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Caught on video: Woman on paddleboard has close encounter with hammerhead shark

Caught on video: Woman on paddleboard has close encounter with hammerhead shark
YOUR COMMUTE STARTING AT 430 TOMORROW MORNING. EXCLUSIVE VIDEO TONIGHT SHOWS THE MOMENT A SOUTH FLORIDA WOMAN PADDLEBOARDING IN THE OCEAN SPOTTED THAT SHARK SWIMMING RIGHT BELOW HER BEHIND HER ARI HAIT. HERE WITH MORE FOR EXCLUSIVELY TALKING WITH THE WOMAN WHO INITIALLY ALREADY THOUGHT THE TAP ON HER BOARD WAS JUST SOME SEAWEED. THAT’S EXACTLY WHAT SHE THOUGHT. AND LET ME SET THIS UP FOR YOU, TODD. THIS IS SUNDAY MORNING, PART OF AN 80 MILE PADDLEBOARD TRIP FOR A CHARITY EVENT CALLED THE CROSSING FOR CYSTIC FIBROSIS. THEY WERE ABOUT HALFWAY THROUGH THE TRIP, MIDDLE OF THE OCEAN, NO LAND IN SIGHT. AND THAT IS WHEN THAT UNINVITED GUEST JOINED THEIR GROUP. COME TO THIS SIDE. YOU’RE DOING GOOD. IT DEFINITELY KIND OF GIVES YOU A LITTLE BIT OF LIKE, OH MY GOSH, I CAN’T BELIEVE THAT HAPPENED. AND THAT WAS CAPTURED ON VIDEO. THE WOMAN ON THE PADDLEBOARD IS MALIA TRIBBLE, AND SHE IS IN THE MIDDLE OF THE OCEAN ABOUT HALFWAY THROUGH AN 80 MILE TRIP FROM THE BAHAMAS TO THE LAKE WORTH PIER, AN EVENT THAT RAISES MONEY FOR CYSTIC FIBROSIS RESEARCH. I WAS JUST KIND OF DOING MY THING AND AND I FELT A LITTLE BIT OF A TAP ON MY BOARD, BUT I THOUGHT I WAS PICKING UP SEAWEED. THAT HAPPENS. YOU CAN DRAG SEAWEED ON YOUR FIN, BUT IN THIS CASE, HER PADDLEBOARD WAS NOT THE ONLY FIN IN THE WATER. THE OTHER FIN BELONGED TO A HAMMERHEAD SHARK FOLLOWING HER. I SAW MY HUSBAND’S FACE DROP AND I SAW HIM TELL THE CAPTAIN TO SHUT OFF THE ENGINE AND HIM THEN GUIDE ME INTO THE BOAT. AND SO AS SOON AS HE DID THAT, I KNEW IT WAS A SHARK CIRCLING. NOW, --, A HAMMERHEAD. IT’S ONE OF THOSE THINGS THAT YOU HAVE TO TRUST. THE PEOPLE YOU’RE AROUND KEEP COMING, KEEP COMING. AND I JUST KNEW TO LISTEN. MY HUSBAND JOKES THAT IT WAS THE FIRST TIME I’VE EVER LISTENED TO HIM IN MY LIFE. TRIBBLE SAYS SHE STAYED CALM THE WHOLE TIME, JUST FOCUSED ON MAINTAINING, GAINING HER BALANCE, GETTING BACK TO THE BOAT AND AWAY FROM THE SHARK. HIS HEAD WAS UNDERNEATH HER BOARD. FANTASTIC. THANK YOU. I SAW IT ONCE. I SAT DOWN BECAUSE IT DID GO BACK UNDERNEATH THE BOARD. AND ODDLY ENOUGH, IT ACTUALLY KIND OF LOOKED AT ME. I SWEAR I SAW HIS EYE STARE RIGHT AT ME. AND GET THIS, AFTER A BRIEF TEN MINUTE BREAK, MALIA GOT RIGHT BACK ON HER BOARD AND FINISHED THE TRIP. JUST LIKE FALLING IN. YOU FALL IN, YOU GET BACK UP. YOU DON’T SIT THERE AND SULK ABOUT FALLING IN. YOU HAVE TO JUST KEEP MOVING AND AND IT’S THE BEST WAY TO KIND OF MOVE FORWARD. AMELIA TELLS ME SHE DOESN’T THINK THAT SHARK WANTED TO HURT HER, BELIEVES HE WAS JUST CURIOUS ABOUT WHO SHE WAS AND WHY SHE WAS IN THE MIDDLE OF THE OCEAN. SHE POINTED OUT THAT IF THAT SHARK WANTED TO KNOCK HER OFF THE BOARD, HE HAD PLENTY OF OPTIONS, TUNITY TO DO THAT. AND BY THE WAY, I ASKED MALIA IF SHE PLANNED ON TAKING PART IN NEXT YEAR’S CROSSING FOR CYSTIC FIBROSIS. SHE GAVE ME A ONE WORD ANSWER. ABSOLUTELY.
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Caught on video: Woman on paddleboard has close encounter with hammerhead shark
A Florida woman had a close encounter with a hammerhead shark while in the middle of a long-distance paddleboard trip for charity.Watch video of the encounter above.“It definitely kind of gives you a little bit of like, ‘Oh, my gosh. I can’t believe that happened to me,’” Malea Tribble said.Tribble was part of a group paddleboarding from the Bahamas to the Lake Worth Pier during an event called the Crossing for Cystic Fibrosis, bringing awareness to the disease and raising money for research.She said they were about halfway through the trip when another guest joined their group. “I was just kind of doing my thing, and I felt a little bit of a tap on my board, but I thought it was picking up seaweed,” Tribble said. “That happens. You can drag seaweed on your fin.”But in this case, her paddleboard wasn’t the only fin in the water. The other fin belonged to a hammerhead shark that was following her.Video recorded by someone in the accompanying safety boat shows the shark’s fin right near Tribble’s board.“I saw my husband’s face drop, and I saw him tell the captain to shut off the engine and he then guided me to the boat,” Tribble said. “As soon as he did that, I knew it was a shark.” Tribble’s husband, Ricky, guided her back to the boat.“It’s one of those things that you have to trust the people that you’re around. And I just knew to listen,” Tribble said. “My husband jokes that it was the first time that I’ve ever listened to him in my life.” The video shows Tribble remaining calm the entire time.She said she was just focusing on maintaining her balance, getting to the boat and away from the shark. “I saw it once I sat down, because it did go back underneath the board,” Tribble said. “Oddly enough, it actually looked at me. I swear I saw his eye stare right at me.”Tribble said she believes the shark was just curious about who she was and why she was in the middle of the ocean. She pointed out that the shark had a number of opportunities to knock her off her board but never did.Once she was in the boat, Tribble helped guide the other paddleboarder to safety. They took about a 10-minute break to decide what to do next. And then Tribble got right back on her board and finished the trip to Lake Worth.“Just like falling in. You fall in, you get back up,” she said. “You don’t sit there and sulk about falling in. You have to keep moving. It’s the best way to kind of move forward.”Tribble said she will absolutely take place in next year’s Crossing for Cystic Fibrosis. She created a donation page for people to help her cause in fighting cystic fibrosis.

A Florida woman had a close encounter with a hammerhead shark while in the middle of a long-distance paddleboard trip for charity.

Watch video of the encounter above.

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“It definitely kind of gives you a little bit of like, ‘Oh, my gosh. I can’t believe that happened to me,’” Malea Tribble said.

Tribble was part of a group paddleboarding from the Bahamas to the Lake Worth Pier during an event called the Crossing for Cystic Fibrosis, bringing awareness to the disease and raising money for research.

She said they were about halfway through the trip when another guest joined their group. “I was just kind of doing my thing, and I felt a little bit of a tap on my board, but I thought it was picking up seaweed,” Tribble said. “That happens. You can drag seaweed on your fin.”

But in this case, her paddleboard wasn’t the only fin in the water. The other fin belonged to a hammerhead shark that was following her.

Video recorded by someone in the accompanying safety boat shows the shark’s fin right near Tribble’s board.

“I saw my husband’s face drop, and I saw him tell the captain to shut off the engine and he then guided me to the boat,” Tribble said. “As soon as he did that, I knew it was a shark.”

Tribble’s husband, Ricky, guided her back to the boat.

“It’s one of those things that you have to trust the people that you’re around. And I just knew to listen,” Tribble said. “My husband jokes that it was the first time that I’ve ever listened to him in my life.”

The video shows Tribble remaining calm the entire time.

She said she was just focusing on maintaining her balance, getting to the boat and away from the shark. “I saw it once I sat down, because it did go back underneath the board,” Tribble said. “Oddly enough, it actually looked at me. I swear I saw his eye stare right at me.”

Tribble said she believes the shark was just curious about who she was and why she was in the middle of the ocean. She pointed out that the shark had a number of opportunities to knock her off her board but never did.

Once she was in the boat, Tribble helped guide the other paddleboarder to safety. They took about a 10-minute break to decide what to do next. And then Tribble got right back on her board and finished the trip to Lake Worth.

“Just like falling in. You fall in, you get back up,” she said. “You don’t sit there and sulk about falling in. You have to keep moving. It’s the best way to kind of move forward.”

Tribble said she will absolutely take place in next year’s Crossing for Cystic Fibrosis.

She created a for people to help her cause in fighting cystic fibrosis.