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Shark warning issued for Fairhaven beach along Victoria s Great Ocean Road
A shark warning has been issued for Fairhaven beach along Victoria s Great Ocean Road after a large whale carcass was found in the area.
VicEmergency issued the warning for Fairhaven and Moggs Creek just after 7am this morning, advising beachgoers to remain on high alert in the water.
A shark warning has been issued for Fairhaven beach.(Supplied)
Whale carcasses are known to attract sharks to the area, bringing them closer to shore than normal. Due to a large whale carcass there has been an increase in shark activity reported at Fairhaven today, the message read.
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A decaying sperm whale carcass that washed up on a Surf Coast beach could take days to remove, just as school holidays are expected to bring an influx of tourists to the area.
The sunburnt male sperm whale, measuring 18 metres long, was seen drifting in shallow waters along the coast for several days.
It triggered a shark warning for the surrounding area after washing up on the sand about one kilometre west of the Fairhaven Surf Life Saving Club on Tuesday morning.
The dead whale washed up on Fairhaven beach in the early hours of Tuesday morning.
Credit:Paul Greene
And cages and food and wicker nests and first aid spray.
JJ Birds & Supplies, a one-stop-shop bird business, has been hawking finches, parakeets, canaries and the occasional cockatiel and cockatoo since 2019.
But it wasn’t until last month that the owners moved operations to a building that’s set back from Second Street where it is less conspicuous to passersby.
The business is owned by cousins Joe Correia and John Ferreira. The two grew up in a four-family Robeson Street house where Correia’s father kept American Singer Canaries in a large cage in the building’s basement.
“We’ve grown up with birds,” said Ferreira, who works as a construction site supervisor for a local company and for years has coached girls’ varsity softball at Durfee High School.
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