Moments Beachgoers Attempt to Rescue Great White Shark in Cape Cod

  • 9 yıl önce
Beachgoers undertake Epic Rescue of Great White Shark | Beachgoers to Try to save great white shark stranded on Cape Cod Beach | Beachgoers band together to rescue a 2,000pound great white shark | At least 100 beachgoers tried to help the 14foot great white shark get back out to sea. Watch as people on a beach in Cape Cod try to rescue an 11foot great white shark | Beachgoers worked together to rescue a beached great white shark and get it back in the ocean as a 11foot shark washed up on a beach in Cape Cod, Massachusetts, US.

Beachgoers band together to try and save great white shark stranded on Massachusetts beach

People came to the shark's rescue by throwing water at it and towing the predator back into the ocean by digging a trench to the water

The footage was captured Robyn Schnaible, who was visiting the beach with her family.

She said: “We got there at about 10am, and there was a huge crowd of people up ahead on the beach. We thought it was a whale, but we were told it was a great white that was alive and they were trying to save it.

"They dug a huge trench to take him back out to sea – it was like a big slip and slide.

“It had taken them a few hours to get to that point. They were using anything they could get their hands on – shovels, sandcastle toys, rubber boot. Someone tied a rope around his tail and a paddle boarder took the other end out to a boat with a tow on it."

Huge Great White Shark Dies After Beaching on Cape Cod

Dozens of holiday beachgoers formed a bucket brigade to try to save a mammoth great white shark that beached itself over the weekend on Cape Cod, Massachusetts, but the beast died, authorities said.

At least 100 people at White Crest Beach for the Labor Day weekend rushed to help the 1ton, 14footlong shark, which was reported beached at 8:09 a.m. Sunday, Wellfleet police said. Many of them relayed buckets of water to splash on the shark while specialists from the Atlantic White Shark Conservancy and the National Park Service were called.