I was intrigued to read about an unusual underwater encounter.
A New Zealand diver was forced to give chase after an octopus wrestled his brand new digital camera from his hands and swam away, with the camera still recording.
The incredible video gives a tentacle-covered view of the five-minute chase, which only ended after the diver used his speargun to prise the camera back from the thieving octopus's grip.
Victor Huang was diving near the Wahine Memorial off the south coast of Wellington on Thursday when the octopus suddenly burst out of a bed of kelp. Huang 'freaked out' at first as he thought the octopus was attacking him - before realising that the octopus was actually just after his shiny new Panasonic Lumix camera.
A wrestling match ensued between the two as Huang tried to hold onto the camera as the octopus attempted to prise it from his grip. And in the end, the tentacle proved too strong - and the octopus 'swam away very quickly like a naughty shoplifter', Hung said on his YouTube video of the event.
The video then shows the camera's-eye view of the chase that followed - mostly covered in suckers - as Huang frantically swam after the octopus in an attempt to get his camera back.
It took five minute for him to catch up with the creature, at which point he managed to get his speargun under the creature and, when it grabbed hold of that as well, use it to pry the camera from its grasp.
He then spent a few more minutes taking the octopus for a ride on his speargun, which he says the octopus seemed to enjoy. He doesn't think the octopus meant him any harm - it had just become fascinated by the gadget.
'I honestly believe that it saw the bright blue digital camera and went ‘oh I need that’, you know?' Huang told stuff.co.nz.
Here's the video clip. The portion where the octopus is swimming away with the camera is obscured by its tentacles, of course, but otherwise it's some great footage.
That's one dive I'm sure Mr. Huang will never forget!
Peter
2 comments:
They are extremelly curious animals and quite intelligent, not surprised they'd pinch a "toy".
My uncle and I used to catch them bare handed by just opening and closing our hands in front of their dens: after a minute or so, their curiosity would take over and they'd "fold" out to check the "funny looking octopus". That's when we nicked them!
Funny video :-) Too bad the octopus had the lens blocked, I'll bet a look back at Mr. Huang would have been hilarious!
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