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Aussie Shark Incident Print E-mail
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Written by Reuters   
Tuesday, 16 October 2007

[Editor: I was quite reluctant to run this story because mainstream news sites tend to report incidents like this in a sensationalist way with little focus on the facts!  For example only one of the many reports in the Aussie press describes how the paddler was knocked off - apparently the shark bit the back of her ski and shook it.

But after receiving about a dozen emails from people all over the world I figured that I'd better put something up! 

The bottom line is that (as far as I know - and I've documented quite a number of these incidents) no surf ski paddler has ever been seriously hurt in interactions with these creatures, so without taking anything away from what was obviously a scary experience, you're far more likely to be injured driving to the beach than in any interaction with the men in gray.

Here in Cape Town we paddle in some of the most Great White-infested waters in the world - and I've only ever seen a single shark - which scared the s#$t out me admittedly - but the thing was actually just cruising along minding its own business! 

But to think of stopping paddling because of sharks would be illogical.

Anyway - here's the story according to a Reuters correspondent.]

Great White Shark
Great White Shark (Photo: Terry Goss)

SYDNEY, Oct 15 (Reuters) - An Australian woman fought off a Great White Shark on Monday after it knocked her into the water from her surf ski at a popular tourist beach.

"I thought this is it" 

"I thought this is it, he is going to grab my leg. I had my blade (paddle) and I just kept punching, punching, punching," Linda Whitehurst told local television.

Whitehurst suffered only small lacerations on her right arm in the fight with the 2.5-metre (eight-foot) shark, before scrambling back onto her surf ski and paddling to shore at Byron Bay's famous surfing beach "The Pass" on Australia's east coast.

"The shark circled the kayak (surf ski) and then swam directly at her," police inspector Owen King told local radio.

Defended herself with her paddle

"She was able to (defend herself from) the shark by striking it in the mouth with the paddle from the kayak. The shark then took off and swam away from her." Whitehurst was about 150 metres (450 feet) from shore.

Boats patrolled the area looking for the shark and people were advised not to go in the water. The beach reopened a few hours later.

Lifeguards said the attack was the second incident involving a Great White in less than a week.

"There was a similar incident last Tuesday when a man in a kayak was menaced by a Great White, about eight to 10 foot long, at Wategos Beach, just the next beach around from where this woman was attacked today," said lifeguard Stephen Leahy.

The attack was the second in Australia in three days.

A 31-year-old man was bitten by a bronze whaler shark on Saturday while spearfishing off a charter boat on the Great Barrier Reef.

Great Whites - protected species

Sharks, even Great Whites, are protected in Australia.

An Australian abalone diver miraculously escaped a Great White Shark attack in January after the shark half-swallowed him head first.

The diver's lead weight vest saved his life by stopping the shark's teeth from biting him in half and the shark then released the diver.

Australia had six shark attacks in 2006, according to the U.S.-based International Shark Attack File. There were 62 shark attacks worldwide in 2006.

 


See also:

 

http://www.smh.com.au/articles/2007/10/15/1192300686143.html

www.realtime.com 

Daily Telegraph 

 

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Comments (6)Add Comment
Diver
written by Alain Jaques, October 17, 2007
The abolone diver story sounds fishy.. The shark would have to be massive to swallow a man head-first up to his waist belt.
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Not fishy
written by Tom Balaam, October 18, 2007
Alain
The attack on the abalone diver actually did happen, these blokes dive for the abalone to sell mostly for export to the Japanese market but a number of them have simply dissapeared over the years, wonder why.

Tom B
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Alain
written by David Tebera, October 19, 2007
It said it was a weight vest. There is some new equipment for freedivers out there that put the weights in a vest rather then a belt. It makes more sense for an abalone diver to have one of these vests. It would make working on the bottom easier. I agree with you in that if it was a belt bite it would be 1 in a million.

Regardless. Scary thought. I am amazed that he held his composure to not exhale.
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...
written by James Lancaster, October 22, 2007
i live and paddle in Byron Bay
Awesome place
and yes being the Ocean we have sharks here too...
recent ocean currents have murkied our waters and local discussion has been that our little friend from the deep was a little confused when going for a ski...

I mean how good can a glass ski taste?

There have been a few sightings lately but when you look at the footage and read the story it becomes pretty clear the shark was only 'checking things out'...

as the ski had minor damage and 4 stitches, from the shark or a carbon scratch, is pretty minimal damage when you consider the power of these awesome animals

mind you i'd rather ride some swell than have a grey goose pushing my ski along
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media beatup
written by kurt tutt, November 05, 2007
Its a shame the media go and freak everyone out by such an incident. In my eighteen years or so of paddling around the rock etc (3.5km off byron) i reckon i've only seen a handful of sharks. This is not saying they are not there, but generally they are not into us.

Its sad when people believe the risk is so great they don't get out there and experience how good it is to have a paddle. If only the media were a bit ( a lot) more factual in their reports on these incidents here in Australia
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Tasty carbon
written by Gary Kroukamp, November 05, 2007
I wonder if us guys who can't afford carbon skis should start putting out the story that sharks really seem to like the taste of carbon, but tend to spit glass out!
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