Snorkeling with Sharks on the Big Island of Hawaii

in Pinmapplelast month

What a week for sharks here in Hawaii! On our first snorkel at Shark Fin Rock, our small boat noticed a dolphin about 30ft away from me at the surface. So I quickly headed that way. I caught a glimpse of it as it swam away, but then was happy to see another headed my way. However, I quickly realized it was not another dolphin, it was a big pelagic shark! It looked like a sandbar shark while I was in the water, but after looking at the photos I'm not quite sure. It may be an oceanic black tip. I followed it for a minute, then it turned right towards me. I snagged a couple of photos with my little olympus tough waterproof point and shoot camera.

P3186847.JPG
Rare encounter with a large shark off in the blue.

P3186848.JPG
This was a about a six to seven foot shark swimming with me.

P3206971.JPG
Seeing white tip reef sharks is much more common for snorkelers around Hawaii. We saw six of them at our snorkel spots this week!

P3206972.JPG
It is still rare to find even white tips, I was pretty excited.

P3227214.JPG
I've been checking under this ledge at Kealakekua Bay all season to see if a shark was there. Today there finally was! And a second shark came in to join while we watched.

P3227222.JPG

P3227227.JPG
The two white tips in the cave came out, swam in circles, then cruised off into the deep.

P3227258.JPG
Later in the snorkel we were joined by another white tip reef shark in about two feet of water! I had not seen them this shallow at Kealakekua before.

P3227260.JPG
White tip reef sharks in the shallows.

P3227261.JPG
Shark swimming right under a snorkeler at Kealakekua Bay.

P3186846.JPG
Larger shark spotted off in the deep.

P3227262.JPG
White tip reef sharks cruising over the reef.

Because we were seeing so many sharks this week, I gave the guests my 'Truth About Sharks" presentation one evening. It was a noticeable change in their shark tolerance to acceptance to excitement over the course of the week. By the end, if someone shouted 'shark!', all of our group would come swimming over to join in the viewing fun!

Check out the location of Kealakekua Bay where we snorkeled here on pinmapple's interactive blog map: [//]:# (!pinmapple 19.48125 lat -155.93276 long Shark Snorkel d3scr)

Keep traveling and learning,

  • Dai Mar
Sort:  

Congratulations, your post has been added to Pinmapple! 🎉🥳🍍

Did you know you have your own profile map?
And every post has their own map too!

Want to have your post on the map too?

  • Go to Pinmapple
  • Click the get code button
  • Click on the map where your post should be (zoom in if needed)
  • Copy and paste the generated code in your post (Hive only)
  • Congrats, your post is now on the map!

Wow it's really amazing to see those beautiful creatures in the ocean

Hiya, @ybanezkim26 here, just swinging by to let you know that this post made it into our Honorable Mentions in Travel Digest #2164.

Your post has been manually curated by the @pinmapple team. If you like what we're doing, please drop by to check out all the rest of today's great posts and consider supporting other authors like yourself and us so we can keep the project going!

Become part of our travel community:

This is awesome- I’m heading to Hawaii to do the same thing!!! Love sharks.

Let me know how it goes!