Scariest shark dives
The most thrilling places to go jaw-to-jaw with nature’s nastiest fish
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You don’t have to be Jacques Cousteau to go scuba-diving in shark-infested waters.
Just ask his son, fellow sea-explorer Jean-Michel Cousteau: “I took the Duchess of York, who was afraid of water,” he says. “In three days, this incredible lady learned to scuba dive, put a chain-mail suit on, and went and fed sharks in the Bahamas.”
She’s not alone. Not by a long shot. “If somebody said twenty years ago the hottest thing in scuba diving was going to be shark diving, it would have been quite amazing,” says National Geographic underwater photographer David Doubilet. “It used to be very hard to get shots of sharks.”
Today, there are scores of jaw-dropping shark-sighting hotspots in the Bahamas and beyond, with guided tours ranging from simple, inexpensive snorkeling trips off the coast of Mexico to swanky seven-day yacht-propelled scuba excursions in the Galapagos Islands.
Sinking our teeth into this adventurous trend, we’ve assembled a panel of noted shark experts to compile a list of the world’s scariest shark dives.
Bring your best waterproof camera. And try to remember to use it.
“I took away my camera because I just couldn't believe the size,” says five-foot-five former model turned underwater photographer Caterina Gennaro about her first up-close encounter with an approximately 21-foot-long great white shark. “It didn’t look real. It looked prehistoric, like a dinosaur,” she says. “People think great whites are scary looking, but when you watch them under water it’s amazing — they’re the most stunning animals.”
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Second is so-called Shark Alley near the Dyer Islands off the southern coast of South Africa, where boatloads of shark seekers from neighboring Gansbaai come to get chummy with the native great whites.
Third and by far tops in the Western Hemisphere is Guadelupe Island off the coast of Mexico.
When dealing with the mythologized man-eater that inspired "Jaws", most operators put divers in protective steel cages. But not always. “I never ever use a cage for diving with sharks,” says South African tour guide Mark Addison.
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Aggressor Fleet The pristine waters of the Galapagos Islands are stocked with all kinds of sharks, especially around Darwin Island. “The best way to describe Darwin is like an underwater airport terminal with visitors flying in, spending some time there, and then moving on back into the blue — lots of hammerheads, eagle rays, dolphins, mantas, Galapagos sharks, white-tip reef sharks, turtles, and, of course, the whale sharks,” says Potenski. |
Is it truly safe to go into the water? “Accidents,” as many experts put it, are rare. “You are more likely to be killed by a falling Coca-Cola machine than a shark bite,” says longtime shark researcher Dr. Samuel Gruber of the Bimini Biological Field Station in the Bahamas.
According to Erich Ritter of the Global Shark Attack File, none of the more than 130 reported shark attacks worldwide since 2006 have involved divers on a guided tour.
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Stuart Cove's You might recognize the tropical scenery of Nassau, Bahamas as the setting for "Jaws: The Revenge". But don’t expect to spot any gargantuan great white sharks trolling the coral, although tigers, hammerheads, and Caribbean reef sharks are common. |
Some experts actually recommend tour operators with prior bad-encounter experience, such as Fox or Hartman. “They do a fabulous job,” says Cousteau, “because they know what not to do.”
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Some tours are more challenging than others, recommended for intermediate to advanced divers only. (Some also require divers to provide their own equipment.) Less experienced divers might be better served by snorkel trips or surface-level cage-dives fed with hookah-style air-supply lines.
Naturally, shark populations in any given area are susceptible to seasonal changes, weather conditions, and, perhaps most importantly, fishing. Poachers are notorious for hunting sharks for their fins, considered a delicacy in some parts of Asia, a practice that has decimated the shark populations in some areas.
Preservationists suggest that shark tourism may be part of the solution. “If you kill a shark, you might get a few hundred dollars for the fin,” says Dr. Gruber. “But that same shark is worth hundreds of thousands of dollars in the water at one of these shark dives.”
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