We don't tend to get aggressive sharks in the Salish Sea.
In Australia we also have crocodiles, blue ringed octopus, beaked sea snakes, cone snails, and stonefish; any of them could kill you while swimming if you wanted to worry about it.
and with a bottle of Joy also shower. Been doing it all my life, never a real problem. .
WifeyB
Shower? I jump in the water, come out and give my body a taste of Joy and jump back in, come out and rinse with fresh water.
Is that a bath or shower?
One our second trip to the Abacos way back in 2003 we started back across the Stream. The water was like glass. I asked everyone if they wanted me to estimate when we were about half way across and I would stop the boat for us to swim. Everyone excitedly said yes.
So we got to the half way point and I slowed down. The water was a deep deep royal blue. I asked if they wanted me to stop and switch off the engines and, after asking me what depth it was and then a pause, the agreement was - let's keep going!
Smart children I have!
I`ve never seen a shark in enclosed waters in Sydney, but I`ve seen one tracking towards Broken Bay, where we cruise. They are definitely in Sydney Harbor, a group on a shark tagging program caught far more than they needed to tag. A Mako was caught recently too.
I will swim, but with care, and not at dusk/dawn,that`s asking for trouble.
It's not the amount of water under you that matters, it's the amount over you. Is there any difference between swimming in 50 feet and 2000 feet?
Men are 9 times more likely to be attacked than women!
Shallow water has a much higher nutrient density, and can therefore support more marine life. More marine life = More fish = more predators.
Shark attacks are really really rare. When you think of the millions of people that go in the water in the US, and the fact that the avereage fatal shark attacks per year is about 1... I'm sure we've all seen those posters that list things that kill more people than sharks. ( Falling coconuts, crushed by vending machine, lightning, cow, bee...etc )
By avoiding spearfishing, swimming at dawn/dusk, low visibility water, near baitfish( and diving birds) you can increase your odds to the point where its not worth worrying about.
WifeyB...if all else fails, just swim with your husband. Men are 9 times more likely to be attacked than women! ( for the oversensitive...that was a joke )