also did not feel the need to close that city's beaches, but did post warning signs and were broadcasting advisories from loudspeakers at lifeguard posts, said Lifeguard Travis Fryant.

“It's not a mandatory closure,” Fryant said. “We're letting the public know the facts and letting them make their own decisions about it.”

Lifeguards in Oceanside were also broadcasting warnings over their stations' loudspeakers, said city Lifeguard Emile Lagendijk.

The ocean temperatures off the coast are in the upper 50s, fairly typical for this time of year, according to Jim Purpura, meteorologist in charge of the National Weather Service office in Rancho Bernardo.

The last time a shark was confirmed to have killed someone in San Diego County waters was in 1994.

The victim, 25-year-old Michelle Von Emster, went for a nighttime swim by herself in Ocean Beach April 14.

Her body, with her leg severed at midthigh, was found the following day two miles to the south, near the surfing area known as Garbage Reef.

Investigators determined she drowned after being bitten by a great white shark.

Homicide detectives were called in after friends of the victim raised questions of foul play.

Friends said the woman – whose body was found unclothed – would not swim alone or without a swim suit. They also wondered why Von Emster's purse was found on the bluffs above the beach, and why her clothing was never found.

Reports of a great white shark at the same spot raised alarms in 2003, two years after great white shark sightings caused a scare at the venerable surf spot at San Onofre State Beach. No one was harmed either time.

u_say_go
04-25-2008, 03:19 PM
it's surprising that there arent more attacks and/or deaths from sharks. you're right, totally schitty way to go. dying at the hands (mouth) of any animal would suck

Smokey1226
04-25-2008, 03:24 PM
I did hear something crazy.....All of last year World wide...there was only 1 person bite and killed by a shark. Numerous bite and survived but only 1 died in the world. That blew me away! I thought were would be hundreds!

Karps TA
04-25-2008, 04:21 PM
Don't tresspass on it's property. You never hear of people getting attacked by sharks sitting on their couch playing Xbox.

Breecher_7
04-25-2008, 04:36 PM
If people only knew how many sharks are just off the coast. I know when we did training runs off the coast of southern california we would see sharks in the water all the time when flying over head in helicopters.

Prince Valiant
04-25-2008, 04:47 PM
I've gone up a couple times in FL in heli's and seen a remarkable number of sharks...most are schools of rather benign ones like black-tips or sandbar sharks feeding on bait fish, but I've also seen some larger ones (likely bull) and even a lone great-hammerhead.

Most times with people right in the surf with hardly a care...

lordairgtar
04-25-2008, 05:28 PM
The reason the attacks are rare in California, and I think other parts as well, is that the kelp beds keep them away from where most people swim. Surfers are in much more danger because they go beyond the kelp beds. I couldn't surf for shite, but I tried.

Heat Seeker WS6
04-26-2008, 12:49 PM
I did a shark dive in Costa Rica with about a dozen white tipped sharks. We were about 30' down in wet suits. Going into it we were told how to act and stay grouped up. Also, anyone with any type of fresh wound or females 'in that time of the month' HAD to stay ashore or on the boat.
When your in the ocean, you join the food chain but sharks usually go for 'easy' food or attack when being intruded on.
Either of those 2 divers could have made themselves sharkbait.

turbogarrett
04-27-2008, 11:39 AM
Love the ocean, but that's why I do most of my swimming in a pool.

Smokey1226
04-27-2008, 05:49 PM
Love the ocean, but that's why I do most of my swimming in a pool.

no balls!

PureSound15
04-27-2008, 09:37 PM
:pics

Smokey1226
04-27-2008, 09:53 PM
Yuupppp, your going to hell! lol

ponyride00
04-28-2008, 01:15 AM
:thumbsup