A video that has been widely shared online shows the final moments of a man doing what he loved before his death.
The clip, which first circulated on YouTube back in 2013, showed a man wearing a horse head prop while being swirled around a whirlpool.
While it might look like a simple bit of fun, a few moments later the rotating body of water would claim the man's life.
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The victim was identified as Jacob Cockle and he was just 28 years old when he hoped to capture a brilliant piece of footage.
Cockle had previously won awards for his impressive photography and had built up quite the reputation.
Not just for capturing images that would see him bag accolades from National Geographic and The Sunday Times but by undertaking dangerous tactics to capture the shot.
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Described by those who knew him as a ‘daredevil’ who was obsessed with the ocean, Cockle found his calling in the water and taking pictures of surfers, boats and whirlpools.
"He made you believe magic existed"
Cockle had just won a £28,000 ($40,000) expedition to Antarctica, a dream for him, when tragedy would strike just weeks later.
On this fateful day, he captured a video for YouTube after seeing a whirlpool open up in the sea in Hayle harbor, Cornwall, UK.
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But he wanted to reach new heights and donned a prop head, venturing out to shoot the clip again.
Unfortunately, his curiosity of the sea would be his demise as after wanting to know what the inside of a whirlpool would look like from his GoPro camera, he decided to dive into the pool.
"There is never a day that I don't think about it"
His friend, Barnaby Courtney, told the BBC: "He had these crazy eyes that looked like the sea, his hair was always unkempt, he always looked happy.
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"He made you believe magic existed."
His mother, Carolyn, chimed: "Jacob loved the water.
"Once he was in you could never get him out."
But as the vortex in Hayle harbor only appeared a few times a year, it was one of the few chances he’d ever be able to get to capturing it.
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On May 28, 2013, the whirlpool returned, and Cockle enlisted the help of a friend to wade out into the water to meet it.
Artist David Raine had initially agreed to film the 28-year-old as he swam around the vortex, but by the time he had reached the harbor, the photographer was already in the water with the horse head.
At the time, Raine thought it was a bit of risky fun, like the other times his friend had filmed.
He said to him: "It looks a powerful one."
Cockle shouted back: "Ah yeah, earlier on it was really scary.
"It's fine now because it's so deep but when I first got in I was a bit scared to be honest.
"It's safe as now, though."
That’s when he asked for the GoPro camera which was attached to a pole so that he could get one last shot below the surface.
But Cockle didn’t reappear after diving down.
Running to the other end of the quay to where the whirlpool funnelled into a pool, Raine attempted to see if his friend had been caught and spat back out.
But there was no sign of him.
It was only moments later as he ran back and forth that he would spot Cockle floating in the pool facedown. It was too late.
Cockle’s mother was woken up that night and taken to Treliske Hospital in Truro to identify her son.
His love for the sea and curiosity for what lay beneath is what ended up costing him his life.
"There is never a day that I don't think about it," his mom said.