Which sail or boards work best to frighten off sharks.
My thinking is a cammed sailed. The pop of the rotation at the gybe or tack sending shock waves thru the water should be enough to scare the sharks away...
I doubt there's been any serious research around this, maybe for surfers sitting in the water? A good catapult will probably do the trick.
Have you seen some grey suits somewhere recently?
Nothing of late, just been reading the papers and I need to replace a couple of sails. What to choose???
Which sail or boards work best to frighten off sharks.
Skateboards and land yacht sails. And sails and boards kept in the shed definately don't seem to attrack sharks.
I used to have a Pryde Combat years ago that had a graphic of a dude poised to throw a spear. Not sure that sharks would necessarily make the association though.
I used to have a Pryde Combat years ago that had a graphic of a dude poised to throw a spear. Not sure that sharks would necessarily make the association though.
That's more of a whaling thing, sharking is something entirely different...
Nazsail said: My thinking is a cammed sailed. The pop of the rotation at the gybe or tack sending shock waves thru the water should be enough to scare the sharks away...
Sorry, completely wrong! The pop of the cam indeed sends shock waves through the water, but the shark thinks that it’s a fish in distress, floating on its side, flapping its tail, so the shark heads straight to where the sound originated.
This is the real reason that cammed sails are becoming more and more unpopular, due to the declining population of windsurfers who use these sails.
Interesting... If it is about the sound matching flapping of a fish, then cammed sails should be safer. Once popped we tend not to be in same place for long. Whereas, I see the rotatonal equipped sailers flapping their sails basically in the same place, trying to get going. Population might swing back in favour of a cammed quiver, given time and declining fish stocks.
Nazsail said: My thinking is a cammed sailed. The pop of the rotation at the gybe or tack sending shock waves thru the water should be enough to scare the sharks away...
Sorry, completely wrong! The pop of the cam indeed sends shock waves through the water, but the shark thinks that it’s a fish in distress, floating on its side, flapping its tail, so the shark heads straight to where the sound originated.
This is the real reason that cammed sails are becoming more and more unpopular, due to the declining population of windsurfers who use these sails.
I dont know wether to laugh or cry
I always surf with a buddy. That gives me a 50-50 chance!
Sail with a mate who is slower or who spends a lot of time water starting ![]()
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I always surf with a buddy. That gives me a 50-50 chance!
Sail with a mate who is slower or who spends a lot of time water starting
slower and bleeding through an open wound.