There's at least three feet of clearance so quit worrying so much. Even if he did get eaten he'd be shot out the blow hole anyways so it's fine.
Or one of those “ball stuck in glass stickers” stickers some heartless asshole left behind and the cleaning staff missed.
https://www.amazon.com/Silfrae-3D-Simulation-Sticker-Baseball-inBroken/dp/B078VMCG7N
I thoroughly enjoyed the game Survive! Mola Mola! The goal was to grow your sunfish to legendary sizes, while it flirted with death from any small reason like getting scared or getting too much sun.
https://www.downloadroms.io/playstation-rom-vigilante-8-2nd-offense-slus-00868/
i used to use the emulator PSX to play spyro and crash bandicoot. at least i think that’s what it’s called - i haven’t used it in 2+ years
For anyone interested in these occurences, Al Venter wrote a great book simply called "Shark Stories", dealing predominantly with shark encounters around the Southern African coast with spearfishers, swimmers, surfers and divers.
I've been fortunate enough to dive with him when he visited one of our local spots that he wrote about in his book that has a healthy amount of great white, ragged-tooth and bullshark activity.
Link to the book: https://www.amazon.ca/-/fr/Al-J-Venter/dp/1869196929
You just quoted/linked a book that is over a century old. I quoted a dictionary. What planet do you live on, friend?
But, I'll play your game and I do feel oddly like arguing with strangers on reddit today. Call it having nothing better to do today, I suppose. Since you seem to think that because your book is over a century old, it therefore must be based in fact much more-so than a modern dictionary, I'll simply go your route and present you with a much older book:
On the Sublime by Cassius Longinus, dated to the 1st century (CE). Since I doubt you've read it, I'll summarize for you: For Longinus, the sublime is an adjective that describes great, elevated, or lofty thought or language, particularly in the context of rhetoric. Not a single word of fear. I encourage you to buy it for yourself and read it with your own eyes. That is, assuming your inflated ego hasn't already burst into flames. In this case, I actually have read it; the paperback was at my local library last I checked.
It was a book first, but it's up to you how you wanna start this journey
Sure! It looks like my exact one doesn’t exist anymore, but here’s the closest I could find. Mine is just a bit bigger.
Simulation Bathynomus Giganteus Stuffed Plush Toy - Realistic Marine Giant Isopod Arthropod Insect Worm Lice Toys, Soft Crustaceans Animals, Big lice Plushie Toys Model Dolls Gifts for Kids, 12inchs https://www.amazon.com/dp/B09FXS5XYK/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_glt_i_R9XJD9FWK7JNHE905DTS
So how do you make that jive with this:
>Freedive =/= Duckdive
You let your freediving 'credentials' go to your head, man. You're not wrong that standard practice for freedivers is to remove the snorkel, but your repeated argument that any time a snorkeler is underwater they need to remove their snorkel is wrong. Clearing a snorkel is an integral part of snorkel training and there's nothing wrong with a snorkeler (who is using a dry snorkel I might add) keeping their snorkel in while moving around just below the surface, like the guy in the original picture.
This is a photo of a shipwreck from the coral reefs of the mesoamerican barrier. Mayan Riviera, Mexican Caribbean. What's the point of making up fake info about the picture when it's so easily debunked?
Hey, I was obsessed with a children’s book about these when I was kid, it was called “Skippy the Scallop.”
I think I just liked it because I liked everything about the ocean. I was a strange kid.