Saved From a Shark (2023) Movie Script

‏[narrator] This program contains content
that may be disturbing to some viewers
‏viewer discretion is advised
‏[dramatic theme music]
‏That day 26 years ago, I remember crystal
clear, every single thing that happened.
‏It seems to be completely burned
into my memory, every detail of it.
‏I don't think that's something
that you ever really forget.
‏I realized he didn't have enough time
to come and get me.
‏There was absolutely no reason
for the shark to stop.
‏I had lost approximately
five pints of blood.
‏You only have eight to nine in your body.
I was waiting for the feeding frenzy.
‏[dramatic crescendo]
‏[gentle theme music]
‏I'm in the Red Sea,
visiting an old friend of mine,
‏so they asked me if I wanted
to do my open water diving.
‏[dramatic bellow]
‏The Red Sea off the coast of Egypt is
home to many different species of sharks.
‏We have oceanic whitetips, silky sharks,
scalloped hammerheads.
‏That's why so many people
go there for the diving.
‏As it's a tourist hot spot, these
interactions between sharks and humans
‏are increasing, and sometimes
with negative consequences.
‏[dramatic bellow]
‏The day that it happened,
Harry and I'd been out diving.
‏We had just started to complete
our open water diving exam.
‏It was actually my first open water course
I'd ever run as a brand new instructor.
‏We'd completed a couple of open water
dives. The day was going great.
‏We were just going back to port.
‏On the way back, we saw three
dolphins and a baby dolphin.
‏That was the initial
reason that we'd slowed down.
‏[Martin] I jumped in to swim with them.
Obviously as soon as I hit the water...
‏the dolphins disappeared.
‏[Harry]
It was a baking hot day...
‏and we put some ropes
out off the back of the boat.
‏We're going half a knot. It's not
something that we would normally do.
‏[dramatic music swells]
‏In hindsight, a human body
does behave like a lure
‏when it's behind a boat on a rope.
‏-It's probably not the wisest thing to do.
-[dramatic bellow]
‏[Harry]
Then I remember he let go of the rope.
‏I thought to myself,
he's burnt his hands probably,
‏because you can get a bit of rope burn
while it's going along.
‏Someone being towed behind a boat
would be a perfect lure for a shark.
‏With the silhouette that a human
can present is a bad idea.
‏The next thing I remember,
we were looking at Martin...
‏and that's when it happened really.
‏[music intensifies]
‏As soon as you get hit like that in the
water, you know exactly what it is.
‏[underwater screams]
‏I saw Martin lifted
out of the water, like this.
‏I was screaming out
"shark" at the top of my lungs.
‏Shark!
‏It's very likely that during the tow,
‏this is when the shark
first became interested,
‏and then the minute that
Martin stopped moving,
‏to a shark, that's just, go, go, go.
Now's the time to attack.
‏[underwater screams]
Shark!
‏There's panic and screaming.
‏I think there was possibly a delay in my
brain between I'm looking,
‏I was watching him and I thought there's
something very, very wrong.
‏Obviously, there was just a lot of blood
in front of me,
‏and my first reaction was
to get away from the blood,
‏and at this point I looked back,
‏I saw Harry,
he jumped straight in the Zodiac
‏and came as fast as he could
to come and get me.
‏-[music intensifies]
-[engine roars]
‏What's really fascinating
about shark behavior
‏is just how opportunistic they can be
and how adaptable they are.
‏Sharks can hit incredible speeds
right away,
‏they have this kind of
burst speed response.
‏They can get up to
20 kilometers an hour or more,
‏and just nail prey before they
even know the shark's coming.
‏And then all of a sudden,
the shark came up from underneath.
‏-[intense music]
-[water splashing]
‏As it hit me here, just about here,
just about that much of its head,
‏was just crowning out of the water.
‏So I punched it as hard as I could, one
of the most worst feelings that I've had,
‏of actually the shark's skin and flesh.
‏It took three bites out
of my back, then went away.
‏[dramatic bellow]
‏Martin's floating on
the surface of the water.
‏We would expect a shark to
attack from below and behind
‏because it gives them
the advantage of surprise,
‏and it also means that they're
going to attack an area
‏which is rich in blood vessels.
‏It's all taking place in
one 40-second event,
‏but I'm heading towards Martin
as fast as I can.
‏That's when it took a bite out of me here.
‏-He's continuing to be eaten.
-[dramatic bellow]
‏When you're an ambush predator,
‏you usually attack first
and then see what it is later,
‏because by the time you make
a calculation of what is that,
‏that fast-swimming prey may have
seen you and gotten away.
‏-[engine roars]
-[dramatic music]
‏I am 20 meters away from Martin
at this point, and I'm thinking to myself,
‏"God, that's, that's a lot of blood."
‏I knew it was circling me, and I realized,
he didn't have enough time,
‏you know, there was too much blood,
‏and basically, I was waiting
for the feeding frenzy.
‏So I turned away and
looked to the mountains.
‏-I gave up.
-[sentimental music]
‏What I felt was pure contentment.
‏It was...
‏just like when you let all the air out,
‏you breathe out completely,
it's just like...
‏-[engine roars]
-[music intensifies]
‏[Harry] I'm approaching the last few final
meters, and it went very, very quiet.
‏-Then...
-[music intensifies]
‏two fins shot behind
Martin's left-hand shoulder.
‏The attack had stopped,
I mean it had just stopped dead.
‏It just went very, very quiet,
and it wasn't normal.
‏There were two fins over
this shoulder of Martin,
‏and I think the dolphins
that we had stopped
‏to interact with on the ropes.
had intervened.
‏[dolphins squeaking]
‏This is a phenomenon which
divides marine scientists,
‏whether or not a shark could be
stopped from attacking a human
‏through the interaction of another animal,
such as a whale or a dolphin.
‏It's really hard to know
the motivation of these animals.
‏It may not be a fully altruistic
"We're trying to protect these people,"
‏it could be
"We just want this predator
‏that could be dangerous to us,
out of here."
‏Being saved by another animal
is certainly a very romantic notion,
‏and there are those people
that believe that it is true.
‏I'm positive there was a very pronounced
curve to the dorsal fins.
‏I'd stake my life on it
that they were dolphin fins.
‏It's hard to understand exactly why
dolphins would do this,
‏but if you have a big predator that
might attack you or your young,
‏you want to keep it in sight
and scare it away.
‏The dolphins see this
big cloud of blood,
‏they know the shark's in the
area and it's bitten someone.
‏It seems like this is a really dangerous
moment for the dolphins,
‏because you've
got a shark in feeding mode.
‏There was no reason for, um,
the shark to stop.
‏It had already taken five bites out
of my body, had a punctured lung.
‏Because the dolphins
have echolocation,
‏they've got the speed,
they've got the maneuverability,
‏if they know where that shark is,
the danger isn't actually any greater.
‏They're able to get in there, mob the
shark, annoy it, and drive it away.
‏[dramatic music bellows]
‏It'd been very, very
calm, extremely still,
‏and there was no more
frenzied attack going on,
‏so clearly they stopped an attack on him.
‏My whole state of my brain changed
and just turned into this,
‏just do what you have to do to get him
in the boat and keep him alive.
‏I remember uncontrollable blood just
pumping and pumping out of his chest,
‏and the site was losing a lot of blood.
‏[dramatic music continues]
‏And from that point,
I don't remember anything else.
‏Now, there are well-documented cases
where people believe they have been saved
‏from a potential shark attack,
but what we don't know in these scenarios
‏is what that particular animal,
or the shark, was thinking.
‏As scientists, we deal in proof,
‏so when it comes to looking
at the deliberate actions
‏of a whale or dolphin protecting
a human from a shark attack,
‏-we need to look at the evidence.
-[damatic musc]
‏It happened so quick. You don't feel
anything, there was no pain.
‏I knew there was no way I could survive.
I accepted it, I accepted dying.
‏It had already taken
five bites out of me.
‏There was absolutely no reason
for the shark to stop.
‏[music continues]
‏I firmly believe that
the dolphins did save my life;
‏there's no other explanation
as to why the shark would stop.
‏Here's one bite here, there's
another one all down there,
‏then you've got the
whole mouth, right here.
‏And this is where
he punctured my lung.
‏And he took this out here,
‏and then just scars all down
here and all up here as well.
‏[camera shutters]
‏With the teeth marks that I have,
they say it's a mako shark.
‏It took three surgeons
four hours to stitch me up.
‏I had over 100 stitches inside
and over 200 outside.
‏Unfortunately, I've learnt that
as soon as I take my t-shirt off,
‏everybody just keeps staring at me.
‏When I got out of the hospital,
I met up with Harry,
‏and the first question I asked him was,
‏was that true about the dolphins,
because I needed to know for myself.
‏Harry looked me in the eyes,
he said,
‏"I saw a dolphin a meter away from you
and another one in the vicinity."
‏-[water splashes]
-[hopeful music plays]
‏I believe the shark didn't finish the job
because it was stopped by the dolphins.
‏It's undeniable that the
dolphins were there beforehand,
‏they were there when I pulled him out,
and that they stopped something
‏that could have actually
finished him off completely.
‏They may not have been trying to save
Martin, but effectively they did.
‏[music intensifies]
‏It was my first proper trauma,
and I don't think that's something
‏that you ever really forget,
‏and I couldn't go back in the water
for a year. I'd just become an instructor,
‏and for some reason I couldn't
let go of the ladder,
‏which was really annoying,
I felt like I was being not very brave.
‏It's made me
a better person for sure.
‏You learn the greatest gift
you're given is life.
‏-[music continues]
-[water splashes]
‏Now people can believe
or disbelieve these accounts,
‏but when it's witnessed by a scientist,
then there's reason to listen.
‏[dramatic music]
‏The South Pacific Ocean is a fantastic
place to observe marine life.
‏You have incredible coral reefs, dolphins,
you've got things like the humpback whale,
‏and of course you've got some
fantastic predatory sharks.
‏One in particular that owns that whole
South Pacific area is the tiger shark.
‏[dramatic music bellows]
‏I've been a whale biologist for 30 years,
and every day when I wake up,
‏I know that there's a new
adventure that awaits me.
‏[serene music]
‏Because I'm underwater a lot, I've had
many, many interactions with sharks,
‏and most of the time they're
just beautiful, beautiful fish.
‏It's really only the oceanic
whitetip, the bulls, tigers,
‏and great whites that
I get out of the water for.
‏-[blow hole sounds]
-[music continues]
‏This is the strangest thing
I've ever seen.
‏If someone else hadn't slid
in the water and filmed it,
‏I would not really have believed
everything had happened.
‏Oh, my God.
‏I'm making a film
in Rarotonga about my research.
‏Two whales approached and we didn't have
enough footage of me underwater, so...
‏[Elissa]
Okay. It's recording.
‏They suggested that
I slide over the side of the boat.
‏[water splashing]
‏I'm in the water and a whale
starts swimming up to me,
‏and he's swimming up to me very fast.
So put my hand out and I touch his head,
‏because he's pushing me, and I know that
I can't push away a 50,000-pound whale.
‏But this whale keeps pushing.
I cannot figure out what's going on.
‏[intense music bellows]
‏I get away just briefly, and I look over,
there's another whale there,
‏and she's slapping her tail
a bit, swishing it in the water.
‏I'm thinking,
what is going on here?
‏Usually, you think about these whales,
‏maybe kind of keeping an eye on
the people swimming with them,
‏largely ignoring them, interacting,
‏but definitely keeping space
and not initiating contact.
‏-[music continues]
-[water sloshing]
‏[Nan] The next thing I know,
he's got me on his head.
‏-[man] Is she okay? She okay?
-[Elissa] Careful!
‏To see this whale lift her up onto its
snout, it's kind of mind-blowing.
‏[Nan] I'm sitting on his head
and freaking out a little bit.
‏His eye is wide open
and I'm right next to it,
‏and he slips me down his body and tries to
tuck me under his pectoral fin.
‏[dramatic sting]
‏Those are behaviors
that would be consistent with
‏trying to protect a young humpback whale.
‏[dramatic bellow]
‏This is really incredible. You can see the
whale swimming right at her,
‏and Nan's trying to not be in its way.
‏[dramatic bellow]
‏You can see this is not her swimming to
the whale and initiating the contact.
‏[Nan] He's looking at me,
and I know he has something to tell me.
‏I do not understand, and
he wants me to understand.
‏[music intensifies]
‏And I look down into the deep blue,
and then I see right below me
‏the tail going like this.
‏[music continues]
‏I'm starting to put together
a little bit more
‏about what that whale
was trying to tell me.
‏[man] Are you hurt?
‏[Nan] There's a great big tiger shark
over there!
‏Tiger sharks and humpback whales
are found in the same spot.
‏Tiger sharks are incredible predators,
they're one of the few species of sharks
‏that eats really big prey.
It wouldn't surprise me if tiger sharks
‏are going after injured whales
or very small ones.
‏It was huge, as long as my truck.
‏It is the hugest shark I have ever seen.
‏15 feet, 18 feet's possible,
and that is a monstrous top predator.
‏They've got that mouth
right at the end of their snout,
‏so it's easy to
reach out and grab on.
‏The teeth are curved and serrated
so they can even grab onto a sea turtle,
‏shake their head back and forth and
cut straight through that shell.
‏[suspenseful music]
‏[Nan] I'm looking at the shark,
‏and it's about 35 feet away from
me and it's approaching quickly.
‏[Mike] They'll spend time
swimming along the surface
‏then maybe drop down to the bottom,
‏and they appear to need
to sneak up on their prey
‏and get fairly close to make
that last little dash to get it.
‏If you run into a big tiger shark
with pectoral fins depressed,
‏starting to swim erratically or fast,
you have something to be worried about.
‏I see its pec fins down,
I see it arching its body,
‏and it's moving fast,
and it's coming towards me.
‏[dramatic music intensifies]
‏I know, and the whale knows,
that this is a serious situation,
‏and I wanted to get out of the water.
‏And then all of a sudden
I was swooped up
‏by the whale
that had been pushing me,
‏and now he's got me right
on the front of his face,
‏and I yell to the boat,
"Please help me!"
‏-Oh, my God!
-[blow hole sputters]
‏And then voom! I'm back
down in the water again.
‏-[man] Is she okay? Is she okay?
-[Elissa] Yeah, yeah!
‏Somehow I always sort of knew with my job
‏that I probably would be killed by a
whale, so I thought, is this the day?
‏-[dramatic music]
-[water sloshing]
‏[Mike] Those tails, or the pectoral fins
of humpback whales,
‏they can do tremendous damage
if they want to.
‏I can only imagine what Nan is
thinking at that point in time,
‏because, yeah, those
pectoral fins could kill her.
‏I don't want to get caught underneath,
because
‏I know that with a snorkel and mask on,
I won't be able to breathe.
‏The whale's so close to me that all I see
are these throat pleats.
‏And I suddenly realize
that the shark is coming up,
‏just at me like this,
right below me.
‏[dramatic music bellows]
‏The whale pushes me back to the boat,
‏and my research assistant
Elissa says, "Nan, the whale."
‏Nan, careful! [laughs]
‏[Nan] I look, and he's right
there next to me, protecting me.
‏-[music swells]
-I was so...
‏And I cried.
Oh, my God!
‏Oh, my God!
It is a very emotional moment.
‏[upbeat music]
‏For me, it matters that Nan
is the one telling this story.
‏She is a serious scientist, she has been
studying these animals for years.
‏[Nan] Holy moly!
‏I've been around whales for so long
‏that there's this whole compassionate
behavior that they have.
‏I believe with my whole heart
‏that that humpback actually
protected me from the shark.
‏You have a big tiger shark
in the area
‏and this very, very rare event
for a whale to initiate contact,
‏and in ways that are similar
to what it would do
‏if it was trying to protect
a young humpback whale.
‏So when she talks about
just how rare and unique
‏this occurrence is,
I put a lot of stock in that.
‏Realistically, any conflict between
‏two incredible oceanic predators
will come down to the scenario
‏that they find themselves in
at that time.
‏[eerie music]
‏The oceans around
the coasts of New Zealand
‏are absolutely packed with life.
‏You just need to go
a few meters off the shore
‏and you're in this incredible,
rich marine environment.
‏[music intensifies]
‏We have all sorts
of different species of whales.
‏We have different species of
sharks, bronze whaler sharks,
‏we've seen the odd mako, we've come across
some small hammerheads.
‏We get great whites.
‏When you swim in the
oceans off New Zealand,
‏you're most certainly
swimming with sharks.
‏[dramatic bellow]
‏-[waves crashing]
-[suspenseful music]
‏It started with us just going
for one of our regular training swims.
‏So, we went into the water,
‏around to the rocks where
we played for a wee while,
‏and then we decided to swim
to the other end of the beach.
‏I've been with Whangrei Heads
Surf Club for a number of years.
‏I'm a senior lifeguard.
I get a lot of pleasure
‏from training all the new,
fresh lifeguards.
‏The surf club is like a big family,
we all look after each other.
‏[dramatic bellow]
‏Every time I think back to that day,
I think how lucky we were.
‏We want to do a taster
for my friend Helen
‏to see if she wants to get
involved in surf lifesaving.
‏With me is my dad
and my friend Karina.
‏We want to get Helen hooked
on becoming a lifeguard.
‏We swim from one end to the
other, so from north to south,
‏but it does get us close to Shark Alley.
‏The area between
the mainland and the island,
‏we call it Shark Alley because
it's a transition point
‏for some sharks when they don't
want to go around the headland,
‏so they'll just cut through.
‏[Tom] If you're swimming
in an area of the ocean
‏which sharks are using as
a highway to move in and out,
‏they will be a little bit
more opportunistic,
‏they'll be looking for a snack
if there's one available
‏to keep them fueled up as
they're moving from A to B.
‏We have to be kind of realistic
‏that we are swimming
near sharks all the time.
‏It's just I'm very scared of them.
They're big and aggressive,
‏and I don't want to be mistaken
for anything in the water.
‏My primary responsibility for this swim
‏will be to make sure that we go
in with myself and three girls,
‏and come out with
myself and three girls.
‏Definitely feel safer
when I'm with Dad in the water.
‏I know that if anything happens
he's there to help.
‏[Rob] We'd been swimming maybe just
a little bit longer than five minutes.
‏We began seeing fins approaching us,
‏and obviously there's the initial panic
when you see a fin.
‏You then have to quickly process to see
what type of creature it is.
‏Sharks are always present. In most cases,
we're not aware of their presence.
‏[dramatic music]
‏Once we clearly identified that
the fins that we were seeing
‏were dolphins... any anxiety drops.
‏[Nicky] We are excited because
Helen's having her first day
‏and she gets to hang out
with dolphins.
‏They are so playful, they swim around,
they catch the waves,
‏and you get to see them
do flips and jump out.
‏And that was gonna be a sure way to get
her hooked into surf lifesaving.
‏-[music bellows]
-As time went on, more fins appeared,
‏and they got closer,
and they started circling.
‏I'm used to having dolphins
swimming alongside me,
‏but this was totally different.
‏They're starting to swim
tight circles around us,
‏which they don't normally
do that aggressively.
‏We were looking at each other
like this is not normal.
‏There was something happening
that we knew nothing about
‏that was creating this behavior pattern.
‏The behavior displayed by the dolphins
is very, very classic.
‏It's signs of fitness,
it's showing to a potential predator,
‏"Look how strong I am, look how fast I am.
‏Don't bother trying to catch me,
I will fight back."
‏I was a volunteer surf lifeguard.
‏It was just a normal day at the beach.
You're in the ocean every weekend.
‏If somebody gets in trouble,
you're there to help.
‏We were heading out
to join the swimmers,
‏what looked to be having
a lot of fun with the dolphins.
‏When I hear the boat, there's an element
of relief, but I'm focused on the girls.
‏We're looking at Dad for some,
like, guidance,
‏like, what is going on here,
what are we supposed to do?
‏The dolphins are going closer to us,
‏they literally are within
centimeters of our face,
‏and they're getting their tails right
next to us,
‏and they're slapping
their tails on the water.
‏The whole tone changed to aggression,
‏as if they were either warning
us or warning something else.
‏I'd never heard of dolphins attacking
humans before, but it just felt that way.
‏-[dramatic bellow]
-[scream]
‏[Rob] I then noticed that there was a
large dolphin heading straight for me.
‏I saw its back arch in the water,
it dived down just before it got to us.
‏It was a primal reflex,
my legs came up to my chest,
‏and that's when very briefly
I saw the shape.
‏Gray back, and I could see the defined
line with the white where it separates.
‏It's the definition between
the gray and the white
‏that told me that it was a great white.
‏A shark would be attracted towards the
noise of a group of swimmers,
‏because all that splashing and
kicking around in the water,
‏that mimics the sound
of a struggling fish,
‏so it's worth a shark
coming in to investigate.
‏[music continues]
‏When I saw the shark,
‏I could have quite easily
called out to them, "Shark."
‏I'm not telling the girls, because there
was always the risk
‏that they then broke out of
the defensive circle of dolphins
‏to try and make a break for the rocks.
‏A great white could just
chew you up and spit you out.
‏[Tom] Sharks will stalk their prey
by firstly following a scent trail.
‏They will then use their lateral line
‏and their ears to feel
vibrations in the water.
‏Then as they get a little bit closer,
they can start to use their eyesight,
‏and it's only at the very, very end
that their electric sensitivity
‏that they have around
their face comes into play.
‏If something lights up
all those different senses,
‏you're guaranteed
that the shark will bite.
‏So, saw the shark.
‏I'm trying to remain calm.
So you've got the duck principle--
‏calm on the top,
paddling like hell underneath.
‏I've been in the water with
these dolphins for 40 minutes.
‏There was a large dolphin
heading straight for me...
‏saw its back arch in the water,
‏and suddenly the solution to the
problem has presented itself.
‏The dolphin came at us,
it was actually targeting the shark
‏that was coming in from our left.
‏That is a big threat towards the shark.
‏The dolphin could attack the gills,
the eyes, and seriously damage
‏if not potentially
mortally wound the shark,
‏and a wounded shark is a dead shark.
‏-[dramatic bellow]
-[engine roars]
‏[Matt] From the boat I see a dolphin
swimming along underwater.
‏So I dive in.
‏I'm expecting to see a dolphin.
I open my eyes and I see...
‏a great white shark.
‏[dramatic music]
‏[Matt] The way the tail
of the shark was pointing,
‏and the way it swam
through the water,
‏told me instantly that
that was not a dolphin,
‏that was a great white shark,
and I'm in the water with it.
‏There's a moment of shock and panic.
‏I am scared,
not knowing what it's going to do.
‏I resurface and I look around,
and Nev has driven off in the rescue boat.
‏[suspenseful music]
‏Only myself and Matt
have got an understanding
‏of what's actually just happened.
‏I'm looking at the three girls
with all the dolphins,
‏and I'm trying to track
the direction of the shark.
‏I can see it angling over to its right.
‏This shark is over 10 feet long.
‏And it's arcing around me, heading
in the direction of Nicky and Karina
‏and the dolphins, that at this point now
were going absolutely ballistic.
‏Everything built to
a big crescendo, and then...
‏-[music crescendos]
-Everything just went calm.
‏[wind blowing softly]
‏The shark disappeared very,
very quickly. It was bizarre.
‏You're actually asking yourself
what's just happened?
‏[Nicky] It's crazy to think
what could have happened.
‏I believe that dolphins
came and saved us.
‏[uplifting music]
‏[Rob] After the event,
the feeling you get is one of awe,
‏in terms of what that dolphin
did when it broke away,
‏having clearly identified what was going
to occur if it didn't intervene.
‏[Nicky] There was
a potentially fatal situation.
‏They saved our lives
and they protected us.
‏[Rob] These dolphins saved
my life, my daughter's life,
‏and our friends' life from
a potential attack coming in...
‏from a great white shark.
‏Human interactions with big predatory
sharks are certainly rare.
‏Interactions with whales and dolphins
and sharks are rarer still.
‏But there are shark hot spots
around the world
‏where encounters are
more likely to happen.
‏Areas like the Bahamas, Mexico, Australia,
and certainly New Zealand.
‏[dramatic music]
‏[Tom continues] New Zealand's Cook Strait
is a small passage of water
‏that runs between
the North and South Islands
‏where you'll get blue sharks there,
you'll get your mako sharks...
‏but you will also get great whites.
‏I'm a long distance endurance swimmer.
‏I traveled to New Zealand
to swim the Cook Strait,
‏which is one of the toughest
ocean swims in the world.
‏What I'm doing is looking to swim across
from one end to another.
‏In the sport that I do,
physically, you're unassisted,
‏you're pushing your body for hours on end,
you're swimming all day long.
‏You can't wear a wetsuit, you
got to wear normal swim trunks,
‏you can't even wear three-quarter shorts,
‏because they really want you
to suffer in this sport.
‏It's you versus the ocean.
‏It's 18 miles... there's very strong
currents, tides, wind, massive swells.
‏But the reason it's so tough
‏is because of the physical and mental
challenges that it possesses.
‏Even now I get goose bumps thinking
‏what an emotional experience
it was in that moment.
‏It was a connection
that I'll never forget.
‏-[water splashing]
-[dramatic music hums]
‏This is where I started,
you have to go land to land.
‏So you never go in a straight
line when you do a channel swim,
‏because you're getting pushed.
‏I'm Gemma Clarke.
Adam Walker is my other half.
‏-[grunts] Eight! And nine!
-[baby squeals]
‏My life changed when I met him,
he turned my life upside down
‏and introduced me
to open water swimming.
‏I don't know if I want him
swimming channels.
‏Yeah. He's gonna swim
long distance, like your dad.
‏It was my dream to swim this ocean swim
‏as part of the toughest seven
ocean swims in the world,
‏and I thought this will be
the day that I have no issue,
‏it'll go absolutely fine,
there'll be no problem at all.
‏[man over radio] You've just
gone over the 10 kilometer mark...
‏About three hours into the swim,
‏I remember swallowing
a whole heap of water,
‏and I started to be sick in the water.
‏[aid] Focus on your stroke and
just get in that rhythm again...
‏-Yeah.
-Okay?
‏I'm trying to focus on the
goal, which is to get across.
‏You've got to keep the emotions at bay.
‏And then I'm vomiting,
and I remember thinking,
‏"What have I done to deserve this?"
‏[dramatic music continues]
‏I looked up at the sky and
I said, "Please, ocean Gods,
‏give me something positive, anything."
‏It's hard to watch him
swimming in ridiculous currents,
‏massive waves and everything
that's under the ocean
‏that, you know, that's all
that goes through my mind,
‏-you just don't know what's down there.
-[dramatic hiss]
‏All of a sudden out of
nowhere, a fin comes towards me,
‏and it's not like the Jaws movie,
it's a very, very fast, bang.
‏[dramatic bellow]
‏[dramatic music]
‏I'm swimming the Cook Strait
‏'cause it's one of the toughest
seven ocean swims in the world.
‏[aid] See how that goes.
Let me know in the next half hour
‏how you felt with that drink.
‏Round about three hours into the swim,
‏all of a sudden out of nowhere,
a fin comes towards me.
‏All of a sudden I've got these
fins flanking me side to side.
‏When I normally swim,
I wear a shark device unit
‏that's supposed to keep sharks
away, so it lets off a sonar.
‏I was gonna put it on for New Zealand,
because I heard that great whites
‏cross through the Cook Strait.
‏The guy who was organizing the swim says,
‏"There's no sharks in here,
just take it off,
‏it'll be no problem," so I took it off.
‏The shark that would be
the greatest concern
‏would probably be the great white.
‏A lot of sharks coming and going,
and when you have an area of high traffic,
‏it's more likely that someone's
gonna bump into you.
‏[dramatic sting]
‏You can't focus on the fact
that something's gonna happen to you,
‏you know, you've got to believe
that you're gonna be okay.
‏[aid] Just start focusing on
your stroke out in front.
‏There were points before
the swim, and I'd say to him,
‏"At what point do I get you out?"
‏And he would say, you know,
you don't get me out.
‏Suddenly, out of nowhere, fins.
‏[eerie music swells]
‏[Gemma continues] So I'm not just
talking one fin, just fins appear.
‏There's no warning,
all these fins surrounding him.
‏[aid]
They've just popped out from nowhere!
‏It was absolutely incredible.
‏[music intensifies]
‏They were flanking me on the side,
and one starts circling me.
‏[man over radio]
They normally come and
‏have a look and
then go off in the same way.
‏[Adam] For 30 minutes they stay with me,
and I think they're gonna disappear,
‏they're gonna get bored.
‏So at that point, I looked down,
I saw a much deeper dolphin.
‏It was moving differently,
it was moving from side to side,
‏the fin look different, everything just
looked different about it.
‏In previous swims I've seen fins,
but I passed it off as dolphins.
‏-I realized actually it wasn't a dolphin.
-[music intensifies]
‏I knew it was a big shark.
‏Sharks will stalk their prey by firstly
following a scent trail,
‏it's the scent that will get
them into the nearby area.
‏It really ran through me that actually
this is a potentially dangerous situation.
‏They will use their lateral line and their
ears to feel vibrations in the water,
‏which again gives them an idea
of what they're dealing with,
‏whether it's prey that's
swimming fast and well,
‏or whether they are the throes and
struggles of an injured fish.
‏They're sort of just staying and playing.
‏They don't know that
there's a shark underneath me.
‏They're shooting
around all over the place.
‏I knew with other swims
when people mention shark,
‏they get you out,
the swim's over, it's finished.
‏So I didn't want that dream to end.
I decided not to tell anybody,
‏because I knew if I mention it,
they'll get me out.
‏Adam sees this shark swimming below him,
and in the Cook Strait, great white sharks
‏are kind of the consummate top predator.
Their ambush speed is incredible,
‏so they like to ambush big prey like
seals, sea lions, or even dolphins,
‏by blasting up from below and delivering
that debilitating strike right away.
‏-[water splashing]
-[dolphins squeaking]
‏[Adam]
This particular shark was checking me out,
‏seeing, you know, what's this
slow mammal doing in the water?
‏The dolphins, they were
flanking me on the side,
‏one would circle me, one was in
front of me, close to my fingertips.
‏I've since found out
they're called dusky dolphins.
‏It continued for the next half an hour,
‏and then I really think, okay,
there's something in this.
‏Why are they staying engaged
with me all that time?
‏And at that point, I think
it must be the shark.
‏[Mike] It's really hard to say
what these dolphins were doing
‏when they came across Adam.
‏They're keeping him in the middle of them.
Could that be what they'd do
‏if they were trying to protect
something from a shark? Yes.
‏-[squeaking]
-[dramatic music]
‏Dolphins are curious animals, and just the
novelty of a swimmer in the water
‏might be enough for them
to just kind of hang out
‏for an extended period of time.
‏This particular shark
tracked me for a period of time.
‏In this sport, you cannot show fear...
‏You can't focus on the demons
that are in your head.
‏I remember looking back down after another
half an hour, and I couldn't see it.
‏And I thought,
"Thanks, dolphins, for your support."
‏And at that point...
they disappeared forever.
‏-[squeaking]
-[gentle music]
‏It took me 8 hours, 39 minutes,
‏and the most amazing journey
I've ever had in my life.
‏All I can tell you is how I felt.
I felt well protected,
‏and I don't think it was
luck or by chance,
‏maybe five minutes, maybe half an hour,
but not an hour and a half.
‏So can dolphins save
people from shark attacks?
‏I think the answer we've seen
is that they can.
‏What we don't know is, is their
motivation to save people,
‏or to get sharks
out of the area generally?
‏[Nicky]
We still talk about the day it happened.
‏[music continues]
‏It's crazy to think if those dolphins
weren't there what could have happened.
‏That shark was obviously stalking us.
‏100%, I believe we were saved by dolphins.
‏I'll always, always feel indebted to the
dolphins for giving me that moment
‏and allowing me to live
the life I want to live
‏-and be the Adam I want to be.
-[music intensifies]
‏There's no doubt about it, I've sent that
footage to all these different people
‏that know and understand
behavior of animals,
‏and not one single person has thought
that this whale was not protecting me.
‏I know the answer to life now,
and the answer to life is happiness.
‏It's brought back a lot of memories,
and it's brought back that day,
‏and it was extremely traumatic for me,
but far more traumatic for you.
‏[Martin] When I die, if I have
that feeling of contentment,
‏like I did back then,
I'd be more than happy.