Rescue
Woman shoves arm in shark’s mouth to save it not knowing it would tell all its shark friends
This is mindblowing to me. I didn't realize sharks could demonstrate this level of communication.
Jenny Brown
05.17.23

Do you consider yourself to be a brave person?

How far would you go to save an animal? Would you put your own life in danger?

Meet Cristina Zenato.

If you consider yourself quite the patron saint of animals Cristina Zenato, may have you beat.

YouTube Screenshot - The Dodo
Source:
YouTube Screenshot - The Dodo

Cristina is a shark lover.

She doesn’t just watch them from afar – she dons a diving suit and hangs out with them in their own territory.

After spending so much time with her finned friends, Cristina noticed that many of them had fishing hooks stuck in their mouths.

YouTube Screenshot - The Dodo
Source:
YouTube Screenshot - The Dodo

She knew the hooks must be causing the sharks some pain.

So her new mission was born: to remove the hooks using hands that the sharks didn’t have.

There was only one flaw with this plan… it meant she’d have to put her fingers inside the mouths of the sharks.

YouTube Screenshot - The Dodo
Source:
YouTube Screenshot - The Dodo

Sharks have, on average, between 5 and 15 rows of teeth – with some having up to 3000 teeth in their mouths.

The sharpest teeth grow longest and point outwards.

Unlike other animals that bite only with their lower jaw, sharks bite with both their upper and lower jaw. Ouch.

Pixabay - Fgyongyver
Source:
Pixabay - Fgyongyver

But Cristina knew that, despite the risks, she was the only person who could save the sharks.

She had to put all her trust into these underwater beasts, hoping they’d realize that she was sticking her hand in their mouths for the greater good.

Miraculously, as Cristina began to save the sharks, they let her do it!

One shark allowed Cristina to stick her hand right into the back of its mouth to pull out a hook.

According to Cristina, the shark now visits her on every dive, nudging her side in a friendly greeting.

YouTube Screenshot - The Dodo
Source:
YouTube Screenshot - The Dodo

And Cristina thinks that seeing the results from pulling out the hooks makes it all worth it.

Speaking in a video with The Dodo, she said:

“When I remove the hooks, I feel happy, satisfied and relieved. The other thing I notice is that as I start removing hooks from my known sharks, other sharks start showing up with hooks.”

Perhaps the word is out on the underwater grapevine that Cristina is on a hook-removing mission.

Of course, like any animal, sharks can communicate with one another.

YouTube Screenshot - The Dodo
Source:
YouTube Screenshot - The Dodo

After spending so much time in their company, Cristina is convinced that sharks have been given a bad rap.

She said:

“They’re very accepting. Sharks in general, in the world, are very tolerant of our presence entering their world.”

Cristina’s sharks seem very tolerant of her, allowing her to pet them and circling around her in a friendly manner

. Perhaps this is because they can sense Cristina’s love for them.

YouTube Screenshot - The Dodo
Source:
YouTube Screenshot - The Dodo

Since the first time she ever saw one, Cristina had wanted to pet a shark.

But it would take a year before she could transition between being a diver and a professional working with sharks.

When the moment finally came, Cristina found that she was hooked (sorry).

YouTube Screenshot - The Dodo
Source:
YouTube Screenshot - The Dodo

Cristina developed an appreciation for the vulnerability of the sharks who visited her, and she considers them some of her best friends.

Good on her – not everyone would be brave enough to hang out with a shark, let alone pull hooks out of multiple sharks’ mouths daily!

Would you ever do what Cristina did?

There’s no denying she is one brave lady!

Click the video below to learn more about this mind-blowing rescue!

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