Post by Lee BellPost by Dan VolkerI admit it, I have "helped" the occasional puffer fish to practice its
"predator protection strategies" on occasion, and to recognize humans as
the
Post by Dan Volkerevil "usurpers of the reef" that we are :-)
You and me both. I'm gentle with them and, these days, only pick on the
really impressive ones, those that grow to basketball size. I must admit
that I've always known enough to gently cradle them from the sides, keeping
hands and other parts clear of their jaws. Just about everything will bite
to get free and you don't have to be real observant to notice the puffer's
beak like teeth or to figure out how much damage they might do.
Lee
Lee... I am sitting here smiling because you are the one who got me
into the awful practice of puffing puffers. Ever since that dive that
you and I did 2 summers ago where you puffed one and then 'passed' the
little rascle to me, I've been hooked on puffing them up. On my last
trip to Sea of Cortez, I was puffing them up with wild abandon on
every dive, puffing up 2 or 3 or 4 of them on each dive and trying to
pass them to fellow divers like you did with me. Someone took a
close-up pic of me doing this and I'll have to send ya the pic.
Anyways... Ken and a few others dubbed me a fish molester and yelled
at me for doing this, saying the same thing that we all tend to
hear..."The puffers are being over-taxed if you puff them." About a
week after our trip, Ken was doing his duties as a diver in the
aquarium and got bit hard by a puffer while trying to feed them. I
told him that he just doesn't know how to handle puffers. He was not
amused at all.
I agree with you that they are not going to bite when you puff them if
you cradle their sides. You are the one who taught me that fine
technique !! Also, I think you need to keep your hands a certain
distance from them when they are puffed because the spines will stick
you otherwise. What I learned from you is that it's a 'touch-release,
touch-release" kind of thing when you handle them. Anyone who is fool
enough to grab one and hold on to it will either get stuck or get bit.
The thing with Ken getting bit was that the fish didn't honor his
finger apart from the food Ken was offering it and I guess that Ken
wasn't fast enough for some reason, which is weird since he's been
feeding them at the aquarium for many, many years and he's very
experienced. My joke to him about handling puffers was really just a
joke 'cause he certainly knows what he's doing. However, the feeding
motion and the cradling motion are NOT the same... your hands /
fingers are in a very different position for each.
Now... as per to this story about the Instructor, the guy had a puffer
cornered in a hole. He waved his fingers in front of the fish's mouth
and the fish had no way of escaping. That is the ultimate in stupidity
for a diver. I've seen ppl come onto the front of a nurse shark and
stick their hand up to the shark, not even bothering to see if the
shark had room to back up or move to the side or escape any other way.
They think a nurse shark is docile and never bites. Guess again !!
I've also seen ppl like Mike Gray and Ken Kurtis be able to pet
/scratch big eels under their chins. Mike and Ken are able to do this
because : 1) They have balls. 2) They make sure the eel is not trapped
and feeling threatened by their presence. IOW, they are looking at the
situation they are placing the animal in before they get that close to
the animal.
It doesn't take much common sense to realize that any animal,
including a human, will attack when it feels it has no escape.
Therefore, sticking your fingers in front of a puffer who can't back
up is not a smart move. NFTM, I don't think that making a puffer puff
up is any different than making your dog play a hard aggressive game
with you. The reflexes to survive are not taxing... they are there for
a purpose. The purpose is to protect and that reflex will act up when
needed and go away when not needed. If it were all that taxing, the
animal would drop dead during the process. In the case of puffers,
they don't...they swim away. And... I must say that I came across my
biggest challenge this past dive trip when one puffer didn't puff. He
simply looked at me like..."Go ahead, I dare ya." I cradled him for a
long while and he didn't care. He didn't puff up. He was gonna bite me
if he could. He wasn't afraid of me at all. <big grin>