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| The shark dives all take
place in Gansbaai, which is a fishing village located in the Western Cape.
It takes a couple of hours to get there from Cape Town. Gansbaai is the
world's capital for great white shark viewing. |
While we were very lucky
with the weather, most people on board our small vessel managed to get sea
sick, and a few members even threw up. Yuka got sick very early on, though
she did not throw. As a result, we did not manage to take many photos. |
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| Also, I decided not to buy
a disposable underwater camera from the White Shark Ecoventures people, and
this turned out to be a bad idea. The preferred option would of course be to
bring a digital camera equipped for underwater filming, but I unfortunately
did not think that far ahead. |
In total, we saw five
different white sharks, the largest being about 3 meters long. One
individual writing on Tripadvisor.com commented that he saw over 20 great
whites, thus it is possible that we were not particularly lucky in terms of
the number of sharks that we saw. |
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| After returning to shore,
our guide took us to a viewpoint from which we could see some right whales.
The right whale is one of the only types of whale that will swim within
sight from shore and thus allow for land based viewing. |
Being in the cage is not
the least bit scary. The white sharks simply glide by beautifully and have
zero interest in you. In order to make the sharks come close to us, the crew
used a tuna head as bait, but it was pretty clear that the shark was
interested in the tuna bait and not in us. However, I assume this is not
always true, otherwise we would not have needed a cage. |