Aggressive shark sighting postpones Huntington Seashore surf competitors

Officers in Huntington Seashore postponed a serious surf contest Thursday after recognizing an aggressively massive 10-foot shark within the ocean. Authorities are presently monitoring the waters for the “all clear” to reopen the world Friday afternoon.
The eighth annual Vans Jack’s Surfboards Professional, a World Surf League Qualifying Collection 4,000-level occasion, attracts a big crowd of spectators and surf fanatics to the five-day competitors and competition.
On Thursday, after the occasion ended for the day, a shark was noticed off lifeguard tower No. 3, positioned on the southern-most fringe of the seaside, mentioned Trevor McDonald, Marine Security Division Chief for the Huntington Seashore Hearth Division.
The species of the shark is unknown.
Aggressive shark conduct consists of circling, charging and gaping within the waters.
“When you’ve that mixture the place you’ve a bigger shark, and also you observe aggressive conduct, we take precaution and carried out a 24-hour water closure,” he mentioned.
If officers, in partnership with World Surf League, don’t see any extra shark exercise Friday, they anticipate reopening the seaside at 4:30 p.m.
“The security of our surfers and workers is our prime precedence, and in accordance with Huntington Seashore Metropolis Protocol, the occasion will stay on maintain for twenty-four hours,” mentioned Brian Robbins, World Surf League Tour Supervisor. “Competitors will resume as soon as the water security staff and native authorities verify the competitors space is evident.”
Town’s Marine Security Division has workers on jet skis and lifeguard boats to assist safe the water and montior for any extra shark exercise in the course of the present closure, McDonald mentioned.
“We even have drones that we’ve been in a position to put up within the air to have an aerial view, and we’re working with our Huntington Seashore Police Division and their police helicopter so we will proceed with monitoring the world,” he mentioned.
Recognizing the 10-foot shark isn’t a typical sighting for the native Marine Security Division.
“We do typically see smaller juvenile sharks, and while you simply have a small juvenile shark below eight ft that’s not displaying any sort of aggressive conduct, that doesn’t set off a detailed like this,” McDonald mentioned. “We solely have the closures triggered once we see above eight ft mixed with that aggressive conduct.”
The subsequent name for surfers within the competitors will likely be Saturday at 6:30 a.m., with a doable 7:00 a.m. begin.
This current shark sighting is on par with what Lengthy Seashore Shark Lab Director Chris Lowe predicted could be a “very sharky summer time,” brought on by a shift in hotter temperatures that begin a lot earlier within the 12 months.
In March, an 8-foot nice white was noticed circling a surfer in Newport Seashore, which prompted a right away shutdown of the shoreline.
One other sighting and shark rescue occurred in April when a fisherman in Hermosa Seashore freed a juvenile nice white shark caught on a fishing line.
