The Scottish Mail on Sunday

And here are the holiday snaps of us... swimming with CROCODILES!

- By Barbara Jones

IT MAY sound like a suicide mission, but the latest attraction for adrenaline junkies is… swimming with crocodiles.

Tourists pay more than £5,000 to dive into a river in Botswana to swim alongside 12ft-long Nile crocodiles.

The creatures, which weigh up to half a ton and can kill a man with one snap of their massive jaws, are responsibl­e for killing hundreds people every year.

The experience is organised by tour operator Big Animals, which assures thrill-seekers that the cold waters of the Okavango Delta, where the trips take place, make the crocodiles ‘lethargic and slow’.

Divers are urged to descend quickly below the surface – the crocodile’s ‘kill zone’ – and ensure they are not seen as a silhouette against the sun, which will make them likely to be seen as a ‘potential meal’.

Wearing scuba gear, the group follow an expedition leader behind a crocodile, and when the time is right, one by one they will swim forward to be alongside it.

British holidaymak­er Tony Rowlands, 62, braved the dive and emerged not only intact but ecstatic.

He said: ‘It was wonderful. You can swim up close to this massive prehistori­c animal, knowing he could tear you to shreds in seconds but he doesn’t, and it’s wonderful.’

In a small team accompanie­d by crocodile ‘spotters’ and experience­d divers familiar with the territory, he went out each morning at daybreak in a flat-bottomed boat. Mr Rowlands, who owns property companies in Liverpool, said: ‘We were quiet, looking all the time for a big croc warming himself on a riverbank. The big old ones are the best – they can be around 50 years old and they are scared of nothing and have no reason to be skittish.

‘They’re the last of the dinosaurs for a reason. They’re survivors and they’re clever.’ Rememberin­g the moment he swam alongside a crocodile, the former Royal Navy sailor said: ‘I thought to myself, “I should be more worried than I am – this is completely insane”.’

Amos Nachoum, of California­based Big Animals, said: ‘This is for people who want the ultimate experience but who are also experience­d divers.’

Before the dive, tourists have to sign a document waiving the Botswanan government and Big Animals of responsibi­lity should anything go wrong.

 ??  ?? PREDATOR: A Nile crocodile in the Okavango Delta. Right: A thrill-seeker with equipment to record an encounter – the camera was later snatched by the terrifying creature, inset below
PREDATOR: A Nile crocodile in the Okavango Delta. Right: A thrill-seeker with equipment to record an encounter – the camera was later snatched by the terrifying creature, inset below
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