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Flew in helicopters all up and down the coast, thier are 100s of sharks within 100 yards of people every day! Certain times of the year they feed along the coast, especially near Florida were I was stationed
@@BlckCloud73 watch yourself in Myrtle Beach. They keep the shark history quiet. Bull sharks I believe are a problem this season. Seen by people up high in hotel balconies in water as low as 3 ft.
Yeah surfing SC & NC in the Summer is often risky, especially with boiling bait balls in the lineup. Plus whenever there’s surf, the water is always murky.
There are lots of Great whites out there too but I don't think they are as big of a risk as other sharks. If you look at Malibu artist RU-vid page he shows tons of Great whites right near swimmers and surfers. They are always there we just don't see them.
@@terrell07981 Yeah I grew up in Orange County & SD and have seen a large up tic in great white sightings over the years. I’ve been living in Japan for a year now and haven’t seen any sharks or heard of any attacks but I know they’re here to. Still gotta surf though, it’s worth the risk.
@@stuarthayward2220 definitely. I'm not a surfer but I love to snorkel and just love the ocean in general. Surf fishing wading out chest deep in the water at night. It's a risk but I feel more in danger driving down the road while everyone is looking at their phone instead of the road. Lol
Gee, I have lived in Myrtle Beach for 18 years. Most of the time when you see a fish jump like that - unless you clearly can identify the fin, they are dolphins. Not that sharks are not there, many times they hang around the piers to grab what fishermen throw away when cleaning their catch, but I don't see a shark in this video at all. Tourists often don't know the difference! 🙄 🙄
That is definitely a shark. Looks like a mako to me with that very sharp snout. After pausing it at a different clip I'm like 99% sure it's a mako. You can see it's mouth and big eyes with pointed snout.
When the dolphins die the sharks take over the ecosystem. Dolphins keep shark populations in check. Maybe import some more hardy Dolphins in your area.
How does this one video make you think the dolphins have all died and the shark population is unchecked lol. The dolphins and sharks coexist in the same habitat
I live only 2 blocks from the beach here in Myrtle Beach and I spend a lot of time on the beach and I have only seen a pod of dolphins and I have been here for 7 years