Swimming With Whale Sharks
Wildlife researchers and tourists are heading to a tiny Mexican village to learn about the mystery of the largest fish in the sea
- By Juliet Eilperin
- Photographs by Brian Skerry
- Smithsonian magazine, June 2011, Subscribe
(Page 3 of 4)
Willy Betancourt Sabatini was one of the first Holboxeños to realize that the massive sharks that congregated near the island to feed might be the answer. He and his sister, Norma, a local environmentalist who now serves as project director for the island’s Yum Balam Protected Area, along with researchers and local entrepreneurs, established rules for a new industry, shark tourism. Only two divers and one guide can be in the water with a single shark; flash photography and touching the sharks are forbidden. Islanders had learned from the lobster debacle that they needed to set limits. “They know if we don’t take care, all of us are going to lose,” Norma Betancourt Sabatini says.
“Conserve the whale shark,” says a sign on Isla Holbox. “It’s your best game.”
Shark tourism is growing. Graham, in a 2002 study of whale shark visitors to the small Belize town of Placencia, estimated revenues of $3.7 million over a six-week period. In the Philippines’ Donsol region, the number of whale shark tourists grew from 867 to 8,800 over five years. And a study found whale shark tourists spent $6.3 million in the area around Australia’s Ningaloo Marine Park in 2006.
“It’s simple and more predictable than fishing,” Willy Betancourt Sabatini says of shark watching. The 12 men who work for him as boat operators and guides earn twice as much as they did fishing, he adds. “We respect the rules. People understand it very well.”
It had taken an hour for De La Parra, Hueter and others on the tagging expedition to reach the sharks. The water was smooth and thick with reddish plankton. “There’s one of them!” a researcher cried out, pointing to a large, shiny dorsal fin. We motored closer, and I found myself gazing at the largest shark—about 23 feet—I had ever seen. Its skin was dark gray, glinting in the sunlight, with mottled white dots.
Suddenly it seemed as if whale sharks were everywhere, though we could see only a fraction of their massive bodies: their gently curved mouths, agape as they sucked in volumes of water, or the tips of their tails, flicking back and forth as they glided through the sea.
I donned a mask, snorkel and fins and prepared to jump in. Hueter had told me he thought the sharks’ cruising speed was one to two miles an hour—slow enough, I thought, to swim alongside one without much difficulty.
Wrong.
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Comments (18)
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I just finished a trip to playa del Carmen and went to Holbox to swim with the Whale Sharks. It was breath taking swimming along side the giant. I would say it is a great experience and I enjoyed life's giant fish. However I did leave the trip feeling somewhat sorry for the fish. There are several boats chasing the whales and at several instances many people swimming toward the fish and jumping right next to it. this continues for hours at a time. At some point the fish just stopped swimming, almost as they gave in and were surrounded by people. Again, i would reccommend the experience but would advise to use extreme caution, care, and respect for this animal and the ocean.
Posted by Dax on July 22,2012 | 02:48 PM
Ilove thisarticle and its really cool!
Posted by shonntayja on May 21,2012 | 03:56 PM
While not the same as swimming with them in the open ocean, the Georgia Aquarium has a snorkeling/diving program where you can swim with them in their salt water aquarium. Might be cheaper and/or safer than traveling to Mexico. Also, on the Planet Earth series, there was film of whale sharks feeding on schools of small fish.
Posted by sparcboy on April 10,2012 | 03:53 PM
Um, Kevin, they are not vegetarians. They eat zooplankton. Think tiny shrimp (though it includes much more.) So the largest fish in the ocean eats some of the smallest animals in the ocean.
Posted by cb on January 31,2012 | 08:31 AM
awesome! I just had an amazing whale shark experience - my first time snorkeling with them. I was in the Philippines. So incredible! I posted a few photos from the day here: http://Visit50.com/2011/12/whale-shark-snorkeling/
Posted by Todd @ Visit50 on December 17,2011 | 03:58 PM
Wonderful and gentle creatures they are!
Posted by Ruth on July 12,2011 | 11:20 AM
I am really delighted to read this story.Thanks for posting.
Earlier Italian beauty not only jumps from planes but also swims with sharks...
Posted by SAANVI on June 26,2011 | 12:22 PM
While vacation on Playa Del Carmen with my daughter we went to swim with the whale sharks a week ago. It was the most amazing things we have ever experience. There were 30 plus whale sharks feeding in the clear blue water. The smaller ones were 25 ft. The bigger ones were 35 to 40ft. The season to swim with them off Isla Mujeres is June to Sept 15, according to our guide. It is a once in a life time experience. You must go if you ever visit Cacun area during the season.
Posted by Eleanor Felbaum on June 22,2011 | 12:52 AM
Through sheer good fortune I was able to swim with whale sharks at Bahia Gonzaga in Baja California a few years ago. Seeing fins in the water and being told that they were whale sharks, I quickly scrounged a canoe from a local and a mask from other visitors. My experiences were much like the author's: fruitlessly trying to chase them down, then finally intercepting one while it was surface feeding. I floated in the water as the behemoth continued on its path straight toward me. It was one thing to know that it was a vegetarian and wouldn't eat me, quite another to see the gaping maw that could swallow me whole. I frantically splashed out of the way, only to go too far and miss the touch. Of course I repeated the whole process again with another shark, this time staying just close enough to brush my fingertips along the base of its fin. The mixture of fear, awe and admiration still comes back to me.
Posted by Kevin Smith on June 22,2011 | 04:24 PM
Wife and I arranged to spend two days in Holbox swimming with the whale sharks in July 2007. Certainly the most enjoyably different of our diving trips over the last 15 years. A double treat was 8 or 10 giant mantas, with 10 to 12 foot wingspans, mixed in with the sharks.
I sure hope Holbox remains as unspoiled as it was then.
Posted by Bob Speir on June 6,2011 | 07:40 PM
We where out last season with Rafael and the researchers from the Georga Aquarium off Isla Mujeres in the blue water swimming with a group of over 150 Whale Sharks in July. This time of the season the Whale Sharks gather in large groups just off the coast of Cancun and in 2009 the largest group ever recorded was 420 in a single day. The Whale Shark Festival on Isla Mujeres is the 15th till the 17th of July, right in the middle of the season. Traveling out to swim with Whale Sharks from Isla Mujeres is a muck shorter and easer trip from Cancun and the Rivera Maya than going all the way to Holbox. check out www.whalesharkfest.com for more info on Whale Sharks and a great event for the Family.
John Vater.
Posted by John Vater on May 26,2011 | 10:16 PM
A dear memory of mine is not only spotting my first whale shark but enjoying the view of this graceful animal as he glided below my surfboard. Having yet to see a photo of one, I did at first panic at the sight of his tail fin and big white freckles, thinking maybe I was about to be eaten by a leopard shark (I grew up on the east coast of South Africa where tiger sharks are common so the idea of wild cat fish hybrids seemed plausible).
Posted by Melissa on May 25,2011 | 01:20 AM
On page 40 of the June 2011 issue of Smithsonian (and on page 4 of this online article), there's reference to a 23 foot whale shark. There's further reference to that whale shark being "a 3,000-pound behemoth." That's nonsense. A 23-foot whale shark would obviously weigh more than 3,000 pounds, probably closer to 30,000 pounds. I'm guessing this is an example of careless writing or editing or maybe careless printing.
Posted by Dino Marino on May 25,2011 | 01:40 PM
about 4 years ago my husband and i were on a whalewatch off the tip of cape cod on stallwagen banks when we saw a whaleshark and a calf swiming close to the boat we were on.it was an incredable site.
Posted by mary ann power on May 22,2011 | 08:11 AM
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