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  • Great White tries to attack Motor on Back of Boat<br />
<br />
Approximately eight kilometers off the coast of Gansbaai, quite close to Dyer Iceland / South Africa, a great white shark tried to attack the outboard motor of our boat.<br />
<br />
The touch-sensitive area of the nose of the shark has unusual consequences: The shark opens its mouth and is relatively far from the water. In slow motion, it remains for a moment, then again to return back to his element ..<br />
©Klaus Jos/Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Shark_attack10.jpg
  • Great White tries to attack Motor on Back of Boat<br />
<br />
Approximately eight kilometers off the coast of Gansbaai, quite close to Dyer Iceland / South Africa, a great white shark tried to attack the outboard motor of our boat.<br />
<br />
The touch-sensitive area of the nose of the shark has unusual consequences: The shark opens its mouth and is relatively far from the water. In slow motion, it remains for a moment, then again to return back to his element ..<br />
©Klaus Jos/Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Shark_attack12.jpg
  • Great White tries to attack Motor on Back of Boat<br />
<br />
Approximately eight kilometers off the coast of Gansbaai, quite close to Dyer Iceland / South Africa, a great white shark tried to attack the outboard motor of our boat.<br />
<br />
The touch-sensitive area of the nose of the shark has unusual consequences: The shark opens its mouth and is relatively far from the water. In slow motion, it remains for a moment, then again to return back to his element ..<br />
©Klaus Jos/Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Shark_attack11.jpg
  • Great White tries to attack Motor on Back of Boat<br />
<br />
Approximately eight kilometers off the coast of Gansbaai, quite close to Dyer Iceland / South Africa, a great white shark tried to attack the outboard motor of our boat.<br />
<br />
The touch-sensitive area of the nose of the shark has unusual consequences: The shark opens its mouth and is relatively far from the water. In slow motion, it remains for a moment, then again to return back to his element ..<br />
©Klaus Jos/Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Shark_attack09.jpg
  • Great White tries to attack Motor on Back of Boat<br />
<br />
Approximately eight kilometers off the coast of Gansbaai, quite close to Dyer Iceland / South Africa, a great white shark tried to attack the outboard motor of our boat.<br />
<br />
The touch-sensitive area of the nose of the shark has unusual consequences: The shark opens its mouth and is relatively far from the water. In slow motion, it remains for a moment, then again to return back to his element ..<br />
©Klaus Jos/Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Shark_attack08.jpg
  • Great White tries to attack Motor on Back of Boat<br />
<br />
Approximately eight kilometers off the coast of Gansbaai, quite close to Dyer Iceland / South Africa, a great white shark tried to attack the outboard motor of our boat.<br />
<br />
The touch-sensitive area of the nose of the shark has unusual consequences: The shark opens its mouth and is relatively far from the water. In slow motion, it remains for a moment, then again to return back to his element ..<br />
©Klaus Jos/Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Shark_attack07.jpg
  • Great White tries to attack Motor on Back of Boat<br />
<br />
Approximately eight kilometers off the coast of Gansbaai, quite close to Dyer Iceland / South Africa, a great white shark tried to attack the outboard motor of our boat.<br />
<br />
The touch-sensitive area of the nose of the shark has unusual consequences: The shark opens its mouth and is relatively far from the water. In slow motion, it remains for a moment, then again to return back to his element ..<br />
©Klaus Jos/Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Shark_attack06.jpg
  • Great White tries to attack Motor on Back of Boat<br />
<br />
Approximately eight kilometers off the coast of Gansbaai, quite close to Dyer Iceland / South Africa, a great white shark tried to attack the outboard motor of our boat.<br />
<br />
The touch-sensitive area of the nose of the shark has unusual consequences: The shark opens its mouth and is relatively far from the water. In slow motion, it remains for a moment, then again to return back to his element ..<br />
©Klaus Jos/Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Shark_attack05.jpg
  • Great White tries to attack Motor on Back of Boat<br />
<br />
Approximately eight kilometers off the coast of Gansbaai, quite close to Dyer Iceland / South Africa, a great white shark tried to attack the outboard motor of our boat.<br />
<br />
The touch-sensitive area of the nose of the shark has unusual consequences: The shark opens its mouth and is relatively far from the water. In slow motion, it remains for a moment, then again to return back to his element ..<br />
©Klaus Jos/Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Shark_attack04.jpg
  • Great White tries to attack Motor on Back of Boat<br />
<br />
Approximately eight kilometers off the coast of Gansbaai, quite close to Dyer Iceland / South Africa, a great white shark tried to attack the outboard motor of our boat.<br />
<br />
The touch-sensitive area of the nose of the shark has unusual consequences: The shark opens its mouth and is relatively far from the water. In slow motion, it remains for a moment, then again to return back to his element ..<br />
©Klaus Jos/Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Shark_attack03.jpg
  • Great White tries to attack Motor on Back of Boat<br />
<br />
Approximately eight kilometers off the coast of Gansbaai, quite close to Dyer Iceland / South Africa, a great white shark tried to attack the outboard motor of our boat.<br />
<br />
The touch-sensitive area of the nose of the shark has unusual consequences: The shark opens its mouth and is relatively far from the water. In slow motion, it remains for a moment, then again to return back to his element ..<br />
©Klaus Jos/Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Shark_attack02.jpg
  • Great White tries to attack Motor on Back of Boat<br />
<br />
Approximately eight kilometers off the coast of Gansbaai, quite close to Dyer Iceland / South Africa, a great white shark tried to attack the outboard motor of our boat.<br />
<br />
The touch-sensitive area of the nose of the shark has unusual consequences: The shark opens its mouth and is relatively far from the water. In slow motion, it remains for a moment, then again to return back to his element ..<br />
©Klaus Jos/Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Shark_attack01.jpg
  • Forty-ton whale lands on yacht during Cape Town sailing trip<br />
<br />
A couple who took a yacht for a quiet sailing trip were stunned when a 40-ton whale crash-landed on their boat off Cape Town.<br />
<br />
The pair were enjoying calm seas off the South African coast when the animal flipped into the air and smashed into their mast.<br />
Ralph Mothes, 59, and Paloma Werner, 50, were helpless as the beast thrashed around on their 33ft vessel before slipping back into the water.<br />
Miss Werner said: "It really was quite incredible but very scary. The whale was about the same size as the boat.<br />
"We'd spotted it about 100 metres away and thought that was the end of it. Then suddenly it was right up beside us.<br />
"I assumed it would go underneath the boat but instead it sprang out of the sea. We were very lucky to get through it, as the sheer weight of the thing was huge.<br />
"There were bits of skin and blubber left behind, and the mast was wrecked. It brought down the rigging too.<br />
"Thank goodness the hull was made of steel and not fibreglass or we could have been ruined."<br />
Moments before the animal leapt it had pounded its tail on the surface of the water in a 'lob-tailing' ritual to communicate with other whales.<br />
The shaken couple, who are experienced seafarers with the Cape Town Sailing Academy, used their engine to get back to shore in Table Bay.<br />
Whales are a common sight in the Atlantic Ocean off the Western Cape coast at this time of year as they come near the shore to breed.<br />
Thousands of tourists flock to the region's seaside resorts every year to spot the mammals during the South African winter from June to November.<br />
Hermanus, a popular destination around 80 miles east of Cape Town, employs a 'whale crier' to walk through the town announcing where whales have been seen.<br />
©Mike Behr/Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Whale_lands_On_Boat1.jpg
  • Forty-ton whale lands on yacht during Cape Town sailing trip<br />
<br />
A couple who took a yacht for a quiet sailing trip were stunned when a 40-ton whale crash-landed on their boat off Cape Town.<br />
<br />
The pair were enjoying calm seas off the South African coast when the animal flipped into the air and smashed into their mast.<br />
Ralph Mothes, 59, and Paloma Werner, 50, were helpless as the beast thrashed around on their 33ft vessel before slipping back into the water.<br />
Miss Werner said: "It really was quite incredible but very scary. The whale was about the same size as the boat.<br />
"We'd spotted it about 100 metres away and thought that was the end of it. Then suddenly it was right up beside us.<br />
"I assumed it would go underneath the boat but instead it sprang out of the sea. We were very lucky to get through it, as the sheer weight of the thing was huge.<br />
"There were bits of skin and blubber left behind, and the mast was wrecked. It brought down the rigging too.<br />
"Thank goodness the hull was made of steel and not fibreglass or we could have been ruined."<br />
Moments before the animal leapt it had pounded its tail on the surface of the water in a 'lob-tailing' ritual to communicate with other whales.<br />
The shaken couple, who are experienced seafarers with the Cape Town Sailing Academy, used their engine to get back to shore in Table Bay.<br />
Whales are a common sight in the Atlantic Ocean off the Western Cape coast at this time of year as they come near the shore to breed.<br />
Thousands of tourists flock to the region's seaside resorts every year to spot the mammals during the South African winter from June to November.<br />
Hermanus, a popular destination around 80 miles east of Cape Town, employs a 'whale crier' to walk through the town announcing where whales have been seen.<br />
©Mike Behr/Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Whale_lands_On_Boat2.jpg
  • Cape Town - South Africa - EXCLUSIVE - <br />
Stunning pictures showing a Paddlesurfer's close encounter with a Whale<br />
<br />
this picture taken by  Photographer Michael Poliza from Germany shows Axel Ohm, a stand-up paddlesurfer, enjoys unsurpassed views of a breaching Souther Right Whale in Walker Bay near Grootbos Nature Reserve, Western Cape.<br />
(©Michael Poliza/Exclusivepix)
    Exclusivepix_Close_Encounter_Whale3.jpg
  • Cape Town - South Africa - EXCLUSIVE - <br />
Stunning pictures showing a Paddlesurfer's close encounter with a Whale<br />
<br />
this picture taken by  Photographer Michael Poliza from Germany shows Axel Ohm, a stand-up paddlesurfer, enjoys unsurpassed views of a breaching Souther Right Whale in Walker Bay near Grootbos Nature Reserve, Western Cape.<br />
(©Michael Poliza/Exclusivepix)
    Exclusivepix_Close_Encounter_Whale2.jpg
  • Cape Town - South Africa - EXCLUSIVE - <br />
Stunning pictures showing a Paddlesurfer's close encounter with a Whale<br />
<br />
this picture taken by  Photographer Michael Poliza from Germany shows Axel Ohm, a stand-up paddlesurfer, enjoys unsurpassed views of a breaching Souther Right Whale in Walker Bay near Grootbos Nature Reserve, Western Cape.<br />
(©Michael Poliza/Exclusivepix)
    Exclusivepix_Close_Encounter_Whale1.jpg
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