Gills Gone Wild made All The Sharks feel more than a photo contest under the ocean. MJ and Aliah made every dive look like a chance to see what most people never will. They did not wait for perfect weather or calm seas because they knew rare sharks do not wait either.
In All The Sharks, they drifted into rough water near Oshima Island and held steady when currents pushed too hard. They laughed when jellyfish stung their arms because they still had a shot at grabbing the pufferfish bonus. They trusted each other when they slipped into restricted spots by mistake.
In All The Sharks, they stayed calm when local boats pulled on their safety line. They never backed away from night dives because they knew darkness hides the best reef species. They floated beside rays in Bimini and still found time to smile for the camera. Gills Gone Wild showed that real divers keep going when plans break.
They made it clear that adventure sits just below the surface if you are ready to jump in. If you ever thought diving was only for experts with perfect gear and calm seas, then MJ and Aliah proved you just need guts and good timing.
These 7 Gills Gone Wild moments from All the Sharks will literally encourage you to go for a dive
1) Chasing Sharknado in Japan

MJ and Aliah found a swirling school of banded hound sharks near Oshima Island. They knew the currents were strong, but they pushed in anyway. They held steady in shifting water that would have pushed most divers back to the boat.
They understood that this Sharknado was not just for show but for the points they needed. They moved with the school long enough to get clear footage that counted. Staying inside the spiral made their score jump when they needed it most.
Seeing them stay locked inside a moving wall of sharks proved how they treated rough water like part of the job. This dive pulled them back from slipping down the ranks and made every fan see why they called themselves Gills Gone Wild.
2) Nailing the Epaulette Shark in Australia

Australia’s reefs looked picked clean until MJ and Aliah went looking where no one else bothered. They searched shallow coral when other teams drifted deep. They used headlamps to sweep cracks for rare species.
Aliah saw the small epaulette shark crawling across the reef floor on its fins. She signaled MJ to hold the light just right so the shot would not blur. That single sighting shifted them from last to back in the mix.
Finding a shark that crawls instead of swims said enough about how these two worked. They did not chase only the big predators. They proved rare and small could score points if you stayed patient and kept your eyes open.
3) Laughing off Jellyfish stings

MJ and Aliah knew the pufferfish game changer would change the scoreboard. They stayed out at dusk when other divers pulled back. They swam right through jellyfish that stung their arms and necks.
They treaded water to check each other’s skin and laughed about the pain instead of panicking. They snapped the pufferfish shot before heading up. They made a tough moment look like another small problem to handle.
This sting story showed how they worked together when small things went wrong. They never called it quits for a quick fix. They stayed in the water when it mattered and pulled in points that kept them in the fight.
4) Holding their nerve in restricted waters

The sharknado pulled them off course near Oshima. They drifted into a zone they were not supposed to enter. Local fishermen tugged their buoys to tell them to get out fast.
Some divers would surface and lose the dive. MJ and Aliah signaled each other to kick back to legal waters without fuss. They did not stop recording as they swam out of trouble. They held onto every shot they got.
They showed how calm heads fix problems. They did not make a scene or waste time fighting the current. They stayed focused and turned a slip-up into proof they could handle the ocean’s surprises.
5) Riding rough surf for bonus points

MJ and Aliah picked rough water on purpose when other teams stayed in flat shallows. They knew bonus species liked deeper reef edges where surf rolled in hard. They swam out where the swell lifted their masks and pushed them off line.
One clip showed MJ with water pouring off her face while she grinned at Aliah. They knew they could lose air faster, but stayed out until they got what they came for.
They never cared if the easy route would save time. They wanted species that hid past the break. That choice pulled them ahead more than once and made them stand out for guts and smart timing.
6) Braving the cold for night sightings

When the sun dropped over Australia’s reef, MJ and Aliah suited up again. They liked night dives because reef corners come alive in the dark. They drifted with headlamps over coral where tiny sharks hunted after dusk.
They trusted the tide, and the cold water never slowed them down. They got shots no one else touched because other teams waited for daylight. Night water can hide surprises and test divers who jump too soon.
These two planned right and used the dark as cover for bonus points. They made late swims count when calm dives in daylight could not do the same.
7) Smiling for selfies with rays

Bimini gave them sharks but also rays that glided past in clear shallows. MJ and Aliah did not rush the moment. They floated near the rays long enough to log bonus species and enjoy the view.
They clicked quick selfies that showed them laughing behind masks while rays drifted under. The footage looked like a break from the chase, but it added points, too. They knew soft reef moments mattered.
While other teams stressed over deep dives, MJ and Aliah balanced speed with calm swims. They proved that drifting slowly sometimes brings home more than fighting surf and open water alone.
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