Florida had a bonanza with sharks this January.
Diver Corey Embree had a New Year's treat looking
for sharks in the waters off Palm Beach County, but
after 20 years of doing that, he never thought he would
meet a great white shark. Another diver, Ben Rother,
later came face to face with a whale shark off the coast
of Jupiter.
"It was amazing. It was kind of surreal. It was unexpected,"
Embree said. "We wanted to see lemon sharks;
we didn't see any -- just a massive white shark."
"It came right up to me, opened its mouth and gave me a big kiss," Rother said of the whale shark."It greeted me and every person in the water in the same way," he told the Sun Sentinel.
According to Neil Hammerschlag, a marine biologist
from the University of Miami, the Gulf Stream
serves as a highway for open ocean creatures, and it
may have come close to shore in recent days.
Embree and the five divers he was with recorded
video of the 14-foot shark, about 3 miles off Juno
beach. It was at least 4 feet wide and probably weighed
on the order of 1,500 pounds. It circled the group for
a few minutes before swimming away.
Luis Roman, owner of Calypso Dive Charters -- the
boat company that chartered the trip -- said he dives
in the area to spot lemon and nurse sharks as well as
sea turtles this time of year.
Ben Rother, a student from the University of
Pennsylvania, drove to Florida for a winter break and
to go diving. He dove with Emerald Charters, expecting
to see lemon sharks and bull sharks, and had
dropped only to 40 feet (12m) when the whale shark
approached him.
"I've never seen something so massive and so
majestic before," he said. "It was this 30-foot creature
that just wanted to hang out with you. It felt like a
miracle." (Source: Sun Sentinel)