Most liked photo of Riley Elliott with over 3.5K likes is the following photo

We have around 74 most liked photos of Riley Elliott with the thumbnails listed below. Click on any of them to view the full image along with its caption, like count, and a button to download the photo.

3.5K Likes – Riley Elliott Instagram
Caption : So we had a baby girl!!!! ✨ Sailor Jane Elliott ✨ Born 3rd October, 3.3kg. I’ve held baby sharks before, a few human ones here and there, but never have I experienced something quite like this. After an amazing labour by Amber, where she did 3/4 of the labour at home, we were surrounded by the most incredible team of women at North Shore Hospital. I was instructed by our midwife to catch my very own baby girl as she came into the world. From her very first moment in this world she was eyes open, super inquisitive and has been a dream so far, peacefully observing her new world with us. She’s already been in the water with Great Whites for Shark Week (inside mummy), has a wolf for a brother, and will likely live a very oceanic life. Lots of love little Sailor. And Amber, I am and always will be blown away by your strength and beauty xxxLikes : 3499

3.5K Likes – Riley Elliott Instagram
Caption : So we had a baby girl!!!! ✨ Sailor Jane Elliott ✨ Born 3rd October, 3.3kg. I’ve held baby sharks before, a few human ones here and there, but never have I experienced something quite like this. After an amazing labour by Amber, where she did 3/4 of the labour at home, we were surrounded by the most incredible team of women at North Shore Hospital. I was instructed by our midwife to catch my very own baby girl as she came into the world. From her very first moment in this world she was eyes open, super inquisitive and has been a dream so far, peacefully observing her new world with us. She’s already been in the water with Great Whites for Shark Week (inside mummy), has a wolf for a brother, and will likely live a very oceanic life. Lots of love little Sailor. And Amber, I am and always will be blown away by your strength and beauty xxxLikes : 3499

3.5K Likes – Riley Elliott Instagram
Caption : So we had a baby girl!!!! ✨ Sailor Jane Elliott ✨ Born 3rd October, 3.3kg. I’ve held baby sharks before, a few human ones here and there, but never have I experienced something quite like this. After an amazing labour by Amber, where she did 3/4 of the labour at home, we were surrounded by the most incredible team of women at North Shore Hospital. I was instructed by our midwife to catch my very own baby girl as she came into the world. From her very first moment in this world she was eyes open, super inquisitive and has been a dream so far, peacefully observing her new world with us. She’s already been in the water with Great Whites for Shark Week (inside mummy), has a wolf for a brother, and will likely live a very oceanic life. Lots of love little Sailor. And Amber, I am and always will be blown away by your strength and beauty xxxLikes : 3499

3.5K Likes – Riley Elliott Instagram
Caption : So we had a baby girl!!!! ✨ Sailor Jane Elliott ✨ Born 3rd October, 3.3kg. I’ve held baby sharks before, a few human ones here and there, but never have I experienced something quite like this. After an amazing labour by Amber, where she did 3/4 of the labour at home, we were surrounded by the most incredible team of women at North Shore Hospital. I was instructed by our midwife to catch my very own baby girl as she came into the world. From her very first moment in this world she was eyes open, super inquisitive and has been a dream so far, peacefully observing her new world with us. She’s already been in the water with Great Whites for Shark Week (inside mummy), has a wolf for a brother, and will likely live a very oceanic life. Lots of love little Sailor. And Amber, I am and always will be blown away by your strength and beauty xxxLikes : 3499

3.5K Likes – Riley Elliott Instagram
Caption : So we had a baby girl!!!! ✨ Sailor Jane Elliott ✨ Born 3rd October, 3.3kg. I’ve held baby sharks before, a few human ones here and there, but never have I experienced something quite like this. After an amazing labour by Amber, where she did 3/4 of the labour at home, we were surrounded by the most incredible team of women at North Shore Hospital. I was instructed by our midwife to catch my very own baby girl as she came into the world. From her very first moment in this world she was eyes open, super inquisitive and has been a dream so far, peacefully observing her new world with us. She’s already been in the water with Great Whites for Shark Week (inside mummy), has a wolf for a brother, and will likely live a very oceanic life. Lots of love little Sailor. And Amber, I am and always will be blown away by your strength and beauty xxxLikes : 3499

3.4K Likes – Riley Elliott Instagram
Caption : I’m going to be a dad! So stoked to have got to a point in this journey where Amber and I feel confident enough to share our joy, because the biggest thing learnt so far, has been the realities behind trying. I feel like I have a new found sensitivity, likely in part to aid in becoming a father but also because I have felt so powerless in the hurdles my incredible wife has overcome. Miscarriages are things I had never heard much about, but when you are unlucky and experience them, you realise you are not alone and in fact so many friends have run the same road at times. For those who haven’t had to, I do not mean to take anything away from your experiences, I imagine and will likely see that creating a human that then entirely depends on you is hard enough. This will hopefully be our next chapter. But up to this point all I can say is that women are so incredibly strong, so driven, and so capable. It’s really hard when you as a guy feel like the car driving alongside the railway tracks and it’s starting to sway. What I’ve learned so far is all you can do is be a rock of support and tell them that everything will be alright. Seeing tears rush from my wife at our half way scan, being happy tears, made the journey all worth it. To all those mums and ones to be, you are amazing. None of us would be here without you. To all those dads, I can’t wait for dad group chat lol. My next big task before the baby comes is to figure out how I juggle my existing 6year old wolf who never likes sharing the back seat!Likes : 3408

3.4K Likes – Riley Elliott Instagram
Caption : I’m going to be a dad! So stoked to have got to a point in this journey where Amber and I feel confident enough to share our joy, because the biggest thing learnt so far, has been the realities behind trying. I feel like I have a new found sensitivity, likely in part to aid in becoming a father but also because I have felt so powerless in the hurdles my incredible wife has overcome. Miscarriages are things I had never heard much about, but when you are unlucky and experience them, you realise you are not alone and in fact so many friends have run the same road at times. For those who haven’t had to, I do not mean to take anything away from your experiences, I imagine and will likely see that creating a human that then entirely depends on you is hard enough. This will hopefully be our next chapter. But up to this point all I can say is that women are so incredibly strong, so driven, and so capable. It’s really hard when you as a guy feel like the car driving alongside the railway tracks and it’s starting to sway. What I’ve learned so far is all you can do is be a rock of support and tell them that everything will be alright. Seeing tears rush from my wife at our half way scan, being happy tears, made the journey all worth it. To all those mums and ones to be, you are amazing. None of us would be here without you. To all those dads, I can’t wait for dad group chat lol. My next big task before the baby comes is to figure out how I juggle my existing 6year old wolf who never likes sharing the back seat!Likes : 3408

3.4K Likes – Riley Elliott Instagram
Caption : I’m going to be a dad! So stoked to have got to a point in this journey where Amber and I feel confident enough to share our joy, because the biggest thing learnt so far, has been the realities behind trying. I feel like I have a new found sensitivity, likely in part to aid in becoming a father but also because I have felt so powerless in the hurdles my incredible wife has overcome. Miscarriages are things I had never heard much about, but when you are unlucky and experience them, you realise you are not alone and in fact so many friends have run the same road at times. For those who haven’t had to, I do not mean to take anything away from your experiences, I imagine and will likely see that creating a human that then entirely depends on you is hard enough. This will hopefully be our next chapter. But up to this point all I can say is that women are so incredibly strong, so driven, and so capable. It’s really hard when you as a guy feel like the car driving alongside the railway tracks and it’s starting to sway. What I’ve learned so far is all you can do is be a rock of support and tell them that everything will be alright. Seeing tears rush from my wife at our half way scan, being happy tears, made the journey all worth it. To all those mums and ones to be, you are amazing. None of us would be here without you. To all those dads, I can’t wait for dad group chat lol. My next big task before the baby comes is to figure out how I juggle my existing 6year old wolf who never likes sharing the back seat!Likes : 3408

1.8K Likes – Riley Elliott Instagram
Caption : A very exciting Great White project I am launching this summer in NZ and YOU can be directly involved by sponsoring a shark’s satellite tag, naming it, receiving scientific insight on what it does and where it goes anywhere in NZ and the world! More than this, the data will be shared live to the public via an incredible philanthropic web application created by @earthrangertech so that we can all learn about where these animals go, what they do, and of most importance, how their movement and behaviour overlaps with our own. This type of information sharing has proven effective around the world to allow for better coexistence with these apex predators. So please check out the link in my bio for a full run down of how and why this project has come about and send us an email through that link if you are interested in sponsoring a shark to be tagged this summer! 🙂 Note the mapped images are example data showing you how the web application will work and display shark dataLikes : 1814

1.8K Likes – Riley Elliott Instagram
Caption : A very exciting Great White project I am launching this summer in NZ and YOU can be directly involved by sponsoring a shark’s satellite tag, naming it, receiving scientific insight on what it does and where it goes anywhere in NZ and the world! More than this, the data will be shared live to the public via an incredible philanthropic web application created by @earthrangertech so that we can all learn about where these animals go, what they do, and of most importance, how their movement and behaviour overlaps with our own. This type of information sharing has proven effective around the world to allow for better coexistence with these apex predators. So please check out the link in my bio for a full run down of how and why this project has come about and send us an email through that link if you are interested in sponsoring a shark to be tagged this summer! 🙂 Note the mapped images are example data showing you how the web application will work and display shark dataLikes : 1814

1.8K Likes – Riley Elliott Instagram
Caption : A very exciting Great White project I am launching this summer in NZ and YOU can be directly involved by sponsoring a shark’s satellite tag, naming it, receiving scientific insight on what it does and where it goes anywhere in NZ and the world! More than this, the data will be shared live to the public via an incredible philanthropic web application created by @earthrangertech so that we can all learn about where these animals go, what they do, and of most importance, how their movement and behaviour overlaps with our own. This type of information sharing has proven effective around the world to allow for better coexistence with these apex predators. So please check out the link in my bio for a full run down of how and why this project has come about and send us an email through that link if you are interested in sponsoring a shark to be tagged this summer! 🙂 Note the mapped images are example data showing you how the web application will work and display shark dataLikes : 1814

1.8K Likes – Riley Elliott Instagram
Caption : A very exciting Great White project I am launching this summer in NZ and YOU can be directly involved by sponsoring a shark’s satellite tag, naming it, receiving scientific insight on what it does and where it goes anywhere in NZ and the world! More than this, the data will be shared live to the public via an incredible philanthropic web application created by @earthrangertech so that we can all learn about where these animals go, what they do, and of most importance, how their movement and behaviour overlaps with our own. This type of information sharing has proven effective around the world to allow for better coexistence with these apex predators. So please check out the link in my bio for a full run down of how and why this project has come about and send us an email through that link if you are interested in sponsoring a shark to be tagged this summer! 🙂 Note the mapped images are example data showing you how the web application will work and display shark dataLikes : 1814

1.8K Likes – Riley Elliott Instagram
Caption : A very exciting Great White project I am launching this summer in NZ and YOU can be directly involved by sponsoring a shark’s satellite tag, naming it, receiving scientific insight on what it does and where it goes anywhere in NZ and the world! More than this, the data will be shared live to the public via an incredible philanthropic web application created by @earthrangertech so that we can all learn about where these animals go, what they do, and of most importance, how their movement and behaviour overlaps with our own. This type of information sharing has proven effective around the world to allow for better coexistence with these apex predators. So please check out the link in my bio for a full run down of how and why this project has come about and send us an email through that link if you are interested in sponsoring a shark to be tagged this summer! 🙂 Note the mapped images are example data showing you how the web application will work and display shark dataLikes : 1814

1.8K Likes – Riley Elliott Instagram
Caption : A very exciting Great White project I am launching this summer in NZ and YOU can be directly involved by sponsoring a shark’s satellite tag, naming it, receiving scientific insight on what it does and where it goes anywhere in NZ and the world! More than this, the data will be shared live to the public via an incredible philanthropic web application created by @earthrangertech so that we can all learn about where these animals go, what they do, and of most importance, how their movement and behaviour overlaps with our own. This type of information sharing has proven effective around the world to allow for better coexistence with these apex predators. So please check out the link in my bio for a full run down of how and why this project has come about and send us an email through that link if you are interested in sponsoring a shark to be tagged this summer! 🙂 Note the mapped images are example data showing you how the web application will work and display shark dataLikes : 1814

1.6K Likes – Riley Elliott Instagram
Caption : A juvenile Great White washed up on Ripiro beach on New Zealand’s w coast with what looks to be an Orca predation, with an incision to extract the nutrient rich liver. This is something Orca in Nz have done for a long time with shark species. Compared to the highly covered S Africa incidences, in Nz its generally been stingray and other shark species, as documented by Orca specialist Dr Ingrid Visser and Steve Hathaway. While this has likely occurred with White sharks in Nz due to their presence, this is of the first to wash up. The area this occurred in is coastal to a well known GW nursery, the Kaipara harbour as documented by Dr Clinton Duffy. It reflects why harbours are used as nursery grounds for shelter and plentiful small food sources for young juveniles. Going outside can pose more risk not only to predation but also coastal set nets and kontiki fishing lines which regularly catch juvenile white sharks. This is one of the reasons for my GW tagging project in NE NZ, in order to better understand the habitat use of this critical age demographic. Not only for the predation but also bycatch through fishing. Given this potential orca kill is a rare find I don’t feel a need to worry about GW displacement seen in S Africa and documented by @alisontowner but it is critical to obtain baseline understanding of shark distribution to measure any potential affect of Orca predation or fishing practises. The most important observation from images thanks to David Cameron, is the shark had its head removed by people. I mention this as its illegal to kill, harm or disturb a live white shark but also to tamper with a dead one. It is a legal requirement to report accidental capture of GWs to the Department of Conservation so that they can continue to protect this species. Orca predation aside, there have been several human induced fatalities of GWs in NE NZ where I am starting a tagging study so please ensure you visibly monitor set nets, don’t set near aggregations of GWs and meet legal requirements for length and naming floats. If you want to support the Great White tagging study in the NE NZ region this summer go to the link in my bioLikes : 1640

1.6K Likes – Riley Elliott Instagram
Caption : A juvenile Great White washed up on Ripiro beach on New Zealand’s w coast with what looks to be an Orca predation, with an incision to extract the nutrient rich liver. This is something Orca in Nz have done for a long time with shark species. Compared to the highly covered S Africa incidences, in Nz its generally been stingray and other shark species, as documented by Orca specialist Dr Ingrid Visser and Steve Hathaway. While this has likely occurred with White sharks in Nz due to their presence, this is of the first to wash up. The area this occurred in is coastal to a well known GW nursery, the Kaipara harbour as documented by Dr Clinton Duffy. It reflects why harbours are used as nursery grounds for shelter and plentiful small food sources for young juveniles. Going outside can pose more risk not only to predation but also coastal set nets and kontiki fishing lines which regularly catch juvenile white sharks. This is one of the reasons for my GW tagging project in NE NZ, in order to better understand the habitat use of this critical age demographic. Not only for the predation but also bycatch through fishing. Given this potential orca kill is a rare find I don’t feel a need to worry about GW displacement seen in S Africa and documented by @alisontowner but it is critical to obtain baseline understanding of shark distribution to measure any potential affect of Orca predation or fishing practises. The most important observation from images thanks to David Cameron, is the shark had its head removed by people. I mention this as its illegal to kill, harm or disturb a live white shark but also to tamper with a dead one. It is a legal requirement to report accidental capture of GWs to the Department of Conservation so that they can continue to protect this species. Orca predation aside, there have been several human induced fatalities of GWs in NE NZ where I am starting a tagging study so please ensure you visibly monitor set nets, don’t set near aggregations of GWs and meet legal requirements for length and naming floats. If you want to support the Great White tagging study in the NE NZ region this summer go to the link in my bioLikes : 1640

1.6K Likes – Riley Elliott Instagram
Caption : A juvenile Great White washed up on Ripiro beach on New Zealand’s w coast with what looks to be an Orca predation, with an incision to extract the nutrient rich liver. This is something Orca in Nz have done for a long time with shark species. Compared to the highly covered S Africa incidences, in Nz its generally been stingray and other shark species, as documented by Orca specialist Dr Ingrid Visser and Steve Hathaway. While this has likely occurred with White sharks in Nz due to their presence, this is of the first to wash up. The area this occurred in is coastal to a well known GW nursery, the Kaipara harbour as documented by Dr Clinton Duffy. It reflects why harbours are used as nursery grounds for shelter and plentiful small food sources for young juveniles. Going outside can pose more risk not only to predation but also coastal set nets and kontiki fishing lines which regularly catch juvenile white sharks. This is one of the reasons for my GW tagging project in NE NZ, in order to better understand the habitat use of this critical age demographic. Not only for the predation but also bycatch through fishing. Given this potential orca kill is a rare find I don’t feel a need to worry about GW displacement seen in S Africa and documented by @alisontowner but it is critical to obtain baseline understanding of shark distribution to measure any potential affect of Orca predation or fishing practises. The most important observation from images thanks to David Cameron, is the shark had its head removed by people. I mention this as its illegal to kill, harm or disturb a live white shark but also to tamper with a dead one. It is a legal requirement to report accidental capture of GWs to the Department of Conservation so that they can continue to protect this species. Orca predation aside, there have been several human induced fatalities of GWs in NE NZ where I am starting a tagging study so please ensure you visibly monitor set nets, don’t set near aggregations of GWs and meet legal requirements for length and naming floats. If you want to support the Great White tagging study in the NE NZ region this summer go to the link in my bioLikes : 1640

1.6K Likes – Riley Elliott Instagram
Caption : A juvenile Great White washed up on Ripiro beach on New Zealand’s w coast with what looks to be an Orca predation, with an incision to extract the nutrient rich liver. This is something Orca in Nz have done for a long time with shark species. Compared to the highly covered S Africa incidences, in Nz its generally been stingray and other shark species, as documented by Orca specialist Dr Ingrid Visser and Steve Hathaway. While this has likely occurred with White sharks in Nz due to their presence, this is of the first to wash up. The area this occurred in is coastal to a well known GW nursery, the Kaipara harbour as documented by Dr Clinton Duffy. It reflects why harbours are used as nursery grounds for shelter and plentiful small food sources for young juveniles. Going outside can pose more risk not only to predation but also coastal set nets and kontiki fishing lines which regularly catch juvenile white sharks. This is one of the reasons for my GW tagging project in NE NZ, in order to better understand the habitat use of this critical age demographic. Not only for the predation but also bycatch through fishing. Given this potential orca kill is a rare find I don’t feel a need to worry about GW displacement seen in S Africa and documented by @alisontowner but it is critical to obtain baseline understanding of shark distribution to measure any potential affect of Orca predation or fishing practises. The most important observation from images thanks to David Cameron, is the shark had its head removed by people. I mention this as its illegal to kill, harm or disturb a live white shark but also to tamper with a dead one. It is a legal requirement to report accidental capture of GWs to the Department of Conservation so that they can continue to protect this species. Orca predation aside, there have been several human induced fatalities of GWs in NE NZ where I am starting a tagging study so please ensure you visibly monitor set nets, don’t set near aggregations of GWs and meet legal requirements for length and naming floats. If you want to support the Great White tagging study in the NE NZ region this summer go to the link in my bioLikes : 1640

1.4K Likes – Riley Elliott Instagram
Caption : The shark forecast is spicy today with Mako sharks landing on boats out front of my house today! Good to see these fishermen @churchyschartersnz were respectful enough not to try and go up there to protect their window wipers but rather wait for the highly intelligent mako to realise it got the gymnastics routine wrong and wiggle back in. In all honestly and seriousness this is unfortunately the most common way ‘shark attacks’ by Mako sharks happen. When they are hooked on a line, and start to go airborne in panic and effort to rid this foreign thing in their jaw and they sometimes land in the boat. As stated by these fishermen, they were happy it didn’t land in the back of the boat as that’s a whole different kettle of fish. If you are jigging or live baiting for kingfish, this is usually when catching Mako can occur. It’s a difficult scenario as you do NOT want the shark to take a bunch of line, and you panic and cut the nylon, because that shark will tow that deadly line around for the rest of its life, slowly but surely becoming entangled. On the other hand many people are scared of getting close to a shark, which is fair enough, and will now be a bit more afraid of one landing in the boat. But best practise if you hook a shark is to get it to the boat safely and respectfully and cut the nylon right beside the hook. This keeps the shark in the water, you safe on the boat and the hook will rust out easy as. The better practise is to try and avoid catching sharks where possible by not intentionally hooking one that comes around the boat, as it’s just not worth the risks, to you or the shark. Overall the greater message is, this was likely an experience that made men feel a little bit scared for a moment, then likely some empathy for what is a literal fish out of water, then some relief when it got back in, for their sake and the sharks. And that’s all good vibes. But as someone who’s had a Great White jump in the back of their boat once before, it can be a much riskier experience, so remember, respect the ocean, wear a life jacket, watch the weather, and get a coastguard membership as the sea itself is far more dangerous than even a shark on your boat 😉Likes : 1444

1.4K Likes – Riley Elliott Instagram
Caption : The shark forecast is spicy today with Mako sharks landing on boats out front of my house today! Good to see these fishermen @churchyschartersnz were respectful enough not to try and go up there to protect their window wipers but rather wait for the highly intelligent mako to realise it got the gymnastics routine wrong and wiggle back in. In all honestly and seriousness this is unfortunately the most common way ‘shark attacks’ by Mako sharks happen. When they are hooked on a line, and start to go airborne in panic and effort to rid this foreign thing in their jaw and they sometimes land in the boat. As stated by these fishermen, they were happy it didn’t land in the back of the boat as that’s a whole different kettle of fish. If you are jigging or live baiting for kingfish, this is usually when catching Mako can occur. It’s a difficult scenario as you do NOT want the shark to take a bunch of line, and you panic and cut the nylon, because that shark will tow that deadly line around for the rest of its life, slowly but surely becoming entangled. On the other hand many people are scared of getting close to a shark, which is fair enough, and will now be a bit more afraid of one landing in the boat. But best practise if you hook a shark is to get it to the boat safely and respectfully and cut the nylon right beside the hook. This keeps the shark in the water, you safe on the boat and the hook will rust out easy as. The better practise is to try and avoid catching sharks where possible by not intentionally hooking one that comes around the boat, as it’s just not worth the risks, to you or the shark. Overall the greater message is, this was likely an experience that made men feel a little bit scared for a moment, then likely some empathy for what is a literal fish out of water, then some relief when it got back in, for their sake and the sharks. And that’s all good vibes. But as someone who’s had a Great White jump in the back of their boat once before, it can be a much riskier experience, so remember, respect the ocean, wear a life jacket, watch the weather, and get a coastguard membership as the sea itself is far more dangerous than even a shark on your boat 😉Likes : 1444

1.3K Likes – Riley Elliott Instagram
Caption : I didn’t create a shark app to try and scare surfers. I created it because I am a surfer. I was afraid of sharks as a surfer. It’s easy to be a tough guy and think a good shark is a dead shark, from the safety of a boat. But try acting like that sitting on a polystyrene board, chest deep in the sharks’ domain. My thoughts were either stick with ignorance is bliss and just walk blind in the savannahs, so to speak. Or learn what a shark is, how they behave, when and where they are dangerous and apply this info out of respect to this capable predator, given I am literally playing in its hunting ground. Choosing the latter has taken me all around the world. I’ve dived with almost every single large shark species and I am still here. But I am still afraid of sharks. And it’s ok to be afraid of an apex predator. You should be. It’s natural instinct. How we react to fear is the important thing. Malice is wrong and short lived and generally only possible from cowards on a boat. Respectfully informed and accepting of self instigated risk is the reality surfers should take, and most do. The Great White app may be scary to some, but I guarantee you that in the long run, knowing what’s out there is more beneficial to you and those animals. I think it’s important to walk the talk in this day and age. I love to surf and I love learning about sharks. I have had nothing but positive feedback about the Great White tracking. I see it as similar to a ski slope, where you are provided with information about risk and then you choose where to go play. How do you feel about it? Images by @jimagesnzLikes : 1313

1.3K Likes – Riley Elliott Instagram
Caption : I didn’t create a shark app to try and scare surfers. I created it because I am a surfer. I was afraid of sharks as a surfer. It’s easy to be a tough guy and think a good shark is a dead shark, from the safety of a boat. But try acting like that sitting on a polystyrene board, chest deep in the sharks’ domain. My thoughts were either stick with ignorance is bliss and just walk blind in the savannahs, so to speak. Or learn what a shark is, how they behave, when and where they are dangerous and apply this info out of respect to this capable predator, given I am literally playing in its hunting ground. Choosing the latter has taken me all around the world. I’ve dived with almost every single large shark species and I am still here. But I am still afraid of sharks. And it’s ok to be afraid of an apex predator. You should be. It’s natural instinct. How we react to fear is the important thing. Malice is wrong and short lived and generally only possible from cowards on a boat. Respectfully informed and accepting of self instigated risk is the reality surfers should take, and most do. The Great White app may be scary to some, but I guarantee you that in the long run, knowing what’s out there is more beneficial to you and those animals. I think it’s important to walk the talk in this day and age. I love to surf and I love learning about sharks. I have had nothing but positive feedback about the Great White tracking. I see it as similar to a ski slope, where you are provided with information about risk and then you choose where to go play. How do you feel about it? Images by @jimagesnzLikes : 1313

1.3K Likes – Riley Elliott Instagram
Caption : I didn’t create a shark app to try and scare surfers. I created it because I am a surfer. I was afraid of sharks as a surfer. It’s easy to be a tough guy and think a good shark is a dead shark, from the safety of a boat. But try acting like that sitting on a polystyrene board, chest deep in the sharks’ domain. My thoughts were either stick with ignorance is bliss and just walk blind in the savannahs, so to speak. Or learn what a shark is, how they behave, when and where they are dangerous and apply this info out of respect to this capable predator, given I am literally playing in its hunting ground. Choosing the latter has taken me all around the world. I’ve dived with almost every single large shark species and I am still here. But I am still afraid of sharks. And it’s ok to be afraid of an apex predator. You should be. It’s natural instinct. How we react to fear is the important thing. Malice is wrong and short lived and generally only possible from cowards on a boat. Respectfully informed and accepting of self instigated risk is the reality surfers should take, and most do. The Great White app may be scary to some, but I guarantee you that in the long run, knowing what’s out there is more beneficial to you and those animals. I think it’s important to walk the talk in this day and age. I love to surf and I love learning about sharks. I have had nothing but positive feedback about the Great White tracking. I see it as similar to a ski slope, where you are provided with information about risk and then you choose where to go play. How do you feel about it? Images by @jimagesnzLikes : 1313

1.3K Likes – Riley Elliott Instagram
Caption : I didn’t create a shark app to try and scare surfers. I created it because I am a surfer. I was afraid of sharks as a surfer. It’s easy to be a tough guy and think a good shark is a dead shark, from the safety of a boat. But try acting like that sitting on a polystyrene board, chest deep in the sharks’ domain. My thoughts were either stick with ignorance is bliss and just walk blind in the savannahs, so to speak. Or learn what a shark is, how they behave, when and where they are dangerous and apply this info out of respect to this capable predator, given I am literally playing in its hunting ground. Choosing the latter has taken me all around the world. I’ve dived with almost every single large shark species and I am still here. But I am still afraid of sharks. And it’s ok to be afraid of an apex predator. You should be. It’s natural instinct. How we react to fear is the important thing. Malice is wrong and short lived and generally only possible from cowards on a boat. Respectfully informed and accepting of self instigated risk is the reality surfers should take, and most do. The Great White app may be scary to some, but I guarantee you that in the long run, knowing what’s out there is more beneficial to you and those animals. I think it’s important to walk the talk in this day and age. I love to surf and I love learning about sharks. I have had nothing but positive feedback about the Great White tracking. I see it as similar to a ski slope, where you are provided with information about risk and then you choose where to go play. How do you feel about it? Images by @jimagesnzLikes : 1313

1.2K Likes – Riley Elliott Instagram
Caption : So I told @abc4explore “mate sorry forgot to tell you, we are about to dive with tiger sharks in a place where no one has intentially done so before, and there’s more under there than any place on earth, and there a massive food source that has them all super competitive” He said “come on mate I’ve done 85 or something shark weeks, nothing can be new to me” Neither of us said this but there is some truth in the statements @sharkweek starts in just five days time!!!!! Tune into @discovery on the 29th July for #sharksofheadstonehell to see what we got ourselves intoLikes : 1193

1.2K Likes – Riley Elliott Instagram
Caption : The Great White App coming soon. Check out the linked article to see how you can be directly involved. https://www.nzherald.co.nz/bay-of-plenty-times/news/great-white-app-to-track-and-advise-on-safe-water/S3AI6VSUTJ3TPFGNQFF5DTJCSM/Likes : 1176

1.1K Likes – Riley Elliott Instagram
Caption : A weekend of crazy context!! Friday, speak to hundreds of school kids about the importance of sharks and our oceans thanks to @mazda_nz and our annual Treemendous circuit. Saturday: attend the boat show to highlight the incredible support I have had from @extremeboats.nz @yamahamarinenz @gfabtrailers @raymarine_nz @seadek who put together a boat package which has enabled the Great White Project in NZ and a @sharkweek show to be released this summer. Also to share my occupational journey with the next generation of kids, encouraging following your passion with the necessity of working hard. Sunday: turn up to a Hollywood set to work with the awesome Jason Momoa @prideofgypsies sharing a passion for the ocean, it’s incredible creatures, the cultural connections with it. Jason is obviously a hugely successful actor but he was more so a genuine, kind at heart, incredibly hard working man who had friends and family on set and I was stoked to have been invited by him! He also made me have a massive bonus fan girl moment by inviting two of my favourite ocean legends on set – @mikecoots who is an incredible photographer and shark ambassador, having lost a leg to a Tiger shark attack, Mike is such a powerful messenger of pro shark appreciation. And @kimi_swimmy an incredible women who is so humble and kind that you fully recognise what living in the ocean does for one’s personality. A ray of complete sunshine and one which inspired my lovely wife @amberandfriendsphoto to become a mother in the face of fear of losing one’s identity or ability to play in the sea. So powerful have been Kimi’s stories that I read up on the incredible Haenyeo women freedivers from Jeju and Amber created Project Hapū aimed at showcasing how incredible women are through pregnancy and ocean lives. After such a weekend of massive context shifts from Hollywood to school classrooms, I think the highlight will always be the sharing of knowledge and information with others, in efforts to improve the world around us. The shiny stuff can be nice but the natural world is what keeps us aliveLikes : 1115

1.1K Likes – Riley Elliott Instagram
Caption : A weekend of crazy context!! Friday, speak to hundreds of school kids about the importance of sharks and our oceans thanks to @mazda_nz and our annual Treemendous circuit. Saturday: attend the boat show to highlight the incredible support I have had from @extremeboats.nz @yamahamarinenz @gfabtrailers @raymarine_nz @seadek who put together a boat package which has enabled the Great White Project in NZ and a @sharkweek show to be released this summer. Also to share my occupational journey with the next generation of kids, encouraging following your passion with the necessity of working hard. Sunday: turn up to a Hollywood set to work with the awesome Jason Momoa @prideofgypsies sharing a passion for the ocean, it’s incredible creatures, the cultural connections with it. Jason is obviously a hugely successful actor but he was more so a genuine, kind at heart, incredibly hard working man who had friends and family on set and I was stoked to have been invited by him! He also made me have a massive bonus fan girl moment by inviting two of my favourite ocean legends on set – @mikecoots who is an incredible photographer and shark ambassador, having lost a leg to a Tiger shark attack, Mike is such a powerful messenger of pro shark appreciation. And @kimi_swimmy an incredible women who is so humble and kind that you fully recognise what living in the ocean does for one’s personality. A ray of complete sunshine and one which inspired my lovely wife @amberandfriendsphoto to become a mother in the face of fear of losing one’s identity or ability to play in the sea. So powerful have been Kimi’s stories that I read up on the incredible Haenyeo women freedivers from Jeju and Amber created Project Hapū aimed at showcasing how incredible women are through pregnancy and ocean lives. After such a weekend of massive context shifts from Hollywood to school classrooms, I think the highlight will always be the sharing of knowledge and information with others, in efforts to improve the world around us. The shiny stuff can be nice but the natural world is what keeps us aliveLikes : 1115

1.1K Likes – Riley Elliott Instagram
Caption : We found Daisy’s tag!!!! Thank you to everyone who put the word out, shared the posts, searched the beaches, told your relatives, amazing work. Long story short, I got a phone call a day ago from a lovely lady called Leanne in Gate Pa, who said her flat mate David found it while walking his dog Thor along the beach. David and Thor search for rubbish every day along the beaches, to keep NZ clean, and stumbled across this weird device. He brought it home, shared the intrigue with Leanne, but the next day they had a hospital appointment and were away for a few days. Understandably they were out of the loop for a time (the days you were all sharing the questions where Daisy’s tag was), and so when they got home, they turned on their phones and holy cow, saw the messages everywhere on social media, the news, the paper etc etc thanks to all of you! And then I got the call. The following day I visited them, who were huge shark fans, both grew up in the JAWS era, but both however love what sharks stand for and do in the oceans, and they were so stoked to have brought Daisy’s tag back to the Great White Project. Next step, find Daisy 🙂 and continue to learn about her and other Great Whites sharks starting to share the waves with us in NE NZ. Thank you so so much for all of your support. This project wouldn’t have even got off the ground without the amazing NZ public, so thank you, and to all the media and news agencies for helping share the information.Likes : 1056

1K Likes – Riley Elliott Instagram
Caption : Daisy the Great White has made an incredible journey. She was first tagged inside the northern end of Tauranga Harbour, by Bowentown and then was tracked to the eastern BOP by the East Cape where she resided for some weeks in a very refined area, likely feeding on spawning schools of fish. Now in a matter of days she has returned to the Tauranga Harbour this time through the southern channel beside the Mt. She is presumably learning the extent of her home range which at present is determined by prey availability of fish and rays, before she matures into a sun adult and may eventually migrate south to seal colonies. If you want to check out the tracks in detail go to www.sustainableoceansociety.co.nz of which the link is in my bio. Pretty incredible movement for this young Great White shark. Please be aware of such movements in your recreation, especially with where you fish or set nets as this is an endangered and protected animal. Please also be aware of where you fish or dispose of fish product to ensure it does not overlap with where people swim, otherwise we can increase the overlap with feeding sharks. What is pretty incredible, whether you want to know or not, is that in the height of summer holidays this animal is sharing the waters we play in. Clearly it’s not a JAWs monster but rather an integral part of an ocean ecosystem we play in and feed from. The more we can learn how and when and why each of our species use certain areas, the more we can ensure co-existence in our stunning marine environment.Likes : 1031

1K Likes – Riley Elliott Instagram
Caption : Daisy the Great White has made an incredible journey. She was first tagged inside the northern end of Tauranga Harbour, by Bowentown and then was tracked to the eastern BOP by the East Cape where she resided for some weeks in a very refined area, likely feeding on spawning schools of fish. Now in a matter of days she has returned to the Tauranga Harbour this time through the southern channel beside the Mt. She is presumably learning the extent of her home range which at present is determined by prey availability of fish and rays, before she matures into a sun adult and may eventually migrate south to seal colonies. If you want to check out the tracks in detail go to www.sustainableoceansociety.co.nz of which the link is in my bio. Pretty incredible movement for this young Great White shark. Please be aware of such movements in your recreation, especially with where you fish or set nets as this is an endangered and protected animal. Please also be aware of where you fish or dispose of fish product to ensure it does not overlap with where people swim, otherwise we can increase the overlap with feeding sharks. What is pretty incredible, whether you want to know or not, is that in the height of summer holidays this animal is sharing the waters we play in. Clearly it’s not a JAWs monster but rather an integral part of an ocean ecosystem we play in and feed from. The more we can learn how and when and why each of our species use certain areas, the more we can ensure co-existence in our stunning marine environment.Likes : 1031

1K Likes – Riley Elliott Instagram
Caption : Daisy the Great White has made an incredible journey. She was first tagged inside the northern end of Tauranga Harbour, by Bowentown and then was tracked to the eastern BOP by the East Cape where she resided for some weeks in a very refined area, likely feeding on spawning schools of fish. Now in a matter of days she has returned to the Tauranga Harbour this time through the southern channel beside the Mt. She is presumably learning the extent of her home range which at present is determined by prey availability of fish and rays, before she matures into a sun adult and may eventually migrate south to seal colonies. If you want to check out the tracks in detail go to www.sustainableoceansociety.co.nz of which the link is in my bio. Pretty incredible movement for this young Great White shark. Please be aware of such movements in your recreation, especially with where you fish or set nets as this is an endangered and protected animal. Please also be aware of where you fish or dispose of fish product to ensure it does not overlap with where people swim, otherwise we can increase the overlap with feeding sharks. What is pretty incredible, whether you want to know or not, is that in the height of summer holidays this animal is sharing the waters we play in. Clearly it’s not a JAWs monster but rather an integral part of an ocean ecosystem we play in and feed from. The more we can learn how and when and why each of our species use certain areas, the more we can ensure co-existence in our stunning marine environment.Likes : 1031

1K Likes – Riley Elliott Instagram
Caption : Daisy the Great White has made an incredible journey. She was first tagged inside the northern end of Tauranga Harbour, by Bowentown and then was tracked to the eastern BOP by the East Cape where she resided for some weeks in a very refined area, likely feeding on spawning schools of fish. Now in a matter of days she has returned to the Tauranga Harbour this time through the southern channel beside the Mt. She is presumably learning the extent of her home range which at present is determined by prey availability of fish and rays, before she matures into a sun adult and may eventually migrate south to seal colonies. If you want to check out the tracks in detail go to www.sustainableoceansociety.co.nz of which the link is in my bio. Pretty incredible movement for this young Great White shark. Please be aware of such movements in your recreation, especially with where you fish or set nets as this is an endangered and protected animal. Please also be aware of where you fish or dispose of fish product to ensure it does not overlap with where people swim, otherwise we can increase the overlap with feeding sharks. What is pretty incredible, whether you want to know or not, is that in the height of summer holidays this animal is sharing the waters we play in. Clearly it’s not a JAWs monster but rather an integral part of an ocean ecosystem we play in and feed from. The more we can learn how and when and why each of our species use certain areas, the more we can ensure co-existence in our stunning marine environment.Likes : 1031

1K Likes – Riley Elliott Instagram
Caption : Daisy the Great White has made an incredible journey. She was first tagged inside the northern end of Tauranga Harbour, by Bowentown and then was tracked to the eastern BOP by the East Cape where she resided for some weeks in a very refined area, likely feeding on spawning schools of fish. Now in a matter of days she has returned to the Tauranga Harbour this time through the southern channel beside the Mt. She is presumably learning the extent of her home range which at present is determined by prey availability of fish and rays, before she matures into a sun adult and may eventually migrate south to seal colonies. If you want to check out the tracks in detail go to www.sustainableoceansociety.co.nz of which the link is in my bio. Pretty incredible movement for this young Great White shark. Please be aware of such movements in your recreation, especially with where you fish or set nets as this is an endangered and protected animal. Please also be aware of where you fish or dispose of fish product to ensure it does not overlap with where people swim, otherwise we can increase the overlap with feeding sharks. What is pretty incredible, whether you want to know or not, is that in the height of summer holidays this animal is sharing the waters we play in. Clearly it’s not a JAWs monster but rather an integral part of an ocean ecosystem we play in and feed from. The more we can learn how and when and why each of our species use certain areas, the more we can ensure co-existence in our stunning marine environment.Likes : 1031

1K Likes – Riley Elliott Instagram
Caption : A fascinating time in NZ for ocean life. This time of year we get the E Aus current pushing down our warm summer water. Already we have had sea snakes, turtles and migratory birds turn up. Also Great whites popping up in harbours likely pupping. This map shows an awesome Tiger shark I have followed for a long time, tagged by Australian scientists at Norfolk Island after we did a @sharkweek show the year prior, emphasising the need to study these animals and they did a great job tagging a bunch which you can follow on the @ocearch app. It’s my silent addiction watching where these sharks move and as you can see by the sea temperature map, this shark is moving towards NZ with that descending warm water. Tiger sharks generally reside within water over 22’C and this shark is doing just that. We used to have many records of Tigers caught out at Mayor island but research shows they generally stay deep and so are rarely seen. But I’ve also seen photos of baby Tigers caught in the Hauraki Gulf just off Auckland CBD which shows some novel and unprecedented pupping behaviour. Long story short, satellite tracking provides some amazing insight into animals and that is the endeavour of my Great White project, where people can sponsor a shark, name it, and a soon to be released website will allow anyone to follow their movements. It’s good for the sharks through scientific conservation but also for us, to best educate ourselves on where we may wish to swim. If you are interested in sponsoring a great white go to www.sustainableocean society.co.nz link in my bioLikes : 975

1K Likes – Riley Elliott Instagram
Caption : A fascinating time in NZ for ocean life. This time of year we get the E Aus current pushing down our warm summer water. Already we have had sea snakes, turtles and migratory birds turn up. Also Great whites popping up in harbours likely pupping. This map shows an awesome Tiger shark I have followed for a long time, tagged by Australian scientists at Norfolk Island after we did a @sharkweek show the year prior, emphasising the need to study these animals and they did a great job tagging a bunch which you can follow on the @ocearch app. It’s my silent addiction watching where these sharks move and as you can see by the sea temperature map, this shark is moving towards NZ with that descending warm water. Tiger sharks generally reside within water over 22’C and this shark is doing just that. We used to have many records of Tigers caught out at Mayor island but research shows they generally stay deep and so are rarely seen. But I’ve also seen photos of baby Tigers caught in the Hauraki Gulf just off Auckland CBD which shows some novel and unprecedented pupping behaviour. Long story short, satellite tracking provides some amazing insight into animals and that is the endeavour of my Great White project, where people can sponsor a shark, name it, and a soon to be released website will allow anyone to follow their movements. It’s good for the sharks through scientific conservation but also for us, to best educate ourselves on where we may wish to swim. If you are interested in sponsoring a great white go to www.sustainableocean society.co.nz link in my bioLikes : 975

1K Likes – Riley Elliott Instagram
Caption : A fascinating time in NZ for ocean life. This time of year we get the E Aus current pushing down our warm summer water. Already we have had sea snakes, turtles and migratory birds turn up. Also Great whites popping up in harbours likely pupping. This map shows an awesome Tiger shark I have followed for a long time, tagged by Australian scientists at Norfolk Island after we did a @sharkweek show the year prior, emphasising the need to study these animals and they did a great job tagging a bunch which you can follow on the @ocearch app. It’s my silent addiction watching where these sharks move and as you can see by the sea temperature map, this shark is moving towards NZ with that descending warm water. Tiger sharks generally reside within water over 22’C and this shark is doing just that. We used to have many records of Tigers caught out at Mayor island but research shows they generally stay deep and so are rarely seen. But I’ve also seen photos of baby Tigers caught in the Hauraki Gulf just off Auckland CBD which shows some novel and unprecedented pupping behaviour. Long story short, satellite tracking provides some amazing insight into animals and that is the endeavour of my Great White project, where people can sponsor a shark, name it, and a soon to be released website will allow anyone to follow their movements. It’s good for the sharks through scientific conservation but also for us, to best educate ourselves on where we may wish to swim. If you are interested in sponsoring a great white go to www.sustainableocean society.co.nz link in my bioLikes : 975

1K Likes – Riley Elliott Instagram
Caption : Another Great White shark has been tagged and is on the Great White App! It’s name is SWAJ – named by sponsors who wanted to help reverse the JAWS mentality – and what better a shark than this amazing 1.4m long, less than one year old new born. A very novel shark to tag. She is the second I have seen in this area which reflects how important it is for the species. On the same day as I tagged this shark I unfortunately also got news that Takami’s tag was torn off by a fishing longline put out off the beach using a kontiki. From the report it would appear that Takami interacted with the line, either for its bait or a fish that was hooked, and she got hooked herself and panicked, becoming entangled. She broke free but the tag got snagged on the longline which was recovered when they reeled it in. I am very grateful for the guys reporting it to me and are sending the tag back for re-deployment later. It is not their fault at all, as they were just tying to catch a feed in what is a very low bycatch manner. It has however become a more common source of juvenile GW interactions. These men were doing the right thing, watching their longline so they could have released any bycatch that may occur. It appears Takami got away ok but I am gutted that we won’t be able to follow her movements anymore. This tagging project is designed to help us learn more about their critical habitat so that we can ensure we don’t adversely interact with them and vice versa. At this stage however, as seen through Takami and in tagging SWAJ, a baby Gw, it would appear that they are vulnerable little sharks likely facing greater risks day to day from fishing interactions. Please don’t use set nets in areas with larger animal presence and if you accidentally hook a shark on a line, please cut the line at the hook and release the shark immediately while it remains in the water. If it’s a GW this is a legal obligation and you must report it to DOC. The Great White App is now available on the Google store for Android, for a small fee that supports the running of this project. It is being developed for Apple asap and it as always is available free to view at sustainableoceansociety.co.nzLikes : 968

1K Likes – Riley Elliott Instagram
Caption : Another Great White shark has been tagged and is on the Great White App! It’s name is SWAJ – named by sponsors who wanted to help reverse the JAWS mentality – and what better a shark than this amazing 1.4m long, less than one year old new born. A very novel shark to tag. She is the second I have seen in this area which reflects how important it is for the species. On the same day as I tagged this shark I unfortunately also got news that Takami’s tag was torn off by a fishing longline put out off the beach using a kontiki. From the report it would appear that Takami interacted with the line, either for its bait or a fish that was hooked, and she got hooked herself and panicked, becoming entangled. She broke free but the tag got snagged on the longline which was recovered when they reeled it in. I am very grateful for the guys reporting it to me and are sending the tag back for re-deployment later. It is not their fault at all, as they were just tying to catch a feed in what is a very low bycatch manner. It has however become a more common source of juvenile GW interactions. These men were doing the right thing, watching their longline so they could have released any bycatch that may occur. It appears Takami got away ok but I am gutted that we won’t be able to follow her movements anymore. This tagging project is designed to help us learn more about their critical habitat so that we can ensure we don’t adversely interact with them and vice versa. At this stage however, as seen through Takami and in tagging SWAJ, a baby Gw, it would appear that they are vulnerable little sharks likely facing greater risks day to day from fishing interactions. Please don’t use set nets in areas with larger animal presence and if you accidentally hook a shark on a line, please cut the line at the hook and release the shark immediately while it remains in the water. If it’s a GW this is a legal obligation and you must report it to DOC. The Great White App is now available on the Google store for Android, for a small fee that supports the running of this project. It is being developed for Apple asap and it as always is available free to view at sustainableoceansociety.co.nzLikes : 968

1K Likes – Riley Elliott Instagram
Caption : The morning ritual of wake up, coffee in hand but rather than straight to the newspaper, now I am all about seeing where the Great Whites are and wow Mananui has made an incredible mission up the Coromandel Coast, passed my house and to the Mercury Bay Islands. Where to next for this shark??? Keep an eye on the Great White App (link in my bio)Likes : 952

1K Likes – Riley Elliott Instagram
Caption : The morning ritual of wake up, coffee in hand but rather than straight to the newspaper, now I am all about seeing where the Great Whites are and wow Mananui has made an incredible mission up the Coromandel Coast, passed my house and to the Mercury Bay Islands. Where to next for this shark??? Keep an eye on the Great White App (link in my bio)Likes : 952

1K Likes – Riley Elliott Instagram
Caption : The morning ritual of wake up, coffee in hand but rather than straight to the newspaper, now I am all about seeing where the Great Whites are and wow Mananui has made an incredible mission up the Coromandel Coast, passed my house and to the Mercury Bay Islands. Where to next for this shark??? Keep an eye on the Great White App (link in my bio)Likes : 952

1K Likes – Riley Elliott Instagram
Caption : The morning ritual of wake up, coffee in hand but rather than straight to the newspaper, now I am all about seeing where the Great Whites are and wow Mananui has made an incredible mission up the Coromandel Coast, passed my house and to the Mercury Bay Islands. Where to next for this shark??? Keep an eye on the Great White App (link in my bio)Likes : 952

869 Likes – Riley Elliott Instagram
Caption : Do you live in the Papamoa Beach area? Can you help me find a Shark Tag??? $100 reward 🙂 Free after school entertainment for kids and dogs lol Unfortunately the famous Great White Shark Daisy, seems to have dropped her tag and it has floated inshore onto the beach roughly in the area in front of Papamoa Beach Surf Club. The tag will look similar to the below picture. It will have seaweed growth on it so may blend in, and will likely be at the high tide mark. This location below shows it on the land but the last location signal was an inaccurate one, so its within a few kms of this area, but definitely on the beach as it washed ashore. The satellites are not overhead to give more accurate locations until tonight. So please if you are in the area, could you have a look and text/call me if you find it 027 463 7397 There has been do much debris in the ocean from the ongoing floods that these tags have had a hard ride through the usually empty ocean, and this is the third to pull from the sharks.Likes : 869

869 Likes – Riley Elliott Instagram
Caption : Do you live in the Papamoa Beach area? Can you help me find a Shark Tag??? $100 reward 🙂 Free after school entertainment for kids and dogs lol Unfortunately the famous Great White Shark Daisy, seems to have dropped her tag and it has floated inshore onto the beach roughly in the area in front of Papamoa Beach Surf Club. The tag will look similar to the below picture. It will have seaweed growth on it so may blend in, and will likely be at the high tide mark. This location below shows it on the land but the last location signal was an inaccurate one, so its within a few kms of this area, but definitely on the beach as it washed ashore. The satellites are not overhead to give more accurate locations until tonight. So please if you are in the area, could you have a look and text/call me if you find it 027 463 7397 There has been do much debris in the ocean from the ongoing floods that these tags have had a hard ride through the usually empty ocean, and this is the third to pull from the sharks.Likes : 869

869 Likes – Riley Elliott Instagram
Caption : Do you live in the Papamoa Beach area? Can you help me find a Shark Tag??? $100 reward 🙂 Free after school entertainment for kids and dogs lol Unfortunately the famous Great White Shark Daisy, seems to have dropped her tag and it has floated inshore onto the beach roughly in the area in front of Papamoa Beach Surf Club. The tag will look similar to the below picture. It will have seaweed growth on it so may blend in, and will likely be at the high tide mark. This location below shows it on the land but the last location signal was an inaccurate one, so its within a few kms of this area, but definitely on the beach as it washed ashore. The satellites are not overhead to give more accurate locations until tonight. So please if you are in the area, could you have a look and text/call me if you find it 027 463 7397 There has been do much debris in the ocean from the ongoing floods that these tags have had a hard ride through the usually empty ocean, and this is the third to pull from the sharks.Likes : 869

869 Likes – Riley Elliott Instagram
Caption : Do you live in the Papamoa Beach area? Can you help me find a Shark Tag??? $100 reward 🙂 Free after school entertainment for kids and dogs lol Unfortunately the famous Great White Shark Daisy, seems to have dropped her tag and it has floated inshore onto the beach roughly in the area in front of Papamoa Beach Surf Club. The tag will look similar to the below picture. It will have seaweed growth on it so may blend in, and will likely be at the high tide mark. This location below shows it on the land but the last location signal was an inaccurate one, so its within a few kms of this area, but definitely on the beach as it washed ashore. The satellites are not overhead to give more accurate locations until tonight. So please if you are in the area, could you have a look and text/call me if you find it 027 463 7397 There has been do much debris in the ocean from the ongoing floods that these tags have had a hard ride through the usually empty ocean, and this is the third to pull from the sharks.Likes : 869

869 Likes – Riley Elliott Instagram
Caption : Do you live in the Papamoa Beach area? Can you help me find a Shark Tag??? $100 reward 🙂 Free after school entertainment for kids and dogs lol Unfortunately the famous Great White Shark Daisy, seems to have dropped her tag and it has floated inshore onto the beach roughly in the area in front of Papamoa Beach Surf Club. The tag will look similar to the below picture. It will have seaweed growth on it so may blend in, and will likely be at the high tide mark. This location below shows it on the land but the last location signal was an inaccurate one, so its within a few kms of this area, but definitely on the beach as it washed ashore. The satellites are not overhead to give more accurate locations until tonight. So please if you are in the area, could you have a look and text/call me if you find it 027 463 7397 There has been do much debris in the ocean from the ongoing floods that these tags have had a hard ride through the usually empty ocean, and this is the third to pull from the sharks.Likes : 869

869 Likes – Riley Elliott Instagram
Caption : Do you live in the Papamoa Beach area? Can you help me find a Shark Tag??? $100 reward 🙂 Free after school entertainment for kids and dogs lol Unfortunately the famous Great White Shark Daisy, seems to have dropped her tag and it has floated inshore onto the beach roughly in the area in front of Papamoa Beach Surf Club. The tag will look similar to the below picture. It will have seaweed growth on it so may blend in, and will likely be at the high tide mark. This location below shows it on the land but the last location signal was an inaccurate one, so its within a few kms of this area, but definitely on the beach as it washed ashore. The satellites are not overhead to give more accurate locations until tonight. So please if you are in the area, could you have a look and text/call me if you find it 027 463 7397 There has been do much debris in the ocean from the ongoing floods that these tags have had a hard ride through the usually empty ocean, and this is the third to pull from the sharks.Likes : 869

803 Likes – Riley Elliott Instagram
Caption : Incredible!!!! SWAJ (jaws in reverse) the last remaining tag transmitting at this point has migrated!!!!! After four months of hanging out in Doubtless bay this baby Great White has made a huge migration to Port Waikato!!!! Incredible to see not only the clear nursery areas utilised like Doubtless bay (in the circle) this baby GW only four feet long has now popped up on the West coast. Absolutely incredible stuff. We would not know any of this without the amazing public support of the Great White Project. Thanks to Hughes Hallett and Vipond Endeavours for sponsoring SWAJ. And I will be making best efforts to tag more GWs and get the other tags we recovered thanks to you, back out on those sharks and more. Cheers everyone. Amazing workLikes : 803

797 Likes – Riley Elliott Instagram
Caption : Tonight Watch Clash of Killers: Great White vs Mako, Friday at 9p ET on @Discovery and @discoveryplus #SharkWeek This was such an extreme adventure on the high seas trying to follow the migration of two open ocean predators. Be sure to tune in for some incredible shark action and insane New Zealand landscapes with myself and @saminthewild_ Thanks to @radleystudios Sigi @wazzagreen @liquid_action_films George @billy.turner98 Tony Spear @sharkexperiencebluff and Sean KellyLikes : 797

778 Likes – Riley Elliott Instagram
Caption : Happy Int Women’s Day !!! To all the incredible ladies out there and to my personal fave, I’m so proud of you, your passion and talent, which has blossomed into an ever growing career. Your compassion and understanding which empowers and supports not only yourself but also me. Big love to you and the successes past present and future. And most of all thanks for encouraging other woman to pursue whatever industry they desire and show us men how powerful and capable you all are xxxLikes : 778

778 Likes – Riley Elliott Instagram
Caption : Happy Int Women’s Day !!! To all the incredible ladies out there and to my personal fave, I’m so proud of you, your passion and talent, which has blossomed into an ever growing career. Your compassion and understanding which empowers and supports not only yourself but also me. Big love to you and the successes past present and future. And most of all thanks for encouraging other woman to pursue whatever industry they desire and show us men how powerful and capable you all are xxxLikes : 778

778 Likes – Riley Elliott Instagram
Caption : Happy Int Women’s Day !!! To all the incredible ladies out there and to my personal fave, I’m so proud of you, your passion and talent, which has blossomed into an ever growing career. Your compassion and understanding which empowers and supports not only yourself but also me. Big love to you and the successes past present and future. And most of all thanks for encouraging other woman to pursue whatever industry they desire and show us men how powerful and capable you all are xxxLikes : 778

778 Likes – Riley Elliott Instagram
Caption : Happy Int Women’s Day !!! To all the incredible ladies out there and to my personal fave, I’m so proud of you, your passion and talent, which has blossomed into an ever growing career. Your compassion and understanding which empowers and supports not only yourself but also me. Big love to you and the successes past present and future. And most of all thanks for encouraging other woman to pursue whatever industry they desire and show us men how powerful and capable you all are xxxLikes : 778

778 Likes – Riley Elliott Instagram
Caption : Happy Int Women’s Day !!! To all the incredible ladies out there and to my personal fave, I’m so proud of you, your passion and talent, which has blossomed into an ever growing career. Your compassion and understanding which empowers and supports not only yourself but also me. Big love to you and the successes past present and future. And most of all thanks for encouraging other woman to pursue whatever industry they desire and show us men how powerful and capable you all are xxxLikes : 778

738 Likes – Riley Elliott Instagram
Caption : Merry XmasLikes : 738

677 Likes – Riley Elliott Instagram
Caption : Thank you @sharkweek for another amazing opportunity to share sharks with the world. I hope you all enjoyed it!!! I’m sure there was something for everyone? I would love to know your thoughts? A huge thanks to all the crew who helped make Jaws in the Shallows. The NZ community who have helped fund tags, house our crew, feed us and provide super useful citizen science by reporting great white sightings. Thank you also to @stephendavidentertainment for helping produce our show. Thanks to @discovery for providing me a childhood dream come true. Thanks also to @extremeboats.nz @yamahamarinenz @gfabtrailers @raymarine_nz @mazda_nz for enabling this project with the research vessel and truck to tow it. Thanks to my stunning wife @amberandfriendsphoto for helping tag and present while in first trimester sickness xxx And thanks to awesome ocean hero’s @prideofgypsies @kimi_swimmy @mikecoots for bringing massive exposure and appreciation for the ocean. Jaws in the Shallows isn’t just a tv show, it’s a representation of a greater research project that I am writing up for publication now, in effort to bring better awareness of this endangered species. It’s also a project to help us as ocean users coexist while playing in the sharks domain. I surf in these very waters where there are now Great whites. Time to walk the talk aye;) Shark Week is about the sharks. Without such a platform, without public engagement and support, without brands supporting it, this wouldn’t happen so thank you all for helping us help the sharks.Likes : 677

677 Likes – Riley Elliott Instagram
Caption : Thank you @sharkweek for another amazing opportunity to share sharks with the world. I hope you all enjoyed it!!! I’m sure there was something for everyone? I would love to know your thoughts? A huge thanks to all the crew who helped make Jaws in the Shallows. The NZ community who have helped fund tags, house our crew, feed us and provide super useful citizen science by reporting great white sightings. Thank you also to @stephendavidentertainment for helping produce our show. Thanks to @discovery for providing me a childhood dream come true. Thanks also to @extremeboats.nz @yamahamarinenz @gfabtrailers @raymarine_nz @mazda_nz for enabling this project with the research vessel and truck to tow it. Thanks to my stunning wife @amberandfriendsphoto for helping tag and present while in first trimester sickness xxx And thanks to awesome ocean hero’s @prideofgypsies @kimi_swimmy @mikecoots for bringing massive exposure and appreciation for the ocean. Jaws in the Shallows isn’t just a tv show, it’s a representation of a greater research project that I am writing up for publication now, in effort to bring better awareness of this endangered species. It’s also a project to help us as ocean users coexist while playing in the sharks domain. I surf in these very waters where there are now Great whites. Time to walk the talk aye;) Shark Week is about the sharks. Without such a platform, without public engagement and support, without brands supporting it, this wouldn’t happen so thank you all for helping us help the sharks.Likes : 677

677 Likes – Riley Elliott Instagram
Caption : Thank you @sharkweek for another amazing opportunity to share sharks with the world. I hope you all enjoyed it!!! I’m sure there was something for everyone? I would love to know your thoughts? A huge thanks to all the crew who helped make Jaws in the Shallows. The NZ community who have helped fund tags, house our crew, feed us and provide super useful citizen science by reporting great white sightings. Thank you also to @stephendavidentertainment for helping produce our show. Thanks to @discovery for providing me a childhood dream come true. Thanks also to @extremeboats.nz @yamahamarinenz @gfabtrailers @raymarine_nz @mazda_nz for enabling this project with the research vessel and truck to tow it. Thanks to my stunning wife @amberandfriendsphoto for helping tag and present while in first trimester sickness xxx And thanks to awesome ocean hero’s @prideofgypsies @kimi_swimmy @mikecoots for bringing massive exposure and appreciation for the ocean. Jaws in the Shallows isn’t just a tv show, it’s a representation of a greater research project that I am writing up for publication now, in effort to bring better awareness of this endangered species. It’s also a project to help us as ocean users coexist while playing in the sharks domain. I surf in these very waters where there are now Great whites. Time to walk the talk aye;) Shark Week is about the sharks. Without such a platform, without public engagement and support, without brands supporting it, this wouldn’t happen so thank you all for helping us help the sharks.Likes : 677

677 Likes – Riley Elliott Instagram
Caption : Thank you @sharkweek for another amazing opportunity to share sharks with the world. I hope you all enjoyed it!!! I’m sure there was something for everyone? I would love to know your thoughts? A huge thanks to all the crew who helped make Jaws in the Shallows. The NZ community who have helped fund tags, house our crew, feed us and provide super useful citizen science by reporting great white sightings. Thank you also to @stephendavidentertainment for helping produce our show. Thanks to @discovery for providing me a childhood dream come true. Thanks also to @extremeboats.nz @yamahamarinenz @gfabtrailers @raymarine_nz @mazda_nz for enabling this project with the research vessel and truck to tow it. Thanks to my stunning wife @amberandfriendsphoto for helping tag and present while in first trimester sickness xxx And thanks to awesome ocean hero’s @prideofgypsies @kimi_swimmy @mikecoots for bringing massive exposure and appreciation for the ocean. Jaws in the Shallows isn’t just a tv show, it’s a representation of a greater research project that I am writing up for publication now, in effort to bring better awareness of this endangered species. It’s also a project to help us as ocean users coexist while playing in the sharks domain. I surf in these very waters where there are now Great whites. Time to walk the talk aye;) Shark Week is about the sharks. Without such a platform, without public engagement and support, without brands supporting it, this wouldn’t happen so thank you all for helping us help the sharks.Likes : 677

677 Likes – Riley Elliott Instagram
Caption : Thank you @sharkweek for another amazing opportunity to share sharks with the world. I hope you all enjoyed it!!! I’m sure there was something for everyone? I would love to know your thoughts? A huge thanks to all the crew who helped make Jaws in the Shallows. The NZ community who have helped fund tags, house our crew, feed us and provide super useful citizen science by reporting great white sightings. Thank you also to @stephendavidentertainment for helping produce our show. Thanks to @discovery for providing me a childhood dream come true. Thanks also to @extremeboats.nz @yamahamarinenz @gfabtrailers @raymarine_nz @mazda_nz for enabling this project with the research vessel and truck to tow it. Thanks to my stunning wife @amberandfriendsphoto for helping tag and present while in first trimester sickness xxx And thanks to awesome ocean hero’s @prideofgypsies @kimi_swimmy @mikecoots for bringing massive exposure and appreciation for the ocean. Jaws in the Shallows isn’t just a tv show, it’s a representation of a greater research project that I am writing up for publication now, in effort to bring better awareness of this endangered species. It’s also a project to help us as ocean users coexist while playing in the sharks domain. I surf in these very waters where there are now Great whites. Time to walk the talk aye;) Shark Week is about the sharks. Without such a platform, without public engagement and support, without brands supporting it, this wouldn’t happen so thank you all for helping us help the sharks.Likes : 677

677 Likes – Riley Elliott Instagram
Caption : Thank you @sharkweek for another amazing opportunity to share sharks with the world. I hope you all enjoyed it!!! I’m sure there was something for everyone? I would love to know your thoughts? A huge thanks to all the crew who helped make Jaws in the Shallows. The NZ community who have helped fund tags, house our crew, feed us and provide super useful citizen science by reporting great white sightings. Thank you also to @stephendavidentertainment for helping produce our show. Thanks to @discovery for providing me a childhood dream come true. Thanks also to @extremeboats.nz @yamahamarinenz @gfabtrailers @raymarine_nz @mazda_nz for enabling this project with the research vessel and truck to tow it. Thanks to my stunning wife @amberandfriendsphoto for helping tag and present while in first trimester sickness xxx And thanks to awesome ocean hero’s @prideofgypsies @kimi_swimmy @mikecoots for bringing massive exposure and appreciation for the ocean. Jaws in the Shallows isn’t just a tv show, it’s a representation of a greater research project that I am writing up for publication now, in effort to bring better awareness of this endangered species. It’s also a project to help us as ocean users coexist while playing in the sharks domain. I surf in these very waters where there are now Great whites. Time to walk the talk aye;) Shark Week is about the sharks. Without such a platform, without public engagement and support, without brands supporting it, this wouldn’t happen so thank you all for helping us help the sharks.Likes : 677

677 Likes – Riley Elliott Instagram
Caption : Thank you @sharkweek for another amazing opportunity to share sharks with the world. I hope you all enjoyed it!!! I’m sure there was something for everyone? I would love to know your thoughts? A huge thanks to all the crew who helped make Jaws in the Shallows. The NZ community who have helped fund tags, house our crew, feed us and provide super useful citizen science by reporting great white sightings. Thank you also to @stephendavidentertainment for helping produce our show. Thanks to @discovery for providing me a childhood dream come true. Thanks also to @extremeboats.nz @yamahamarinenz @gfabtrailers @raymarine_nz @mazda_nz for enabling this project with the research vessel and truck to tow it. Thanks to my stunning wife @amberandfriendsphoto for helping tag and present while in first trimester sickness xxx And thanks to awesome ocean hero’s @prideofgypsies @kimi_swimmy @mikecoots for bringing massive exposure and appreciation for the ocean. Jaws in the Shallows isn’t just a tv show, it’s a representation of a greater research project that I am writing up for publication now, in effort to bring better awareness of this endangered species. It’s also a project to help us as ocean users coexist while playing in the sharks domain. I surf in these very waters where there are now Great whites. Time to walk the talk aye;) Shark Week is about the sharks. Without such a platform, without public engagement and support, without brands supporting it, this wouldn’t happen so thank you all for helping us help the sharks.Likes : 677

677 Likes – Riley Elliott Instagram
Caption : Thank you @sharkweek for another amazing opportunity to share sharks with the world. I hope you all enjoyed it!!! I’m sure there was something for everyone? I would love to know your thoughts? A huge thanks to all the crew who helped make Jaws in the Shallows. The NZ community who have helped fund tags, house our crew, feed us and provide super useful citizen science by reporting great white sightings. Thank you also to @stephendavidentertainment for helping produce our show. Thanks to @discovery for providing me a childhood dream come true. Thanks also to @extremeboats.nz @yamahamarinenz @gfabtrailers @raymarine_nz @mazda_nz for enabling this project with the research vessel and truck to tow it. Thanks to my stunning wife @amberandfriendsphoto for helping tag and present while in first trimester sickness xxx And thanks to awesome ocean hero’s @prideofgypsies @kimi_swimmy @mikecoots for bringing massive exposure and appreciation for the ocean. Jaws in the Shallows isn’t just a tv show, it’s a representation of a greater research project that I am writing up for publication now, in effort to bring better awareness of this endangered species. It’s also a project to help us as ocean users coexist while playing in the sharks domain. I surf in these very waters where there are now Great whites. Time to walk the talk aye;) Shark Week is about the sharks. Without such a platform, without public engagement and support, without brands supporting it, this wouldn’t happen so thank you all for helping us help the sharks.Likes : 677

677 Likes – Riley Elliott Instagram
Caption : Thank you @sharkweek for another amazing opportunity to share sharks with the world. I hope you all enjoyed it!!! I’m sure there was something for everyone? I would love to know your thoughts? A huge thanks to all the crew who helped make Jaws in the Shallows. The NZ community who have helped fund tags, house our crew, feed us and provide super useful citizen science by reporting great white sightings. Thank you also to @stephendavidentertainment for helping produce our show. Thanks to @discovery for providing me a childhood dream come true. Thanks also to @extremeboats.nz @yamahamarinenz @gfabtrailers @raymarine_nz @mazda_nz for enabling this project with the research vessel and truck to tow it. Thanks to my stunning wife @amberandfriendsphoto for helping tag and present while in first trimester sickness xxx And thanks to awesome ocean hero’s @prideofgypsies @kimi_swimmy @mikecoots for bringing massive exposure and appreciation for the ocean. Jaws in the Shallows isn’t just a tv show, it’s a representation of a greater research project that I am writing up for publication now, in effort to bring better awareness of this endangered species. It’s also a project to help us as ocean users coexist while playing in the sharks domain. I surf in these very waters where there are now Great whites. Time to walk the talk aye;) Shark Week is about the sharks. Without such a platform, without public engagement and support, without brands supporting it, this wouldn’t happen so thank you all for helping us help the sharks.Likes : 677

677 Likes – Riley Elliott Instagram
Caption : Thank you @sharkweek for another amazing opportunity to share sharks with the world. I hope you all enjoyed it!!! I’m sure there was something for everyone? I would love to know your thoughts? A huge thanks to all the crew who helped make Jaws in the Shallows. The NZ community who have helped fund tags, house our crew, feed us and provide super useful citizen science by reporting great white sightings. Thank you also to @stephendavidentertainment for helping produce our show. Thanks to @discovery for providing me a childhood dream come true. Thanks also to @extremeboats.nz @yamahamarinenz @gfabtrailers @raymarine_nz @mazda_nz for enabling this project with the research vessel and truck to tow it. Thanks to my stunning wife @amberandfriendsphoto for helping tag and present while in first trimester sickness xxx And thanks to awesome ocean hero’s @prideofgypsies @kimi_swimmy @mikecoots for bringing massive exposure and appreciation for the ocean. Jaws in the Shallows isn’t just a tv show, it’s a representation of a greater research project that I am writing up for publication now, in effort to bring better awareness of this endangered species. It’s also a project to help us as ocean users coexist while playing in the sharks domain. I surf in these very waters where there are now Great whites. Time to walk the talk aye;) Shark Week is about the sharks. Without such a platform, without public engagement and support, without brands supporting it, this wouldn’t happen so thank you all for helping us help the sharks.Likes : 677

667 Likes – Riley Elliott Instagram
Caption : Awesome to see SWAJ giving us some new detections, even in the middle of massive storm swells. Hard to tell if the baby GW is running from the storm or is seeking out the most epic waves it has to offer. Judging from Mananui, currently on the west coasts 90mile beach, and the fact Daisy has gone ‘underground’, with no surfacing detections in a while, the trajectory of SWAJ may suggest they are getting sick of the east coasts storms and floodwaters which would likely make visual hunting difficult. Much to learn but one thing is for sure, this has been an unprecedented stormy summer.Likes : 667

650 Likes – Riley Elliott Instagram
Caption : Incredible movement patterns by SWAJ which are almost mirror images of Mananui’s migration to the West Coast’s 90mile beach. This is fascinating for several reasons. Firstly these are two totally different demographics/ages. SWAJ is a new born GW which should be residing in nursery ground areas, which in theory would have suggested she stayed within or at close proximity to Tauranga Harbour. So has she been forced out of the region due to a murky flood water harbour so dirty she can’t visually hunt, or perhaps GW nursery range is larger than theorised. Secondly, why this specific path, so similar to Mananui? We know that sharks can migrate entire oceans and therefore are able to accurately navigate, so perhaps there are key features or ‘road signs’ used by both sharks. If so, what is amazing is that the ability to read these is pure instinct as baby GWs receive no parental guidance. The other option for such paths & one I looked into to ensure it wasn’t the case, is these are human tracks and the shark and tag are on a boat! I feared this with Mananui, in seeing such direct paths and when she then went into Whangarei port area. But with both tags I receive temperature and wet/dry sensor data which show that they are not on a boat, and are in fact just doing something that’s almost unbelievable. What is a very real risk however, is several of the hotspot bays these sharks are visiting, are some of the areas where a recent NIWA fishery report showed that 53 GWs had been killed over the past decade as bycatch in commercial set nets/gill nets. Furthermore we’ve seen dozens either caught or wash up dead after recreational set nets and longlines have entangled GWs. Takami showed us first hand, the very real gauntlet that these sharks run each day. I am not against fishing at all, and fishers in general aren’t against sharks, and if they are they should know that more sharks mean healthier populations of fish they are after. So the common goal should be to identify areas of critical habitat for these endangered GWs and contrast that with human induced risk to them & us, as that can empower an informed ability to co-exist. That is the GW Projects goalLikes : 650

650 Likes – Riley Elliott Instagram
Caption : Incredible movement patterns by SWAJ which are almost mirror images of Mananui’s migration to the West Coast’s 90mile beach. This is fascinating for several reasons. Firstly these are two totally different demographics/ages. SWAJ is a new born GW which should be residing in nursery ground areas, which in theory would have suggested she stayed within or at close proximity to Tauranga Harbour. So has she been forced out of the region due to a murky flood water harbour so dirty she can’t visually hunt, or perhaps GW nursery range is larger than theorised. Secondly, why this specific path, so similar to Mananui? We know that sharks can migrate entire oceans and therefore are able to accurately navigate, so perhaps there are key features or ‘road signs’ used by both sharks. If so, what is amazing is that the ability to read these is pure instinct as baby GWs receive no parental guidance. The other option for such paths & one I looked into to ensure it wasn’t the case, is these are human tracks and the shark and tag are on a boat! I feared this with Mananui, in seeing such direct paths and when she then went into Whangarei port area. But with both tags I receive temperature and wet/dry sensor data which show that they are not on a boat, and are in fact just doing something that’s almost unbelievable. What is a very real risk however, is several of the hotspot bays these sharks are visiting, are some of the areas where a recent NIWA fishery report showed that 53 GWs had been killed over the past decade as bycatch in commercial set nets/gill nets. Furthermore we’ve seen dozens either caught or wash up dead after recreational set nets and longlines have entangled GWs. Takami showed us first hand, the very real gauntlet that these sharks run each day. I am not against fishing at all, and fishers in general aren’t against sharks, and if they are they should know that more sharks mean healthier populations of fish they are after. So the common goal should be to identify areas of critical habitat for these endangered GWs and contrast that with human induced risk to them & us, as that can empower an informed ability to co-exist. That is the GW Projects goalLikes : 650

650 Likes – Riley Elliott Instagram
Caption : Incredible movement patterns by SWAJ which are almost mirror images of Mananui’s migration to the West Coast’s 90mile beach. This is fascinating for several reasons. Firstly these are two totally different demographics/ages. SWAJ is a new born GW which should be residing in nursery ground areas, which in theory would have suggested she stayed within or at close proximity to Tauranga Harbour. So has she been forced out of the region due to a murky flood water harbour so dirty she can’t visually hunt, or perhaps GW nursery range is larger than theorised. Secondly, why this specific path, so similar to Mananui? We know that sharks can migrate entire oceans and therefore are able to accurately navigate, so perhaps there are key features or ‘road signs’ used by both sharks. If so, what is amazing is that the ability to read these is pure instinct as baby GWs receive no parental guidance. The other option for such paths & one I looked into to ensure it wasn’t the case, is these are human tracks and the shark and tag are on a boat! I feared this with Mananui, in seeing such direct paths and when she then went into Whangarei port area. But with both tags I receive temperature and wet/dry sensor data which show that they are not on a boat, and are in fact just doing something that’s almost unbelievable. What is a very real risk however, is several of the hotspot bays these sharks are visiting, are some of the areas where a recent NIWA fishery report showed that 53 GWs had been killed over the past decade as bycatch in commercial set nets/gill nets. Furthermore we’ve seen dozens either caught or wash up dead after recreational set nets and longlines have entangled GWs. Takami showed us first hand, the very real gauntlet that these sharks run each day. I am not against fishing at all, and fishers in general aren’t against sharks, and if they are they should know that more sharks mean healthier populations of fish they are after. So the common goal should be to identify areas of critical habitat for these endangered GWs and contrast that with human induced risk to them & us, as that can empower an informed ability to co-exist. That is the GW Projects goalLikes : 650

646 Likes – Riley Elliott Instagram
Caption : CAN YOU HELP me photo ID the new and growing population of Great Whites in Nz? Please go to the link in my bio and vote for me in the @canon.nz Oceania Grant which would equip my team with the essential camera equipment to take the critical photos of identification marks that we use for population estimates and tracking individuals through time. This would be a huge supporting leg for the Great White Project so please go to the link in my bio or just google Canon Oceania Grant, click vote now on their page and select the environment category and choose Sustainable Ocean Society which is our charity of support. Thanks so muchLikes : 646

624 Likes – Riley Elliott Instagram
Caption : UPDATE!!!!! The tag seems to have been picked up and taken home/to work by someone. This isn’t a manhunt it’s a tag hunt 🙂 The person likely doesn’t know what it is, so please if you know people in the Gate Pa area or a community page there, please share this post and see if we can get the tag back. Thank you for all of you help. Remember there is a $100 reward 🙂 Call or text me with any info please 027 463 7397 ……………….. Previous posts info below Unfortunately the famous Great White Shark Daisy, seems to have dropped her tag and it has floated inshore onto the beach roughly in the area in front of Papamoa Beach Surf Club. The tag will look similar to the below picture. It will have seaweed growth on it so may blend in, and will likely be at the high tide mark. This location below shows it on the land but the last location signal was an inaccurate one, so its within a few kms of this area, but definitely on the beach as it washed ashore. The satellites are not overhead to give more accurate locations until tonight. So please if you are in the area, could you have a look and text/call me if you find it 027 463 7397 There has been do much debris in the ocean from the ongoing floods that these tags have had a hard ride through the usually empty ocean, and this is the third to pull from the sharks.Likes : 624