Not generally. They are deep sea creatures, and do not come so close to shore, usually.
Because the Water is the Ocean and The Water Evaporates and More Water Falls into the Coast Ocean and The Water is in a 1.8m Deep White Beach Sand Hole.
In deep water, you are buoyed up by the water displaced and as a result, you don't exertas much pressure against the stones on the bottom. When you are up to your neck inwater, you hardly feel the bottom at all.
Deep Mine
"The Water Horse: Legend of the Deep " ~ See related link below .
* Broadstairs beach is really good. It's very sandy but busy and crowded. * Margate beach is nice and sandy. * Ramsgate beach is sandy but narrow and close to the water. * Deal beach is very long and narrow but it is a pebble beach. I like it because you walk into deep water very quick. Good for swimming. Keep your shoes on. * Botany bay in Kingsgate is a nice secluded beach and sandy. Rocks in water though. Also has an unofficial unimposing nude section by the sand dunes. * Joss bay between Kingsgate and Broadstairs is also really good and sandy, but also is rocky in the water. Take your pick !
on the beach whrere the tides just about but cnt reach 2ft deep t keep water from reaching
The ocean can range from 36,000 feet deep (Challenger Deep, Mariana Trench) to only a few millimeters deep at the beach.
Deep Water
As deep as the container in which the water is in
Deep water
i could go out into this long, drawn out explanation, but I'll sum it up for you. if the water is deep enough, then your shark bait. if not, you could drown. those are the two main reasons you should always swim at a patrolled beach.