lemon shark diving

Shark Diving's Dirty Little Secret

Emma the tiger shark gut checking me. Thankfully I safely pulled out my arm in time.

I’ve been thinking about this a lot lately.

The hiding.

In the shark diving world—especially among those of us who work with and feed sharks—there’s something we rarely talk about publicly. Something we keep to ourselves, behind the curtain. It’s what you might call the dirty little secret of our industry:

Shark Feeders getting bitten.

We don’t talk about it in public. We don’t post about it (other than this blog post). We don’t share it with guests. It’s only discussed among ourselves—quietly, or with dark humor. We laugh about it. We call each other out when someone really screws up. We give tight hugs when we know one of us dodged a bullet.

It’s the game within the game.

Now that my son David is deep into this world, it weighs even heavier on my mind. I keep asking myself—why do we hide it? Is it really about protecting the shark diving industry? People aren’t going to stop diving with sharks because they hear someone got nicked. If anything, it probably fuels curiosity.

Shark divers are definitely wired a little differently.

David working with a tiger shark at Tiger Beach, Bahamas.

But we tell ourselves it’s about protecting the sharks’ reputation. We don’t want these bites added to shark attack databases that the media loves to quote. We don’t want certain so-called "shark experts" (yes, I’m thinking of someone specific) using those stats to stoke fear and misrepresent the animals we love so much.

Every time I’m in the water with sharks, I feel like they’re teaching me something. If I’ve been bitten—and yes, I have—it’s because I was a slow learner.

One of my personal teaching experiences from a reef shark back in 2010.

In my 16-year career, after thousands of feeding dives with tigers, lemons, and other species, I’ve been bitten four times. All superficial thankfully. Nothing serious. I wear those scars like reminders for being a slow learner.

I’m grateful to have spent so much of my life with these animals. Grateful that I’ve made it this far. Grateful to be just good enough to still be here.

So why do we keep it quiet?

Because we love sharks.
Because when we get bitten, we know it’s our fault.
Because we don't want anyone blaming the shark for a mistake that was human.
Because when you work with animals—even dogs—you eventually get bitten.
And when you work with sharks, the risk is simply part of the deal.

David learning hard lessons of his own with a great hammerhead off Bimini, Bahamas.

It’s always been a game of—It’s not if... it’s when.

And that’s how it will always be.

So the next time a shark feeder gets bit, expect to hear NOTHING about it. Not on the news. Not on social. Not even in a blog post.

Because, well...
It’s still our dirty little secret.

Thanks for reading.
To my fellow feeders and dive family… stay safe, stay sharp, and love you guys.

My BEST and WORST Day at Tiger Beach!

Totally Gutted!
January 29, 2019, - So I dropped down for a feed on our second dive of the day and we had Patches the great hammerhead and a hand full of lemons buzzing around. No tigers. There was one lemon who was buzzing me pretty close that caught my attention. Her skin had a few wart looking spots on her and a crack on the left side of her gills. I started calling her Cracks. Just the name that came to mind. 

Anyway, Cracks approached close on her passes, and so I started giving her a nose rub. She really enjoyed it and came back for more. Before I knew it, Cracks came in for the rub and once I started, she would stop swimming and drop her tail onto the sand... Like, completely stop swimming. Of course Patches, would come in and push her off, but I really enjoyed this interaction with Cracks. So, every time she would swim up to me, I would rub her, and each time, she would drop. 

During one interaction, when she dropped, I just sort of stretched her out and allowed her to drop all the way down to lay down in front of me. This was the first time a swimming lemon shark, swam up to me, where I would rub her nose and she went completely still and drop down into the sand for me. It was one of the most amazing moments of my career. I was on fire. In all the years of working with lemon sharks, this had never happened before. It was a new behavior and I couldn’t be happier that I got to be a part of this magic.  A few people were around me with cameras and I couldnt wait to go up and check out what they captured. This moment, and this interaction, is the stuff I dream about when I think of sharks. 

THEN, reality hit my ass…  NO ONE had captured it on video, my heart sank. A few stills here and there and my buddy / safety diver Houston, got a short piece of it on video, but not the entire interactions, I was gutted. They all thought this was normal and didn’t think much of it. I saw everyone filming, so I assumed it was being filmed, but nope! Something, I need to make sure doesn’t happen next time. I will beg someone to capture it. Of course, if there is a next time?

Easily the COOLEST lemon shark interaction I have EVER had in my entire career diving at Tiger Beach, and sadly I don’t have the entire video to share with the world. I have it in my heart and mind, but showing people what is possible with these amazing animals is lost this time. Hopefully, I will get another opportunity with Cracks, but it is so rare that we do not have tiger sharks on our dives, I do not think that opportunity will happen again. The moment is with me forever, but I really would of loved to share that moment with you all.

Thank you for reading…

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