Great White Shark Petite Bracelet
Regular price $29.00 AUDGreat White Shark
Population 2025: 11,197
Inspired by the living fossil, your Great Whit Shark band is sustainably and ethically handmade by artisans using tempered glass and stainless steal beads.
1 Band Plants 10 Trees
Handmade with tempered glass & Stainless Steel
Your Petite Great White Shark band is handmade by skilled artisans using tempered glass beads with stainless steel findings and lobster clasp.
The bracelet measures 15cm / 6 inches with extensions to 19cm / 7.5 inches.
Your band plants 10 Mangrove Trees to give animals a home and recycles 3.08 tonnes of CO2.
What comes with your band?
Your Band of Courage comes with an Endangered Animal gift card and a 10 Tree Planting Certificate, both of which can be personalised. They tell you all about your Endangered Animal, your Mangrove trees, and your CO2 recycling.
Every band comes in a drawstring fabric pouch.
Care for your bands
Go flying, swimming, showering or whatever you wish with your Great White Shark Band, why would you want to take him off, he's ocean proof and tarnish proof.
Shipping
Your order will be processed within 2 business days of receipt. Shipments are tracked and details for the delivery service you choose are shown at checkout.
Great White Shark
As predators, Great White Sharks are second to Killer Whales, who hunt the sharks. At 20 feet or more and weighing over 2 tonnes, White Sharks are formidable, but size is no guarantee of survival in nature. White Sharks live almost 80 years, litters average 5 pups, but only about 1 in 1,000 baby White Sharks (pups) make it to adulthood, thanks to ocean predators including humans, who hunt them for food, fins especially, and as trophies. A female White Shark might have 100 - 200 pups over her lifetime, and statistically none might survive to adulthood! So it takes 5 mums to birth one serving pup. With these statistics and threats, population recovery is challenging. There are just 8,000 White Sharks surviving today (our own estimates) with over 6,000, found in Australia.