T
Tom Henderson
Guest
rtk <[email protected]> wrote in
news[email protected]:
>
>
> Mike Tennent wrote:
>
> He probably wasn't joking. The Great Barrier Reef is the most
> fertile
>> shark breeding ground in the world.
>>
>> The second most fertile, I've been told, is right off my little
>> island - St. Simons Island in southeast Georgia. I've flown over it
>> and I can believe it. If the tourists on the beach could see all the
>> little sharksies swimming nearby, they'd never go in the water.
>>
>> Of course, 99% of them are small and non-threatening, but the
>> thought's the same.
>>
>> BTW, I swim in a pool...
>>
>> Mike Tennent
>> "IronPenguin"
>
> I didn't see any sharks while swimming in the Great Barrier Reef, but
> I saw clams that could swallow me whole. Off Georgia, you're not
> counting the little sand sharks? Lots of them, but they were more in
> danger of being eaten by me than me by them.
>
> rtk
>
> (hi Mike!)
>
Ruth, for the LAST time, quit biting the sharks!
tom
news[email protected]:
>
>
> Mike Tennent wrote:
>
> He probably wasn't joking. The Great Barrier Reef is the most
> fertile
>> shark breeding ground in the world.
>>
>> The second most fertile, I've been told, is right off my little
>> island - St. Simons Island in southeast Georgia. I've flown over it
>> and I can believe it. If the tourists on the beach could see all the
>> little sharksies swimming nearby, they'd never go in the water.
>>
>> Of course, 99% of them are small and non-threatening, but the
>> thought's the same.
>>
>> BTW, I swim in a pool...
>>
>> Mike Tennent
>> "IronPenguin"
>
> I didn't see any sharks while swimming in the Great Barrier Reef, but
> I saw clams that could swallow me whole. Off Georgia, you're not
> counting the little sand sharks? Lots of them, but they were more in
> danger of being eaten by me than me by them.
>
> rtk
>
> (hi Mike!)
>
Ruth, for the LAST time, quit biting the sharks!
tom