Shark Cage Diving in Cape Town


Sharks are the most commonly feared ocean creatures and are the reason behind many beautiful beaches being closed with thousands of swimmers refusing to leave the safety of the shoreline. Perhaps the most fearsome extreme sport, Shark Cage Diving takes you into the territory of the world’s scariest predator, giving you the adrenaline rush of a lifetime.

Shark Cage Diving is one of the Cape’s most popular extreme tourist activities. Shark Cage diving in Cape Town allows you to come up close and personal with these formidable creatures, whilst safely being out of the reach of their infamous jaws.

Great White Shark Passing cage

There are many reasons why sharks are feared. Their teeth and what some think evil looking eyes are perhaps at the forefront of our minds. Images from famous films of fins slicing through the water and scary music accompanying sharks have most of us cowering at the thought of them. Endless photography and video recordings of sharks moving quickly and brutally catching their prey work in our imaginations, and stories reported and passed around have told us that these creatures won’t stop at anything if they are hungry. The fear and panic sharks create in us makes the latest and possibly the most terrifying extreme activity Shark Cage Diving so compelling.

Cape Town has a healthy and growing Great White shark population due to their protection and conservation. With a huge seal population in and around False Bay and Gansbaai, sharks enjoy the Cape for breeding and feeding. Speculation surrounds Shark Cage Diving in Cape Town as its impact on the shark and seal population is unknown. The most controversial speculation however is whether shark cage diving associates humans with food, making it likely that sharks will hunt humans in the future. This has been researched since the beginning of the industry 15 years ago and nothing to date has drawn a connection between the two. Although it is important to consider the impacts on the environment, sharks and people are not directly harmed by shark cage diving.

Cape Town is home to many Shark Cage Diving businesses and invites visitors to have the once in a lifetime opportunity to encounter the terrifying Great White Shark and to learn more about them. The trip will hopefully dispel the myths behind this beautiful predator and teach people that sharks are not mindless killers but incredibly intelligent and advanced predators. The most popular regions in the Cape for Shark Cage Diving include Gansbaai and False Bay. False Bay has been the focus of many documentaries due to the natural hunting activity that occurs around Seal Island. -(nonsense), and Gansbaai is known as the Capital of Great White Shark Cage diving in the world. Great White Sharks have been known to grow up to an astounding 6 meters in length.

Great White Shark by the cage

Shark Cage diving calls all adrenaline junkies, tourists, and animal lovers to witness Great White Sharks in their own territory. Whether you are facing a life-long fear, are in it for the adrenaline rush created by being up close and personal with the world’s most famous sea predator, or are simply curious about these terrifying yet majestic creatures, Shark Cage Diving in Cape Town is an experience that you’ll never forget.


Source: White Shark Diving Tours
Shark Cage Diving in Cape Town


 

Shark Cage Diving as an Education


Shark cage diving is not only an extreme sport for adrenaline junkies but allows us to come up close to sharks in their natural habitat so that we can understand them better. Although sharks are one of the world’s most dangerous predators and it’s easy to imagine them at their scariest, sharks are also graceful and majestic sea creatures that have an important role to play in the environment. Shark cage diving offers the opportunity for us to witness sharks in their own territory and to come closer to acknowledging that there is more to these animals than meets the eye.


Great White Shark near Cape Town


Sharks are probably one of the most misunderstood predators. But without sharks the sea would be overpopulated with seals and fish, resulting in an unbalanced eco-system: sharks are carnivorous, one of the main factors leading to their formidable reputations as some sharks such as Tiger Sharks will eat almost anything. One of the world’s largest Great White Shark populations can be found in Cape Town, due to the abundance of seals that live on Seal Island and by Shark Alley in Gansbaai.

The seals leave the island to feed in the waters however whilst doing so, many are preyed on by sharks. If there wasn’t a large shark population along the coastline, eventually there would be an overpopulation of seals and not enough fish to feed them. Great White Sharks are roaming animals and new sharks are seen in the waters of the cape every day. The sharks travel vast distances to feed and breed but there is still an abundance of information to learn about these apex predators.


It has been argued that shark cage diving encourages sharks to hunt and feed on humans as diving companies that go into the waters throw fish and chum into the ocean to entice the sharks to come closer, it has been debated that sharks will learn to associate humans with being fed.  Fortunately as mentioned Great White Sharks are roaming animals and do not stay in one particular area for a lifetime or even a long period of time. Great White Sharks have been tagged in the Cape in the past were spotted moving up the east coast of Africa only weeks after being tagged in Cape Town. One famous shark (Nicole) was tagged in Gansbaai and after 99 days made it to Australia. If Great White Sharks were territorial and resident in one place then there may be cause for concern but thankfully they are not.


For a very long time Great White Sharks have been coming up to fishing boats as all fishing boats are basically baiting. There is no difference between the fishing boats and shark cage diving boats from baiting except that the shark boats are there to observe nature and the environment and educate people.   Shark Cage diving has allowed researchers and documenters to come up close to sharks whilst remaining safe from their fierce jaws. Safely behind bars in steel cages, they have been able to make recordings and watch how sharks behave when they are in their own territory.

Great White Shark Cage Diving

False Bay and Gansbaai have become a hot spot for photographers and documenters over the last decades as the shark population is large;  incredible photographs and footage have been taken of sharks breeching and hunting their prey.

Lastly, shark cage diving invites tourists and locals to get a different perspective of sharks. Without a doubt the experience will give you an adrenaline rush, but it will also allow you to repel the fears and misconceptions about sharks, and will give you an opportunity to have an inside look on how sharks behave underwater.


Source: Shark Cage Diving South Africa


 

 
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