Every Time She Sees The Diver The Shark Approaches Her For A Cuddle


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Rick Anderson must put on an oxygen tank, insert a regulator into his mouth, and jump into the water off the shore of Nobbys Beach in New South Wales, Australia, in order to see his friend.

The 6-foot female Port Jackson shark is Anderson’s pal. Anderson knows her based on her marks even though she has no name.

Credit: RICK ANDERSON

And she always recognizes him, according to Anderson.

“I started playing with her about seven years ago when she was just a pup about 6 inches long,” Anderson told The Dodo in 2017. “I approached her carefully so as not to spook her, then began to gently pat her. Once she got used to me, I would cradle her in my hand and talk soothingly to her through my regulator.”

Credit: RICK ANDERSON

“I did this each time in the first season she was here,” he said. “Then over the following seasons, she’d recognize me and would swim up to me for a pat and cuddle. She soon got used to me — to the point where she will swim up to me when I’m going past, and tap me on the legs until I hold my arms out for her to lay on for a cuddle.”

Credit: RICK ANDERSON

Most divers who witness this for the first time find it unbelievable, he continued. “I basically treat them as I would a dog — I don’t feed her or any of the other sharks I play with.”

Credit: RICK ANDERSON

Port Jackson sharks are a lot smaller than great white sharks, but any kind of shark tends to ignite fear, especially as the media often wrongly portrays sharks as dangerous to people. In reality, people are far more dangerous to sharks — it’s estimated that people kill 73 million sharks per year.

Credit: RICK ANDERSON

Anderson, a dive instructor who has been scuba diving for more than 30 years, thinks that his connection with this shark from Port Jackson will reduce people’s fear of sharks.

Credit: RICK ANDERSON

The most common misperception about sharks, according to Anderson, is that they are all cold-blooded murderers waiting for humans to enter the sea so they can eat them.

Anderson dives with a variety of sharks in addition to Port Jacksons, including banjo sharks, grey nurse sharks, tiger sharks, bull sharks, hammerhead sharks, and even the occasional great white shark.

Credit: RICK ANDERSON

“I have always felt comfortable swimming with these animals,” he said.


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