Thursday, November 23, 2006

SCARED -- 31 October 2006 -- Siletz River mouth, Lincoln City, Oregon, US -- surfer attacked


Tony Perez, 22, was surfing with two friends just before sundown about 300 metres offshore of the Siletz River mouth, Lincoln City, Oregon, US, when he was attacked by an estimated 16-17 foot great white shark, according to a report published 22 November in Oregon's The News Guard.

Perez escaped injury as the shark bit the back of his board and pulled it under water before releasing it and swimming away.

According to the newspaper:



"I didn't see a thing," the 22-year-old said.


"It hit out of nowhere," he said, snapping his fingers for emphasis. "That's the scariest thing about it.


You never know what's going to happen."


It happened this Halloween, just before sundown, when Perez and two friends were about 300 yards off the mouth of the Siletz River surfing some of the best waves of the season.


The trio had been surfing about two and a half hours and muscles were getting fatigued when one of his friends decided to pack it in, saying he had a strange feeling. All of the elements for "sharky water" were in place — sundown, off the mouth of a river, rainy weather with salmon running and seals. And to top it off, Perez, who had broken his surfboard in the morning, was using a loaner-board from The Oregon Surf Shop — a bright yellow loaner.


Some surfers believe yellow attracts sharks more than other colors, though shark experts say it isn't so.


"I guess Jeff left us out here for feeding time," Perez joked to the friend who'd stayed behind with him to catch a few more waves before the sun went down.


The words were barely out of his mouth when it happened.


"I felt a violent blast on the back of the board," said Perez, who was lying flat on his ride and just happened to have his legs bent with his feet up in the air. "It pulled me back and down, but my head didn't go under water.


My feet came down on top of it, and I felt this huge rock-hard body, just this big old beast below me."


"I just started swimming as fast as I could away from him toward my buddy who was about 15 feet away," Perez said. "I swam like mad. I didn't know what to do man."


Perez's board was still attached to his ankle by a short leash. He yanked it to him and jumped back on.


He told his friend, who hadn't seen a thing, what happened. His buddy thought Perez was joking at first.


"I'm not kidding," he said. "We gotta get out of here."


As luck would have it, there were no waves to catch — so it was one long, exhausting sprint to the beach, Perez said. "Of course, I was first to the beach."


As he paddled he thought maybe some huge, angry seal had hit him.


"Then I got to the beach and saw the teeth marks."


The telltale u-shaped bite marks of a large shark stretched from one side of the 16-inch-wide surf board to the other — and up a good 14 inches into its 5-foot-7-inch length.


The shark's mouth had opened wide enough to get around and over the three fins jutting from the end of the board, and the teeth marks it left behind on the board measured 2-inches across.


After examining photos of the board and measurements of the bite marks, shark expert Ralph Collier in Los Angeles, said the attack was indeed from a great white that he estimates was between 16- and 17-feet long and at least 4,000 pounds.


Perez's friend back on shore had seen a large splash behind Perez's board but figured it was a seal.


"I just got lucky," Perez said. "I happened to have my legs up, and that's it. Otherwise I would have been a pirate for Halloween."


Perez didn't see nor hear the shark approach.


"That's the thing about great whites, especially, quick, heavy attacks," he said. "But he bit into a hard, epoxy surfboard, and that's not what he wanted. He expected a big juicy seal and instead got a mouthful of plastic fins and not any bit of me, no blood or anything. So he just backed off."


"This year there's been more than usual, with four or five attacks, more sightings and more bumps," said Norman Eburn, manager of The Oregon Surf Shop in Lincoln City.


His theory: "It might have something to do with the dead-zone."


The dead zone to which he refers is a recent reoccurring phenomena of oxygen-depleted water stretching from the central Oregon coast to the central Washington coast that has killed marine life and forced some creatures closer to shore in search of food.


But none of that fazes Perez, who was out surfing the very next morning after the attack — albeit at a different spot.


"I'm not that crazy," Perez said. "I wrote that spot off for a little while. But surfing is all I do. It's really important to me. And after something like that, it's like lightning striking — hopefully, it won't happen again."


Source: The News Guard

Photo: News Guard photo by Garret Jaros


Monday, November 13, 2006

INJURED -- 9 November 2006 -- Nahoon River, East London, South Africa -- swimmer attacked

Richard Tebbutt was bitten on the left arm by a 1.5 metre Zambezi shark after he mistakenly grabbed it by the tail, thinking it was a fish a fisherman had on the end of his line.

In this rather odd incident which took place in the Nahoon River, close to the mouth, on Thursday 9 November 2006, Tebbutt was paddling his canoe on the river when he saw a fisherman struggling with a fish he had caught. Tebbutt jumped out of his canoe thinking he would assist the fisherman with his catch. He dived down and grabbed the fish by its tail, but it turned out to be a Zambezi shark, which turned and bit him on the left arm.

Tebbutt told the local newspaper, the Daily Dispatch: “I just jumped out of my canoe and dived down and grabbed the fish by its tail … I got a shock of my life when I saw a big Zambezi shark, charging towards me.

“The shark quickly turned around, grabbed my left arm and lacerated it. Within a split second, I saw my blood in the river.

“I just smacked the shark as hard as I could with my right arm to get it to let go of me.

“I was in the water holding my arm which was bleeding profusely, and the shark started coming towards me very fast.

“I immediately jumped out of the water onto the rocks and it missed me … I could have been dead by now.”

Tebbutt was helped by his son, also out paddling a canoe on the river. He was taken to St Dominics Hospital where he had 50 stitches.

He told the newspaper: “I was shocked that I had overcome the shark. Its strength was unbelievable.

“In my 30 years in surfing, I never thought I would have this kind of experience.”

There have been several shark attacks on surfers in the East London area over the years.

Zambezi sharks are renown for scavenging up rivers and in river mouths. They are also known as Bull sharks and are notorious for attacks on people around the world.

Sources:
Daily Dispatch

Sunday, November 12, 2006

INJURED -- 11 November 2006 -- Kama'ole Beach Park II, Kihei, Maui, Hawaii -- swimmer attacked

Kyle Gruen, 29, was bitten on his left side by a shark while swimming about 30 to 40 feet offshore of Kama'ole Beach Park II, Kihei, Maui, Hawaii. His thigh and hand were injured in the attack which took place at 12.30 pm local time on Saturday 11 November 2006, according to a report in the Honolulu Advertiser.

Gruen was carried to shore by bystanders and taken to Maui Memorial Medical Center, where he was reported in a stable condition.

His twin brother Jeff Gruen, who was on the beach at the time of the attack told the newspaper: “He was swimming along when just all of a sudden it got him. He pulled away and kicked it off, and it took off right away."

The size or species of shark was not reported.

Sources: Honolulu Advertiser