Orange County, San Diego, and L.A. peeps - Great White recently spotted in region

I’m not a Chicken Little type (and yes, the chances of encountering this thing are small), but if something happened to one of us (like it did in Solana Beach not too long ago) and I hadn’t put this out there then I’d feel like sh*t…

San Clemente — On January 8, 2009 Richard Thornton was walking along the beach near Mariposa Street in San Clemente. It was 11 AM and the sky was slightly overcast. The ocean was glassy smooth with the surf running 1 – 2 feet. No marine mammals were observed in the area. Thornton reported; *“I was called by a friend who told me that a Great White Shark was in the water by the pier and to hurry down to check it out. Another person I know had just seen possible the same shark at State Park 3 days prior. When I arrived we watched the shark thrash around in the water for several minutes. It was just outside the surf, 20 – 30 yards from shore. I estimate the shark to be 12 – 15 feet in length with huge fins, including a dorsal fin that was at least 18 inches high. It rolled at one point before lifting its entire head several feet out of the water. It was amazing how large It was. One surfer got out of the water right away and asked if it was a whale or something.” *Please report any shark sighting, encounter, or attack to the Shark Research Committee.

Source: http://www.sharkresearchcommittee.com/pacific_coast_shark_news.htm

Of course a great white was seen in the Eastern Pacific. It’s one of the places they live and breed. They are all over the place. So you needn’t feel bad if you didn’t report it and something bad happened.

Sightings are much more common than people think… we just don’t like to hear about them. Don’t click on this link if you don’t want to read about the reported 2008 sightings http://www.sharkresearchcommittee.com/…_shark_news_2008.htm. If nothing else, it will reveal how common sightings actually are

Reason most of us aren’t out swimming isn’t because of this shark sighting, it’s cuz the water is 55 frickin degrees.

ETA - OK, I will admit that reading thru the sightings from places where we OWS does give me a bit of the creeps, but this is my favorite entry… gotta love surfers

On August 16, 2008 Scott at SunsetSurf.com received the following report from Ian McCullen; “Today around 8:15 AM, just south of the point at Sunset near Gladstones, there were 10 – 12 other surfers witnessed a white shark breach. I myself only saw the whitewash ripples from the shark’s reentry. It was described by others as breaching the surface and turning over showing its white under belly. Everyone said it was large, approximately 10 – 12 feet in length. All the surfers stayed in the water but away from that part of the break.”


These were taken off of Newport Beach a few years ago

 ![http://tinypic.com/2gu9z60.jpg](http://tinypic.com/2gu9z60.jpg)Great White's attacking a dead whale being towed out to see(you can see the Newport Coast/Laguna Beach in the background)  

http://tinypic.com/2gud4pc.jpg

Easily 15+ footer’s

http://tinypic.com/2yws5s0.jpg

http://tinypic.com/3ycuvyp.jpg

Yes, great whites are present up and down the pacific coast.

http://tinypic.com/48xu55d.jpgThis is a great reference to see the size of the great white.

I remember that, there was even a video of some yahoos that had gone out and were standing on the dead whale when the whites were feeding
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Sweet! I live and surf here in San Clemente, and was surfing the past three days about 500 yards south of the pier with no knowledge of this. I surf about 250 days/year and have been for nearly 30 years. My shark “encounters” have been far outweighed by near accidents driving on the freeways and roads in those same 30 years.

They are pretty common up here in Nor Cal. In fact this was in today’s paper. More importantly, I had a Levi sighting today while out at lunch time out riding in his full Astana kit…getting closer to ToC time!!
IT’S SHARK SEASON Beware the great white While North Coast surfers, kayakers are aware of the lurking danger, sometimes it doesn’t hit home until a close call – or worse
http://srimg.ny.publicus.com/apps/pbcsi.dll/bilde?Site=SR&Date=20090112&Category=NEWS&ArtNo=901120302&Ref=AR&Profile=1349&MaxW=600&border=0 KENT PORTER / The Press Democrat Patrick Giambalvo of Petaluma slips off his board while surfing at Salmon Creek State Beach on Saturday. Anyone entering the water is advised to be on the lookout for great white sharks. “When you go out, and you have sharks on your mind, you just can’t stay focused,” he said. “So I tend not to worry.”
By BOB NORBERG
THE PRESS DEMOCRAT

Published: Monday, January 12, 2009 at 4:20 a.m.
Last Modified: Monday, January 12, 2009 at 4:20 a.m.
Being bitten by a great white shark six years ago has not kept Michael Casey out of the water, nor did seeing a shark again while surfing this past New Year’s Day near Bodega Dunes Campground.
Instead of giving up for the day, Casey went a quarter mile up the beach and went back in the water.
“I saw other guys out,” said Casey, a Santa Rosa assistant city attorney. “I just felt more comfortable, it was uneventful, I caught some good waves and it was a good way to start the new year.”
Casey’s encounter was not unusual. This is the time of the year when great white sharks can be seen cruising the North Coast looking for food.
“The whole area up here is part of the central area for great white sharks in the fall,” said Ben Vanden Heuvel, a Sonoma Coast State Beach ranger stationed at Salmon Creek. “They usually show up in late summer, early fall, they return here and feed. It is not uncommon to have encounters or sightings.”
It is best not to think about the sharks, said Patrick Giambalvo, who surfed Saturday at Salmon Creek State Beach.
“When you go out, and you have sharks on your mind, you just can’t stay focused,” he said. “So I tend not to worry.”
Supervising Park Ranger Damien Jones said some people at Salmon Creek reported seeing a shark they believed to be about 6 feet long.
On Dec. 20, kayaker Tony Johnson of Sacramento was run into by a shark in the ocean at Dillon Beach.
“It didn’t just bump. It hit my paddle very hard from behind,” Johnson said. “It was surprising – the speed of this animal and how fast it was in front of me 15 feet away. It is huge, but it can travel fast.”
Johnson, who had been kayaking for 15 years, was shaken from the encounter, even recounting it a week after the attack.
“I was never concerned about sharks, ever,” said Johnson, a member of the Bay Area Sea Kayakers. “To me I thought it would be a blessing or a good luck charm if I saw one from the safety of my boat. But nothing prepared me for this – it was so massive and fast.”
Sightings of great white sharks, which can grow to 20 feet in length, often result in beach closures.
“We post warnings saying a shark has been sighted, but people can enter the water at their own risk,” Vanden Heuvel said. “People who use the water out here know and you are entering into another food chain, if you will.”
In September, there were a pair of sightings days apart at Stinson Beach in Marin County, which caused that beach to be closed to swimmers and surfers for five days.
Attacks are rare and seldom fatal.
Guerneville surfer Royce Fraley was bitten in December 2006 at Dillon Beach, but the bites were not serious.
In September 2005, Megan Halavais was bitten in the leg by a great white at South Salmon Creek.
It was the same place where Casey, a body-boarder, was bitten in the leg in November 2002 and only a quarter of a mile where he saw the shark’s dorsal fin at about 7:30 a.m. New Year’s Day.
“I saw that thing, it was 30 yards away from me,” Casey said. “I had gotten outside, just outside where the waves were breaking … there was this nice glassy area and then I saw this dorsal fin, then I saw it roll, it just flopped over, it exposed its side fin.”
Casey said he recognized what it was immediately.
“My heart was pounding, I stopped dead in my tracks, I just turned in the opposite direction,” Casey said.
Casey said he and a fellow surfer left the water and drove to North Salmon Creek, where several other surfers were in the water and let them know what Casey has seen.
“I just wanted to get some surfing in,” Casey said. “I can’t explain it.”
Staff Writer Nathan Halverson contributed to this story. You can reach Staff Writer Bob Norberg at 521-5206 or bob.norberg@pressdemo
crat.com

We’re gonna need a bigger boat.

Dude, It is their yard and they got no fence. From Oz to America it is all freerange for the beasties. Enter with an open mind when you go in someone elses house. Same goes for the woods, there are bears in there, and big cats too. At sometimes in our lives we aren’t so much the apex of the food chain. I try not to worry too much, but when in doubt don’t go out. That shark you worry about and his buddies have probably been dropping in on SoCal for the last few thousand years.

I saw literally over 1,000 sharks in one day along the Gulf Coast between Panama City and Pensacola beach (80 miles or so). No big deal though. They were swimming between people, under rafts etc… Did not seem to be bothering anyone. I used to see quite a few sharks around Pensacola during my flights in the SAR helicopter. THey were everywhere. Even with all the sharks everywhere, there are very few attacks. No worries.

Mike

It’s still out there:)

http://www.ktla.com/...5367&feedID=1198
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Sweet! I live and surf here in San Clemente, and was surfing the past three days …
How can you be surfing out there when the water is so cold?

water temp is about 58, not too bad with a wetsuit on.

Sweet! I live and surf here in San Clemente, and was surfing the past three days …
How can you be surfing out there when the water is so cold?
Yeah, a wetsuit and booties and I’m TOASTY! Hey, I grew up bodyboarding in Maryland year round. The water temps there are in the 30’s with snow on the beach! Out here is practically TROPICAL compared to that! Here’s what THAT looks like:

http://graphics8.nytimes.com/packages/images/photo/2009/01/15/0116-superior/26203637.JPG
This shot is one I found of surfing on Lake Superior in Minnesota, but we used the same wetsuit gear in Maryland.

True HTFU right there… awesome!!!

(On a side note, It feels like august right now at the beach)

Yeah, a wetsuit and booties and I’m TOASTY! Hey, I grew up bodyboarding in Maryland year round. The water temps there are in the 30’s with snow on the beach! Out here is practically TROPICAL compared to that! Here’s what THAT looks like:

http://graphics8.nytimes.com/packages/images/photo/2009/01/15/0116-superior/26203637.JPG
This shot is one I found of surfing on Lake Superior in Minnesota, but we used the same wetsuit gear in Maryland.

My MOP’er Training Log

I remember surfing in the snow…I was young and crazy.

Looks like a nice left point break…for a lake.

PS: nice longboard, three stringer with a tail block.