Carrabelle AJs and bull sharks, 5-25
Posted: May 26th, 2004, 1:45 pm
(Cross posted from Spearboard.com, in case any of the references sound out of place)
We ran out of Carrabelle for a quick "after work" trip on Tuesday. We stopped off at O tower first, to try for some snapper. A couple of weeks ago it was covered in huge mangroves. Not this time though. We then headed on over to the Yamaha to kill a few AJs.
The AJs were hanging out a bit deeper than usual, but we were able to kill a 38" AJ freediving. Since it was getting late in the day, we decided to cheat, so we put our tanks on and went on down. Spotted a few big gags, but they slipped back up in the barge before we could get any of them. We decided to circle the barge looking for more of them, and when we came around the north end there was another big school of AJs. I picked off a nice 37" and put him on the stringer. There was a lot of blood, and I jokingly thought to myself, "Hope this doesn't bring in the sharks." (Two big bulls ran me off the Yamaha on Sunday when I was freediving it.)
About 30 seconds later, a nice big bull shows up, and within 30 seconds another one was on the other side of us. They started circling and dodging in and out, coming as close in as 5-10 feet of us. My dive buddy and I decided to start a slow ascent, backs to each other. As we did, more bulls started showing up. Given that we had overlapping fields of view, we're not sure of the total shark count, but it was at least 9 of the rascals, all 7-8 ft or better.
We were paying too much attention to the sharks and not enough to the location of the boat (vis sucked anyway), and ended up surfacing about 100 yards behind the boat. After a nice surface swim, against the current, prodding the sharks off with the spear gun (they were getting way too close for comfort at that point), we made it back to the boat. We decided to call it a day, with two AJs and a 12" mangrove (he "ran interference" for a 30" gag, I wouldn't have shot him on purpose). If it hadn't been for the sharks, we could have had our limit of 4 AJs easily, plus a few big gags.
I can't find his post to link to it, but a big thanks goes out to Spear One (I think it was him, can't find the post, so not entirely sure) for his informative post about how to deal with sharks. It really did help to take an aggressive posture towards them and prod them with the spear gun. It probably would have worked a lot better if there'd been fewer sharks to deal with. I also made sure not to drop my stringer, even though they made it pretty clear that it was the AJ they were interested in. This was my first real encounter with aggressive(ish) sharks, and the instructions also helped provide me with a level of confidence, in that I was not totally unprepared for it. I think I'll be ordering a few of Ray's powerheads now.
Here's a pic of Sean and Jon bringing back the AJ they killed freediving:

Myself, Sean, and Jon with our catch (photo credit goes to our buddy Tom who volunteered to be designated bubble watcher):

We ran out of Carrabelle for a quick "after work" trip on Tuesday. We stopped off at O tower first, to try for some snapper. A couple of weeks ago it was covered in huge mangroves. Not this time though. We then headed on over to the Yamaha to kill a few AJs.
The AJs were hanging out a bit deeper than usual, but we were able to kill a 38" AJ freediving. Since it was getting late in the day, we decided to cheat, so we put our tanks on and went on down. Spotted a few big gags, but they slipped back up in the barge before we could get any of them. We decided to circle the barge looking for more of them, and when we came around the north end there was another big school of AJs. I picked off a nice 37" and put him on the stringer. There was a lot of blood, and I jokingly thought to myself, "Hope this doesn't bring in the sharks." (Two big bulls ran me off the Yamaha on Sunday when I was freediving it.)
About 30 seconds later, a nice big bull shows up, and within 30 seconds another one was on the other side of us. They started circling and dodging in and out, coming as close in as 5-10 feet of us. My dive buddy and I decided to start a slow ascent, backs to each other. As we did, more bulls started showing up. Given that we had overlapping fields of view, we're not sure of the total shark count, but it was at least 9 of the rascals, all 7-8 ft or better.
We were paying too much attention to the sharks and not enough to the location of the boat (vis sucked anyway), and ended up surfacing about 100 yards behind the boat. After a nice surface swim, against the current, prodding the sharks off with the spear gun (they were getting way too close for comfort at that point), we made it back to the boat. We decided to call it a day, with two AJs and a 12" mangrove (he "ran interference" for a 30" gag, I wouldn't have shot him on purpose). If it hadn't been for the sharks, we could have had our limit of 4 AJs easily, plus a few big gags.
I can't find his post to link to it, but a big thanks goes out to Spear One (I think it was him, can't find the post, so not entirely sure) for his informative post about how to deal with sharks. It really did help to take an aggressive posture towards them and prod them with the spear gun. It probably would have worked a lot better if there'd been fewer sharks to deal with. I also made sure not to drop my stringer, even though they made it pretty clear that it was the AJ they were interested in. This was my first real encounter with aggressive(ish) sharks, and the instructions also helped provide me with a level of confidence, in that I was not totally unprepared for it. I think I'll be ordering a few of Ray's powerheads now.

Here's a pic of Sean and Jon bringing back the AJ they killed freediving:

Myself, Sean, and Jon with our catch (photo credit goes to our buddy Tom who volunteered to be designated bubble watcher):
