My first time Kayaking and this Kayak held strong. ruclips.net/user/postUgkx4k5UrhC3v_Y4hIEaXLGvHcN5a5aBmZNB The water got pretty rough as a speed boat zipped by me, and the Kayak withstood it (I expected to be capsized). The Ores are very easy to put together, the pump worked beautifully. the seats are a bit hard to sit in after a while (I recommend sitting on the floor). after reading the reviews I was very scared it'd get a hole in it, the material is very strong and durable. The Air valve may need a small Phillips head screwdriver to adjust, other than that, it's well worth the money!(update)I've gone Kayaking in 3 Lakes and 2 rivers totaling about 40 miles. the kayak had two holes and they patched easily and no other problems can't wait for kayaking season this year!
It looked like a big Bull to me, probably a female if I'm not mistaken they get bigger than the males. The nose didn't look square enough to be a tiger imo.
I added another entry to my "things not to do" list : fishing in a Kayak. This goes after "not to freedive at 50m" after seeing the video on blackouts of freediver, and "not cliff jump at 30m" after seeing the video on failed cliff jumps
Hi. I’m a diver and I dive with sharks ALL the time. That was (most likely) a large black tip oceanic (no known attacks on humans) and it was clearly chasing another bonito (in slo mo you can see it in front of an approx 8 foot - medium size shark) You were in very little danger, the struggle of you catch brought the shark in
I was not in danger at all, I don't know why people here get so excited. It is ridiculous to see that even people who call themselves "a captain" may think a shark would attack a kayak ))) This was just nice shot of a big shark chasing my catch, that is it! As you said, people dive and snorkel with sharks all the time and there are more sharks around beaches than people even think. But Thanks for your input.
Either a Mako or a juvenile White shark for sure. Most likely a juvenile White shark because of the gray color most of all along with triangular dorsal fin, pointed snout, a vertical caudal fins. In the clear water like that, Makos are such a brilliant dark blue color, they look almost purple. A Makos nickname is a "purple torpedo".
My thought was juvenile white shark, the berth to big for open water runners, like oceanic, reef, hammer even to wide for a bull. There are some other fat greys, I think more common in Africa. So location could narrow but whites are everywhere 🤷
@Keith Long no Mako . Thats a white for sure. If you slow the footage you can see the tail fin has a curve like a boomerang. A Mako has a straight tailfin. No curve at all. Its a teenager White for sure.
Wow what an encounter. You can def rule out Tiger or hammerhead. Looks like a great white judging by colouration and torpedo shape. Too girthy to be a mako.
It is extremely rare. Believe me, you have much more chances to be attacked by a human than a shark being in the water. So, do you stay at home all the time? It is much more dangerous to go outside than to swim with sharks in the ocean. You can be robbed, killed, etc.
I don't think it's possible to distinguish the shape of its head with much accuracy because of the constant distortion of the water's surface, but there are several frames in the 2:33-2:38 range that appear to show a perfectly good shovel-shaped tiger shark snout to me. The real kicker is the dorsal fin. Run back and forth through all of the frames at 2:37 and one of them will show that distinctive squat equilateral triangle-shaped dorsal that tigers have, and which no other big sharks (that I know of) do. Color's right, too. I'd give it 85% medium-sized tiger.
@WildBrit777 Cymru Probably a Bull or a small White. I don't have any experience with Bulls, but have seen plenty of Makos and other North Atlantic species.
@WildBrit777 Cymru Yeah, I'm in NJ. We see a lot of Mako and Blues in open water. Thresher, Sand Tiger and Browns inshore. But they have tracked a few Whites traveling along our coast as well and they come in close. If most people realized how close they come to sharks while swimming at the beach they probably wouldn't do it lol.
it looked like a bull, had a round snout, husky body, it did resemble a shortfin when its dorsal was sticking out, but it didn't have a pointed snout, I'd say it was a bull,
The question is.. why did it approach the Kayak so fast? Looks to me like an attack was aborted just before hitting, which makes me belive it was a Tiger shark, thinking a Kayak was someting else when it came closer, a bull shark would just have tiped over the boat once it have decided to make the move..
Any shark is lightning in water....depends on where he is that would give up or rule out species....even a white can do 25-30 mph, does it really matter if its 35, lol.....
Moved by too fast, for 100% accurate identification, but given the speed, the color, and the shape, I'd say you lucked out since that Mako was interested in something else just then.
@Keith Long For what it's worth, I'm convinced @Lil Fish is right. I don't think it's possible to distinguish the shape of its head with much accuracy because of the constant distortion of the water's surface, but there are several frames in the 2:33-2:38 range that appear to show a perfectly good shovel-shaped tiger snout to me. The real kicker is the dorsal fin. Run back and forth through all of the frames at 2:37 and one of them will show that distinctive squat equilateral triangle-shaped dorsal that tigers have, and which no other big sharks (that I know of) do. Again, with the surface chop that shape could be an distorted, but it sure looks convincing to me. It also looks to me like the shark might taper abruptly in its last third the way tigers often do but which makos usually don't. It's not the right color for either mako, and distortion shouldn't have any effect on color. Although I agree in general with your feeding ecology point, I don't think one short burst of speed in pursuit of an obviously distressed bonito is enough to rule out tiger shark, and generally speaking, makos are much more highly pelagic than the near-shore zone where this video was shot.
To sharks prowling for dinner, the thumping sound of fishermen operating their kayaks' foot pedals, is probably regarded as a completely irresistible dinner bell. You couldn't pay me a million greenbacks, to go out in such a flimsy craft while trailing struggling fish on a line. A good sized Great White could swiftly snap that entire boat and its occupant, clean in two.
To me the shark had a elongated snout. And I tried to see the apex of the tail joint which looked thick also so to me it appeared to be a blue pointer or Mako (Bonita shark) as they swim lightening fast. Because of the shape of snout it was either a Mako or juvenile GreatWhite but pretty sure it to be a Mako.
No way to tell what kind of shark it was but it was NOT a hammer and it was not huge, lol. Do you know what hammerhead sharks even look like, dude??? I have it paused on 2:36 and can CLEARLY see the pointed snout. I'm going to guess a juvenile White, based on size, color, tail shape, coastal location, and behavior. I can kinda make out the distinctive flat, wide area behind the 2nd dorsal that says White shark. Yeah, after 10 views, it's a White. It's thick, heavy bodied, pointed nose, no tips...just really, really appears to be a juvey White.
Well, you paused it, viewed it 10 times, do you think I had the same opportunity in the ocean? At that time I only saw a huge body moving toward my kayak. Sorry, I did not have a chance to pause it and review it in slow motion.
It seemed too brownish in color for a Mako or Great White, but too pointy of a nose for a Bull or Tiger. Big and fast. My first glimpse said to me it was a bull shark.
in this scenario i would just drop the fakking rodder which i think the guy thought about doing as well and start rowing or peddaling to shore but this guy,get this not only does he not leave the fish behind,he actually has a nice chat with the camera instead of pedalling to safety immidiately lol
Pretty clear conical snout rules out a bull or tiger. I'd put my money on a white. The hammerhead is the slam-dunk easiest-to-recognize shark in the ocean. The only absolute certainty about the species in the video is that it is NOT a hammerhead.
That was a White Pointer im pretty sure. Not huge but not tiny either. Im 90 per cent sure and ive had some experience around em like when my diving partner got eaten by one. A Bull shark has a 2nd dorsal fin infront of the tail where a Great White basically doesnt have a 2nd Dorsal fin. Technically its there but very small. A bull shark has wide and fatter pectoral fins . 1000 per cent sure its not a Tiger but could be a Mako except the nose is not pointy enough to be a Mako i think. Could be wrong but i dont think i am. Been bumped on my Kayak for 30 mins by a 5.5m White a few years back and its not fun. Stopped me from going so far out again.
You're a hammerhead lol That was most likely a big bull, maybe a whaler or mako it was pretty quick. From what I saw there were no tell tale stripes to suggest tiger shark.
@@cheeseymccheese7249 how about no....lol I covered nearly every shark and some genius comes up with tiger 3 months later. So is it a sand tiger or just a tiger? Back to Google you go ;)
@@cheeseymccheese7249 you certainly don't study grammar at uni big fella :) "I" you're one of those well ejimicated fellas that has a textbook that says I'm wrong aren't ya lol
Dude, I think I’ll stick to a nice big comfy boat with a hot coffee, finger food, and refreshments. And, warm n dry in a cabin. Those sharks scare me 😳
I mean it was pretty fast, so Mako comes to mind, but looked too wide. Then there's bull, but the dorsal doesn't look quite right, it's definitely either a Bull or a young Great White. I'd go with young great white due to the white trim around him you can 'just' make out. Hard to tell from top down view though.
Folks, it was a bull shark. Thanks everyone who commented.
1980:
Kayak : A means to navigate Lakes and Rivers.
2020:
Kayak : A means to provide large sharks with a snack.
hahahaha! LOVE!
You guys on little tiny kayaks on the ocean are freaking crazy!
Agreed
crazy is a polite way of saying imbeciles
What exactly does one expect, dangling bait out in deep ocean like this?
My first time Kayaking and this Kayak held strong. ruclips.net/user/postUgkx4k5UrhC3v_Y4hIEaXLGvHcN5a5aBmZNB The water got pretty rough as a speed boat zipped by me, and the Kayak withstood it (I expected to be capsized). The Ores are very easy to put together, the pump worked beautifully. the seats are a bit hard to sit in after a while (I recommend sitting on the floor). after reading the reviews I was very scared it'd get a hole in it, the material is very strong and durable. The Air valve may need a small Phillips head screwdriver to adjust, other than that, it's well worth the money!(update)I've gone Kayaking in 3 Lakes and 2 rivers totaling about 40 miles. the kayak had two holes and they patched easily and no other problems can't wait for kayaking season this year!
It wasn't attacking the kayak, it was going after a fish. You can see the fish it was swimming after in front of it.
What is the draw of kayak fishing in the ocean except getting eaten by a shark?!
Eaten by sharks? lol Don't spread media lies and unjustified fear please.
Oh it’s Justified all right😂😂
I had one follower me for two hours once, after hitting the back of the kayak I went home, wasn’t using bait, only soft bait
It looked like a big Bull to me, probably a female if I'm not mistaken they get bigger than the males. The nose didn't look square enough to be a tiger imo.
yeah, bull shark
difficult to see, but sure not a hammerhead.
Shark uses Bonita to catch guy in kayak! 🚣♀️.....🦈
I added another entry to my "things not to do" list : fishing in a Kayak. This goes after "not to freedive at 50m" after seeing the video on blackouts of freediver, and "not cliff jump at 30m" after seeing the video on failed cliff jumps
The same.
Fortunately, I've never seen a video about lighting a match on a tiger's asshole ending badly so I haven't had to give that up.
That shark was swimming so fast that was insane imagine being chased by a shark dang
You wouldn’t make it far😬
There would be no chase
Can't say this is the most intelligent way to fish.
serious shit. i fish everyday but never would i do ocean kayaking . that shark was bigger then the kayak
prolly need to head to Walmart for a new 3 pack of Haynes after that
Save money and free ball.
People who say prolly are annoying
Imagine wearing Haynes 💀
...prolly?
@@prestonsearer1491 we call them idiots 😅
Hi. I’m a diver and I dive with sharks ALL the time. That was (most likely) a large black tip oceanic (no known attacks on humans) and it was clearly chasing another bonito (in slo mo you can see it in front of an approx 8 foot - medium size shark)
You were in very little danger, the struggle of you catch brought the shark in
I was not in danger at all, I don't know why people here get so excited. It is ridiculous to see that even people who call themselves "a captain" may think a shark would attack a kayak ))) This was just nice shot of a big shark chasing my catch, that is it! As you said, people dive and snorkel with sharks all the time and there are more sharks around beaches than people even think. But Thanks for your input.
@Joe Martin I think it is much less likely
@ZZtop stranger Get you butt out of a coach and this way you will see great story yourself
@@Beyondthebreakers It could possibly be due to the fact there are videos of sharks attacking people in kayaks...
@@unitedstatian there are no such videos
I would go home after that.
and i would never go out fishing in a frigging kayak Ever. Again.
And clean out the pants
@@johnfay681 clean out the kayak seat too..
And leave for free sign on the dang thing
Either a Mako or a juvenile White shark for sure. Most likely a juvenile White shark because of the gray color most of all along with triangular dorsal fin, pointed snout, a vertical caudal fins. In the clear water like that, Makos are such a brilliant dark blue color, they look almost purple. A Makos nickname is a "purple torpedo".
Could also have been a Porbeagle shark.( also gray in color )
My thought was juvenile white shark, the berth to big for open water runners, like oceanic, reef, hammer even to wide for a bull. There are some other fat greys, I think more common in Africa. So location could narrow but whites are everywhere 🤷
Definitely a Juvenile white
Get that on the end of your line you'll be going on a "Nantucket sleigh ride "
Cool! How far off shore are you? How deep is the water? Cold or warm water?
around 1.2 miles, 150 feet, around 82 F
@@Beyondthebreakers Whoa, that's a pretty far swim :)
2:30 A shark has a crack at his fish, you get a glimpse of it as it chases it towards the kayak. That's it.
I'll bet his shfinkta puckered shut when it did too lol
P.S. Also, you are wrong about sharks & kayaks! Sharks, aggressive ones especially, most certainly DO attack kayaks.
Anthony Hopkins Do your homework Anthony. There have been a fair few reported on. Ask Mr. Google to show you. Question : Why wouldn't they attack??
@Anthony Hopkins wrong
Literally just look it up lmao. It happens. Just in May an article was released on some guy whose kayak was attacked by a large great white.
2 cheetahs eating a pumpkin just got off a video of a guy hitting a hammerhead 20 times with his paddle but it kept coming back for him
Glad we got the experts here to let us know 😌🤣
He’s going to need a bigger kayak 😝
I REALLY hate thieves irregardless of if they got 2-legs, 4-legs, or fins...
Would have been my last day!!! FREE KAYAK!
If you had a pedal drive system hanging underneath you would've been f**ked!
oh you did.hahaha, how did the shark not hit the propeller, it went literally under your yak where the pedal drive sits in the water?
It was down, nothing happened. Sharks have great spatial orientation.
Omg the size and energy of these great whites put me in awww every time! So amazing!
That was a little guy. Still eating fish.
@Keith Long no Mako . Thats a white for sure. If you slow the footage you can see the tail fin has a curve like a boomerang. A Mako has a straight tailfin. No curve at all. Its a teenager White for sure.
Not sure. It's nose is unconvincing for a great white. But it's hard to tell since it was filmed over the water.
Juvi White for sure
Location??
That was either a sub adult white shark, or mako. I'm leaning towards mako.
Now I am pretty sure it was bull shark.
why would you keep a Bonita? They taste awful... or is it for bait?
yeah, mainly for bait. But the taste is not too bad actually. Obviously, black fin or yellow fin tuna is much better
I believe that was a White shark looked about size of a teenage White shark .Tuna big part of the diet for a white shark at that age
Wow what an encounter. You can def rule out Tiger or hammerhead. Looks like a great white judging by colouration and torpedo shape. Too girthy to be a mako.
All I can say is watch Sharks Happen here on youtube.
It is extremely rare. Believe me, you have much more chances to be attacked by a human than a shark being in the water. So, do you stay at home all the time? It is much more dangerous to go outside than to swim with sharks in the ocean. You can be robbed, killed, etc.
I want to hear the Jaws soundtrack to this. 🤣🤷🏼♀️
It is copyrighted unfortunately :(
How many kayaker are taken by sharks each year?
I think something around 0
@@Beyondthebreakers ight bet
Young Great White, and I am certain
So........when was the shark attack?
lookes like a small white shark or a mako too me
Without any doubt, that was a young great white. Dorsal fin is the biggest giveaway, followed by the snout. Unmistakable.
Andrew Smedley unmistakable
agree 100%.
I don't think it's possible to distinguish the shape of its head with much accuracy because of the constant distortion of the water's surface, but there are several frames in the 2:33-2:38 range that appear to show a perfectly good shovel-shaped tiger shark snout to me. The real kicker is the dorsal fin. Run back and forth through all of the frames at 2:37 and one of them will show that distinctive squat equilateral triangle-shaped dorsal that tigers have, and which no other big sharks (that I know of) do. Color's right, too. I'd give it 85% medium-sized tiger.
Yep defo tiger dorsal
Great movie though what's the name of this hanging around the barbershop eventually? 🤔
Smh you like extreme fishing in a kayak don't complain when a shark show up🙄
where is he complaining
was he complaining?
That shark was pretty fast....looks like a Mako.
Yeah, most people agree this was either mako or great white.
Definitely not a Mako. Head was too broad and they look like they are made of metal. Also looked like it was after the fish, not attacking the kayak.
@WildBrit777 Cymru Probably a Bull or a small White. I don't have any experience with Bulls, but have seen plenty of Makos and other North Atlantic species.
@WildBrit777 Cymru Yeah, I'm in NJ. We see a lot of Mako and Blues in open water. Thresher, Sand Tiger and Browns inshore. But they have tracked a few Whites traveling along our coast as well and they come in close. If most people realized how close they come to sharks while swimming at the beach they probably wouldn't do it lol.
Makos have pointy noses more like a tiger or bull
it looked like a bull, had a round snout, husky body, it did resemble a shortfin when its dorsal was sticking out, but it didn't have a pointed snout, I'd say it was a bull,
Kenneth Ketchum that is clearly not a bull. It’s a great white.
The question is.. why did it approach the Kayak so fast? Looks to me like an attack was aborted just before hitting, which makes me belive it was a Tiger shark, thinking a Kayak was someting else when it came closer, a bull shark would just have tiped over the boat once it have decided to make the move..
Any shark is lightning in water....depends on where he is that would give up or rule out species....even a white can do 25-30 mph, does it really matter if its 35, lol.....
Pointer can do 35 miles per hour, but it was a bull shark.
Is it known if they can tow, even in a haphazard fashion ¿?
VerY QooL
Nice vid dude
🌵🐠
The shark was chasing a fish and you just happened to be in the way of his meal. Should be your title.
@Dog Hamby Well I just threw a bone to a DOG named Hemby out the window going 100 mph. Guess what happened? 🙌🏽 He got fckd to the face "Head First!"
Wonder what fish it was chasing
bonita
A terrified one.
Keith Long definitely a short finned mako chasing a tuna
Looked like a Mako to me, or maybe a juvenile Great White.
probably bull
It’s a white
Moved by too fast, for 100% accurate identification, but given the speed, the color, and the shape, I'd say you lucked out since that Mako was interested in something else just then.
Come to my country!! no sharks here
What is that?
What about the first fish that almost took all your line? Was that a shark also?
Most likely, it cut me above the wire leader
Definitely a tiger shark, you can tell by the nose and fins.
what Keith said.
@Keith Long For what it's worth, I'm convinced @Lil Fish is right. I don't think it's possible to distinguish the shape of its head with much accuracy because of the constant distortion of the water's surface, but there are several frames in the 2:33-2:38 range that appear to show a perfectly good shovel-shaped tiger snout to me. The real kicker is the dorsal fin. Run back and forth through all of the frames at 2:37 and one of them will show that distinctive squat equilateral triangle-shaped dorsal that tigers have, and which no other big sharks (that I know of) do. Again, with the surface chop that shape could be an distorted, but it sure looks convincing to me. It also looks to me like the shark might taper abruptly in its last third the way tigers often do but which makos usually don't. It's not the right color for either mako, and distortion shouldn't have any effect on color. Although I agree in general with your feeding ecology point, I don't think one short burst of speed in pursuit of an obviously distressed bonito is enough to rule out tiger shark, and generally speaking, makos are much more highly pelagic than the near-shore zone where this video was shot.
To sharks prowling for dinner, the thumping sound of fishermen operating their kayaks' foot pedals, is probably regarded as a completely irresistible dinner bell. You couldn't pay me a million greenbacks, to go out in such a flimsy craft while trailing struggling fish on a line. A good sized Great White could swiftly snap that entire boat and its occupant, clean in two.
when i see kayak and fishing pole i laugh and say dummy!
Tell Bill to resign pls
Ok, at what point was there an actual attack?
Oh god fuck no. I’m keeping it to rivers forever.
This is common when deep sea fishing.
Think your going to need a bigger boat...not like going down the pond chasin’ bluegills and tommycods
I think you need more education on offshore kayak fishing
@@Beyondthebreakers jaws quote.
To me the shark had a elongated snout. And I tried to see the apex of the tail joint which looked thick also so to me it appeared to be a blue pointer or Mako (Bonita shark) as they swim lightening fast. Because of the shape of snout it was either a Mako or juvenile GreatWhite but pretty sure it to be a Mako.
It was in 120 feet, so bull shark
Looked like a bull or tiger shark?
You gotta cut the videos to the title mate. Don't ruin it with the music and slowmo.
Scary encounter for sure.
No way to tell what kind of shark it was but it was NOT a hammer and it was not huge, lol. Do you know what hammerhead sharks even look like, dude??? I have it paused on 2:36 and can CLEARLY see the pointed snout. I'm going to guess a juvenile White, based on size, color, tail shape, coastal location, and behavior. I can kinda make out the distinctive flat, wide area behind the 2nd dorsal that says White shark.
Yeah, after 10 views, it's a White. It's thick, heavy bodied, pointed nose, no tips...just really, really appears to be a juvey White.
Well, you paused it, viewed it 10 times, do you think I had the same opportunity in the ocean? At that time I only saw a huge body moving toward my kayak. Sorry, I did not have a chance to pause it and review it in slow motion.
Yip. Agree. Straight away I saw a juvi white. That nose with a glimpse of a white belly.
after watching the video several times in slow motion. I can tell you that was a juvenile Great White. About 8 foot long.
Based on the location and depth, I am pretty sure it was a
bull shark.
Juvenile white shark maybe. Close encounter nonetheless!
thank you for your input
It was a short finned mako chasing a tuna. Very fast shark for a very fast prey.
It sure was crazy, but you still caught your fish, usually people loose their fish if a shark shows up. Good catch 👍
No one likes a tight fish. Loose is much better, lmao.
yeah
Where the Hell was that
Florida
It could definitely be the reflection in the water but 2:55 looks like stripes on the tail. Could be a tiger.
It seemed too brownish in color for a Mako or Great White, but too pointy of a nose for a Bull or Tiger. Big and fast. My first glimpse said to me it was a bull shark.
Just before the shark (which, imo looked like a White Pointer not a Hammerhead) is another Bonito, so maybe it was attacking that?
Lol @ the animation at the end. Nice video though
sharks are so nice to these people.
they should eat them each time
Hi [USERNAME], we love your content. Keep up the great work! 💪🏼
maybe a Mako....go HOME now.
Snouts too wide for a mako. It was fast though.
looked like a tiger shark. but it could also be a whitetip those are really fast and super dangerous.
That shark look like it was chasing a dolphin
no, this is bonita
looked like a white at first glance, but after slowing down i'm confident was a tiger
Agreed. Tiger shark.
Late in the afternoon, distressed fish being dragged to the kayak, all alone... what could go wrong 🤔
Well looks like nothing went wrong💁♀️
The type that would make me shit on my pants, and have a heart stroke.
in this scenario i would just drop the fakking rodder which i think the guy thought about doing as well and start rowing or peddaling to shore but this guy,get this not only does he not leave the fish behind,he actually has a nice chat with the camera instead of pedalling to safety immidiately lol
Pretty clear conical snout rules out a bull or tiger. I'd put my money on a white. The hammerhead is the slam-dunk easiest-to-recognize shark in the ocean. The only absolute certainty about the species in the video is that it is NOT a hammerhead.
Hey dude.. u need a bigger boat
so what excatly did the shark attack ? 😴😴😴
Bonita fish
That was a White Pointer im pretty sure. Not huge but not tiny either. Im 90 per cent sure and ive had some experience around em like when my diving partner got eaten by one.
A Bull shark has a 2nd dorsal fin infront of the tail where a Great White basically doesnt have a 2nd Dorsal fin. Technically its there but very small. A bull shark has wide and fatter pectoral fins .
1000 per cent sure its not a Tiger but could be a Mako except the nose is not pointy enough to be a Mako i think. Could be wrong but i dont think i am.
Been bumped on my Kayak for 30 mins by a 5.5m White a few years back and its not fun. Stopped me from going so far out again.
You're a hammerhead lol
That was most likely a big bull, maybe a whaler or mako it was pretty quick. From what I saw there were no tell tale stripes to suggest tiger shark.
It was a tiger, look at the head and slow the video down, then google top of tiger shark.
@@cheeseymccheese7249 how about no....lol I covered nearly every shark and some genius comes up with tiger 3 months later. So is it a sand tiger or just a tiger? Back to Google you go ;)
@@barrymundi480 Im a marine Biologist, i study sharks mainly whites tigers and bulls. We tag them all year round. Back to school for you
@@cheeseymccheese7249 I'm a fisherman from Australia dick head let's meet if you want to be smart
@@cheeseymccheese7249 you certainly don't study grammar at uni big fella :)
"I" you're one of those well ejimicated fellas that has a textbook that says I'm wrong aren't ya lol
You are crazy too because you're going with kayak in deep water where the sharks are.This is not safe dude!
Shark was already chasing another fish in front of it, didn't look like a hammerhead....
that was a bull shark
Hardly a "shark attack" man....
Dude, I think I’ll stick to a nice big comfy boat with a hot coffee, finger food, and refreshments. And, warm n dry in a cabin.
Those sharks scare me 😳
I mean it was pretty fast, so Mako comes to mind, but looked too wide. Then there's bull, but the dorsal doesn't look quite right, it's definitely either a Bull or a young Great White.
I'd go with young great white due to the white trim around him you can 'just' make out. Hard to tell from top down view though.
I would say watching it twice that it was a mako. A kayak fisherman on the ocean is like sitting in a chum bucket
My suggestion if you have a fish on and you see a sizeable shark is cut the line. You risk enticing a powerful strike that could end badly.
I wouldn’t be leaving sharks snack down beside my feet like that😁
My pants just shat themselves
All the armchair expert shark weekers trynna let us know what typa shark and how old. Who gives a shit that animal is impressive
Looked like a great white to me. Possibly a mako. The snout seemed too pointed to be a tiger or bull. Seemed too large to be a bull shark also.
When that fish was saying: *aue aue aue*
I felt that 😔
How was that an attack ??
Short fin Mako. The speed of recovery after the initial missed strike was just just to quick for a great white.
Don't think so. The dorsal fin when it first appears is wrong for a mako. Looks like a GWS.
@@brianjacob8728 your right Brian. Ask that guy if it was Male or female. I say you've got damn good eyes!
Why would anyone be on a tiny kayak let alone attracting sharks by fishing??