LA JOLLA (CNS) - A shark warning in and around La Jolla was no longer in effect Tuesday after lifeguards determined many reported sightings were of dolphins, not sharks.
Lifeguards issued an alert to beachgoers Monday morning after several shark sightings were reported over the weekend. But with no confirmed sightings on Monday, the alert was called off for Tuesday, said lifeguard Lt. Andy Lerum.
The alert was for a roughly two-mile-long stretch of shoreline from La Jolla Cove to Scripps Pier.
Though there were no confirmed shark sightings on Monday, several anxious beachgoers went to lifeguards throughout the day claiming to have seen a shark, Lerum said, noting that what they really saw were dolphins.
On Sunday morning, a kayaker reported seeing a shark while paddling about two miles off the coast of La Jolla Shores, lifeguard Chief Rick Wurts said.
The canoeist said the marine predator was "as big or bigger" than his kayak, suggesting that the animal might have been eight to 10 feet long, Wurts said.
Late that afternoon, several lifeguards supervising La Jolla Shores saw an 18 to 24 inch dorsal fin approaching the beach, according to Wurts. The shark got to within about 50 yards of land, then made a sharp turn and disappeared into the ocean, he said.
Following the first sighting, lifeguards began notifying surfers and swimmers about the sightings.
"We want to give people a chance to make their own informed decisions about what we saw," Wurts said.
The most recent local fatal shark attack occurred April 25, 2008, when a great white killed 66-year-old retired North County veterinarian David Martin as he swam with fellow members of a triathlon club near Fletcher Cove in Solana Beach.
This is an update. The original story is below.
SAN DIEGO (CNS) - Lifeguards were alerting beachgoers in and around La Jolla Monday about several shark sightings that occurred over the weekend.
On Sunday morning, a kayaker reported seeing a shark while paddling about two miles off the coast of La Jolla Shores, lifeguard Chief Rick Wurts said.
The canoeist said the marine predator was "as big or bigger" than his kayak, suggesting that the animal might have been eight to 10 feet long, Wurts said.
Late that afternoon, several lifeguards supervising La Jolla Shores saw an 18- to 24-inch dorsal fin approaching the beach, according to Wurts. The shark got to within about 50 yards of land, then made a sharp turn and disappeared into the ocean, he said.
Following the first sighting, lifeguards began notifying surfers and swimmers about the sightings.
"We want to give people a chance to make their own informed decisions about what we saw," Wurts said.
Lifeguard personnel will continue informing beachgoers about the possible presence of sharks in the area through the day, according to Wurts.
The warnings along a roughly two-mile-long stretch of shoreline from La Jolla Cove to Scripps Pier will cease tomorrow, unless more sharks are sighted, he said.
The most recent local fatal shark attack occurred April 25, 2008, when a great white killed 66-year-old retired North County veterinarian David Martin as he swam with fellow members of a triathlon club near Fletcher Cove in Solana Beach.