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Andre Hartman Pandai Menggeletik & Hypnosis Ikan Jerung(14 photos)
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Tickling Jaws! Amazing pictures of the man who hypnotises Great White sharks by rubbing their noses
Daredevil fisherman attracts the creatures using bait and puts them in dream-like trance
Fearless: Andre tickles the Great White shark's noseBarcroft
There's no snap but plenty of tickle as a daring “shark whisperer” puts a 16ft great white in a dream-like trance.
Andre Hartman attracts the creatures using bait and hypnotises them by tickling their sensitive snouts.
Sharks’ noses are loaded with nerve endings and rubbing them is said to overload their sensory system.
The ex-fisherman was pictured casting his spell off Cape Province, South Africa, by US photographer Doug Perrine.
He said: “The shark seemed to enter a pleasant but confused state where it was dreamily seeking the source of the stimulus. So there was no trigger for it to attack anything.”
Hypnotised: The shark whisperer puts the creature in a tranceBarcroft
Sensitive: Sharks’ noses are loaded with nerve endings and rubbing them is said to overload their sensory systemExclusivepix
Fancy a bite: In one year, a single great white eats about 11 tons of foodBarcroft
Toothache: A Great White can use and lose more than 1,000 teeth in its lifetime and have a bite force of up to 1.8 tonnesBarcroft
I smell food: Using super-senses, Great Whites can home in on the scent of a seal colony from two miles awayBarcroft
Snappy smile: The shark shows off his big mouthBarcroft
Experts say sharks are naturally intelligent and curious creatures and have been given a bad name thanks to movies such as Jaws.
Doug added: “Although initially terrified, Andre has learned that sharks are not out hunting people and it’s possible to interact with little danger once you understand how they communicate.”
Great White facts
SPEED: An adult Great White can swim up to 45mph
TEETH: A Great White can use and lose more than 1,000 teeth in its lifetime and have a bite force of up to 1.8 tonnes - the weight of a transit van.
SENSES: Using super-senses, they can home in on the scent of a seal colony from two miles away
EYES: They can roll their eyeballs back, which protects the vital front part of the eye from being scratched
SKIN: Its skin is protected by thousands of tiny teeth called dermal denticles
FOOD: In one year, a single great white eats about 11 tons of food. Scientists estimate that after a big meal, a great white can last three months before another feed
In September last year British expat Michael Cohen almost died when he was attacked by a Great White in Cape Town, South Africa.
Michael Cohen lost more than seven litres of blood after having his right leg ripped off and left leg bitten through after entering the water - despite flags warning a shark was in the area.
Local men Douglas Drysdale, 61, and Hugh Till, 66, risked their life by wading into the water to drag Mr Cohen to safety.
Mr Cohen was saved by a seal who fended off the Great White shark as the beast prepared to make a second and final attack.
Tickling Jaws! Amazing pictures of the man who hypnotises Great White sharks by rubbing their noses
Daredevil fisherman attracts the creatures using bait and puts them in dream-like trance
[url=http://www.mirror.co.uk/news/weird-news/shark-whisperer-hypnotises-a-16ft-great-800010#][/url]
Fearless: Andre tickles the Great White shark's noseBarcroft
There's no snap but plenty of tickle as a daring “shark whisperer” puts a 16ft great white in a dream-like trance.
Andre Hartman attracts the creatures using bait and hypnotises them by tickling their sensitive snouts.
Sharks’ noses are loaded with nerve endings and rubbing them is said to overload their sensory system.
The ex-fisherman was pictured casting his spell off Cape Province, South Africa, by US photographer Doug Perrine.
He said: “The shark seemed to enter a pleasant but confused state where it was dreamily seeking the source of the stimulus. So there was no trigger for it to attack anything.”
Hypnotised: The shark whisperer puts the creature in a tranceBarcroft
Sensitive: Sharks’ noses are loaded with nerve endings and rubbing them is said to overload their sensory systemExclusivepix
Fancy a bite: In one year, a single great white eats about 11 tons of foodBarcroft
Toothache: A Great White can use and lose more than 1,000 teeth in its lifetime and have a bite force of up to 1.8 tonnesBarcroft
I smell food: Using super-senses, Great Whites can home in on the scent of a seal colony from two miles awayBarcroft
Snappy smile: The shark shows off his big mouthBarcroft
Experts say sharks are naturally intelligent and curious creatures and have been given a bad name thanks to movies such as Jaws.
Doug added: “Although initially terrified, Andre has learned that sharks are not out hunting people and it’s possible to interact with little danger once you understand how they communicate.”
Great White facts
SPEED: An adult Great White can swim up to 45mph
TEETH: A Great White can use and lose more than 1,000 teeth in its lifetime and have a bite force of up to 1.8 tonnes - the weight of a transit van.
SENSES: Using super-senses, they can home in on the scent of a seal colony from two miles away
EYES: They can roll their eyeballs back, which protects the vital front part of the eye from being scratched
SKIN: Its skin is protected by thousands of tiny teeth called dermal denticles
FOOD: In one year, a single great white eats about 11 tons of food. Scientists estimate that after a big meal, a great white can last three months before another feed
In September last year British expat Michael Cohen almost died when he was attacked by a Great White in Cape Town, South Africa.
Michael Cohen lost more than seven litres of blood after having his right leg ripped off and left leg bitten through after entering the water - despite flags warning a shark was in the area.
Local men Douglas Drysdale, 61, and Hugh Till, 66, risked their life by wading into the water to drag Mr Cohen to safety.
Mr Cohen was saved by a seal who fended off the Great White shark as the beast prepared to make a second and final attack.
And in November a Great White shark was feared to be in the English Channel after another man-eater was savaged.
A 5ft blue shark washed up on a beach had a giant bite mark, suggesting it had been attacked by an even bigger predator.
A dog walker who discovered the dead shark sent pictures to experts who said it could have been attacked by a Jaws-like killer.
Vet nurse Nikki Lambert, 27, who found it on Camber Sands in East Sussex and emailed photos to the Marine Conservation Society, said: ““It had a hole just behind its flipper through which you could see its internal organs.
“I was told that the only animals who would attack a blue shark like this would be a great white shark or a killer whale.
“But I suppose it’s possible the wound was made after it was dead by a dog or birds.” |
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Shark tickler's skill is jaw-dropping
Impressive ... Andre mesmerises the shark by holding his nose
Klaus Jos/Exclusivepix
By BELLA BATTLE
A LETHAL 16ft-long great white enjoys a nose rub — after being 'hypnotised' by a brave shark tickler.
Andre Hartman is able to place sharks into a dream-like state of happiness just by the touch of his hand.
Incredible snaps of Andre at work show him getting terrifyingly close to the razor-sharp jaws of the potential man-eater and giving the beast a rub on one of its most sensitive places — its torpedo-like snout.
The amazing sight was captured by US photographer, Doug Perrine, off the coast of South Africa.
Danger ... shark looks set to attack the boat
Klaus Jos/Exclusivepix
Doug said: “I was there to get pictures of a shark raising its head out of the water and opening its mouth – a shot Andre was able to produce.
“The shark was attracted by the scent of the bait we put out.
“Andre reached down and tickled the underside of the shark’s snout, while gently lifting it up.
“This part of the shark’s body is loaded with nerve endings, and the creature’s sensory system became overloaded from the stimulus.
Stunned ... shark is confused as Andre works his magic
Klaus Jos/Exclusivepix
“The shark seemed to enter a pleasant but confused state where it was dreamily seeking the source of the stimulus.
“So there was no trigger for the shark to attack anything.”
Great white sharks are classified as a vulnerable species because of the threat to their food from fishing.
They are also the victims of the Asian shark fin industry — where these mighty hunters are killed for their distinctive fin.
Shark’s fin soup can cost up to £100 a bowl in China.
Moving away ... Andre breaks the spell and the great white sinks beneath the waves
Barcroft Media
Doug explained how Andre perfected his amazing technique for ‘hypnotising’ sharks.
He said: “Andre is a former spear-fisherman, who had encounters with great white sharks while free-diving and spearing fish in the waters of Cape Province, South Africa.
“Although initially terrified, like most people, by the appearance of these massive predators, over years of observation he gradually realised that they are intelligent, curious animals.
“He understood that sharks are not out hunting people, and it is possible to interact with them with little danger once you understand how they communicate.”
Predator ... the great white shark dwarfs other sea creatures |
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Mak aiii beraninya. Tapi kalau le berlakunya kesilapan sekali dia ngappp...putus tangan weiii. |
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mau x terkejut jaws tu,
x penah2 ade benda lain pegang hidung dia..haha |
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pernah tengok dokumentari ni kat TV.....mcm kucing bila diusap kepala jadi manja......mungkin shark ni pun camtu gak lebih kurang.....tapi kalau malang tak berbau, mahu hilang tgn tu. |
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