On Aug 11 Diving
guide Dave Marcel had been taking tourists out on Elbow Reef off Key
Largo, Florida for years - allowing them to interact with the reef's
wildlife including the 300-pound nurse shark.
These sharks are not usually aggressive, and love being petted.
Marcel would prove their harmlessness by kissing the sharks, and then allowing the tourists to do the same.
Until the day one of the sharks bit back.
The shark bite was caught on camera and aired on Discovery Channel as a part of this year's 'Shark Week.'
Marcel's key mistake that day was flipping the shark upside down before planting a smooch - something he hadn't done before.
Marcel
didn't realize that since the shark's eyes are on top of it's head, it
wouldn't see him and would assume he was being fed fish.
Instead of passively receiving the peck, the shark bit down with all 500 of it's razor-sharp teeth.
Lesson of the bite: don't kiss a shark Spider-Man style.
Once the shark realized it was eating human flesh and not fish meat, it lost interest and swam off.
'He spit me out. I guess he said I didn't taste good,' Marcel told the Discovery Channel.
Discovery
Channel's Jeff Kurr also pointed out to the Huffington Post that while
these sharks are docile, their anatomy is rigged to do major damage.
He said nurse sharks can suck a conch right out of it's shell.
Luckily
for Marcel, the bite didn't leave his face deformed. But it still
required 285 stitches. He compared the painful bite to a firecracker
going off in his mouth.
Marcel, not about to let a shark bite get him down, was out in the water again three days later.
'You
can not be a wild animal handler without having the expectation that
you will be bitten,' Marcel said. 'It's a part of the job.'
No comments:
Post a Comment