OK, after doing a little asking around, I found some cool stuff. I had stated earlier that she was 6' 4" and had grown over a foot and a half in the six plus months she was here. We were thinking about an inch per month, as that is about normal for most of the larger sharks (only about 10% of sharks in the world get over 4' 6"). She grew at a rate of over 3" per month, and put on over 15 pounds per month. The hunting behavior that she had begun displaying was not for the turtels, it was for the palagic stingrays. The Monday before she was released was the first day she displayed the hunting behaviors. Her feedings were quickly increased to three times in the morning, and once in the afternoon. So this also gives us a good idea on how much she eats at her size as well. But the hunting behavior in general is what they were worried about. But it is a good sign that she was displaying those behaviors, especially with her being released, no imprinting hopefully.
The reason we let her go off our local coast and not down in So Cal is becasue it has been an unusually warm spring, as far as water conditions go. In the Monterey Bay, we have a condition called upwelling. There is a trench that goes down about 2 and a half miles (more than twice the size of the Grand Canyon), winds increase the water flow a the surface and bring that cold, nutriant rich water up to the surface. Well since we are still at about 59-62 degrees, we let her go here. One of the otehr factors was size.
All the husbandry staff was guessing 100 lbs, we even got a couple people to say 120, max! I tried to get the pics from the intranet at MBA, but they wouldnt link to my home address. There is a pic of one of the project leaders (literally) with his mouth wide open as she was put on the scale. The staff was thinking that 150 pounds was about the most we would be able to keep her at.
When she was taken out, no one knew but the curators (ealry in the week) and the people on the white shark team (late Wednesday night), on other husbandry staff knew until she was gone. She had to be taken out when most of the husbandry staff was there, which is why it was done on a Thursday. They used a large dip net to get her out, and they actaully had her once, but she got out of the net. The second time was a success, and it took five gown guys to pull her out.
We have had some not-so-gruntled guests the past couple of days, but most understand. That is why we were saying day-to-day, becuase no one had ever had one this long. and we knew it could end abruptly, which it did. Prolly shouldnt tell this story, by oh well. One guy from Oregon wanted us to refund his flight, hotel, entrance, food, and everything else that he had spent to come see her. He thought someone was going to call him to let him know that she was no longer there.

Ya, I'll have what he is having.