A scuba diver in Massachusetts was this weekend while lobster diving off the coast of Rockport. Mike Murray, a diver with two decades experience, saw the ray on the ocean’s floor, 40 feet underwater. Diving alone鈥攚hich Murray admits was his first mistake鈥攈e initially avoided the ray, a species that is easygoing but can deliver shocks of 220-volts, which hurts . Murray spotted a lobster and swam above the ray before feeling a pain in his left leg that he first assumed was a shark bite. Realizing what had happened, Murray returned to shore with no problems. Experts at the say Murray was lucky not only to see a torpedo ray but to escape the encounter otherwise unscathed. “They鈥檙e not aggressive, but they won鈥檛 back away from divers either,鈥 said Assistant Curator Dan Laughlin. Unlike other rays, torpedo rays do not have barbed tails. 鈥淚t was my mistake,鈥 Murray said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 his ocean. I was a guest in his ocean, and on that day I was a very poor guest.鈥 Worse yet, the lobster Murray was after was wasn’t big enough to keep, and he threw it back.
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