Wednesday, November 2, 2011

Surfer from water competition

The world's top surfers gathered this week for the first-ever ASP World Tour competition in San Francisco. They knew they'd have to contend with possible fog, bone-chilling wind and water temperatures.

They did not figure on sharks coming into play, but only four heats into Tuesday's opening round, Hawaii's Dusty Payne was frightened out of the water after spotting what he described as "the biggest fin I've ever seen in my life coming at me."

The surfer assured, "I've seen dolphins and it wasn't a dolphin."

Payne was competing against South Africa's Jordy Smith, who remained in the water for the remaining five minutes and easily won the heat.

Lifeguards and rangers patrolled the lineup in an inflatable boat during a brief interruption and as the Rip Curl Search competition resumed. But one Bay Area shark expert questioned the wisdom of holding a surf contest in San Francisco at a time of year when dozens of white sharks are gathered at the Farallon Islands, 25 miles offshore, to fatten up on seals and sea lions.  

"You wouldn't hold a blind hop-scotch competition on the interstate freeway. You just wouldn't do it because it's insane," said Patric Douglas, a commercial shark-diving tour operator and CEO of the Shark Diver company. "You could also say it's a middle finger to the white sharks, because it's their habitual range, and the arrogance to assume that nothing is going to go on ... the fact that they saw a fin should have closed that contest out."

San Francisco is within the so-called Red Triangle, which extends from Bodega Bay north of San Francisco to just beyond the Farallon Islands, to just south of Monterey. The triangle is notorious white shark habitat.

On Saturday a surfer was bitten by what is believed to have been a large white shark just north of Monterey. He sustained moderate injuries to his shoulder and neck and the shark tore a 19-inch chunk from his board. Since 1926, according to the Florida Museum of Natural History's International Shark Attack File, there have been four unprovoked attacks off San Francisco, 10 off Marin County and nine off Monterey. The last fatal attack off San Francisco occurred in 1959.

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