Scuba Diving

SCUBA DIVING NEWS   ::   SCUBALINX   ::   SCUBA FORUM   ::   SCUBA POLL   ::   CYBER DIVER

Scuba Diving NewsScuba Diving CDNNScuba NewsDive Travel NewsScuba Diving Safety NewsEco NewsScuba Industry NewsScience

Dive News :: CDNNScuba Diving NewslettersCDNN Act NowCDNN PhotoCDNN InterviewCDNN Special ReportCDNN EditorialsCDNN ArticlesDestinationsDiver Alert

PAGE ONE :: WORLD NEWS :: SAFETY

Lucky to be alive: Maui tourist describes shark attack

Powered by CDNN - CYBER DIVER News Network
by PETER FIMRITE

MAUI, Hawaii (9 May 2007) -- Marin County psychologist and author Peller Marion enjoys swimming with the turtles in Hawaii, but she was surprised Monday when one began tugging on her foot.

Turned out it wasn't a turtle, and it wasn't tugging.

A hungry tiger shark had chomped down on her foot and was filleting the appendage with its razor-sharp teeth like it was a meaty appetizer.

"I saw it from the side," Marion said by phone Wednesday from her hospital bed in Maui. "It looked like a wall of gray. I instantly said, 'Holy (smokes), this isn't a turtle.' "

Marion, who swims regularly with members of the Tiburon Peninsula Club, was in the water about 8:30 a.m. off Keawakapu Beach in Kihei, Maui, when she was attacked by the shark, estimated to be about 14 feet.

The 63-year-old author of four books, including the nonfiction "Career Tune Up" and the fictional "Searching for the G Spot," immediately pulled her foot away. Breathing through a snorkel, one fin gone, she began swimming like mad for the shore about 25 yards away, trying hard not to panic.

"I didn't hear the 'Jaws' music. I heard my heart pounding," Marion said.

"I've been in tight situations before in the ocean, with the current going one way and me going the other, but this was different," she said. "I try to keep my head, but yes, I was frightened. I wasn't Esther Williams at this point."

By the time Marion stumbled onto the sand, her foot was a bloody mess.

"You could look through my foot to the bone," she said. "This isn't a how-many-stitches-did-you-get kind of thing. There is a huge gash, tendons were slashed, joints were popped and there were marks on the bone like the teeth had scraped across."

The attack happened about an hour after a tiger shark bumped a surfer at nearby Kamaole Beach Park II, prompting officials to issue a shark alert and close a 1-mile stretch of coastline.

Keawakapu is about a mile and a half from Kamaole Beach, so it was not closed. Marion said there were no warnings or she never would have entered the water.

The tiger shark is named for the dark strips on its gray back, which fade in adulthood. It is notorious for its jaw strength and heavily serrated teeth. One of the largest sharks in the ocean, tigers generally roam shallow reefs and lagoons at night and can cut open the bodies of large sea turtles.

"They are what we call our apex predator," said John Naughton, a marine biologist for the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration fisheries service in Hawaii. "They are the big boys at the top of the food chain, like the white sharks are in colder waters like Northern California. When we have attacks on people, we can attribute them to tiger sharks."

Tigers are second only to great whites in the number of recorded human deaths. They regularly dine on farm animals that wash down Hawaiian streams during floods and have been known to consume sailors who have fallen overboard, but Naughton said they do not hunt people.

 

Peller Marion
'G Spot' author Peller Marion at Maui Memorial Medical Center recovering from shark attack.

"If they did we'd have a bloodbath here in Hawaiian waters, because there are millions of people who enter the water," Naughton said. "Very commonly, what we see is one bite and then they are gone. It seems to be mistaken identity."

Naughton said Hawaii averages two to four attacks a year. "It's more dangerous to drive 100 mph, but being eaten by an animal seems to really get people's attention," he said. "It's like people going out into our national parks where you have bears and occasionally you get attacks. It's their habitat, and we have to respect that and give them their space."

Marion, a professor of psychology at Dominican University in San Rafael, underwent a two-hour operation at Maui Memorial Medical Center, where she is expected to remain four more days. She is facing long hours of rehabilitation. Doctors told her that if everything goes right, she may someday walk normally again.

Her acclaimed "G Spot" novel is about a Marin County couple who travel to a resort very much like Maui and take a tantric sex workshop to revive their marriage. Hawaiian vacations haven't been so great for Marion, however -- her last trip to Maui a year ago was ruined when her husband was rushed to Honolulu for open-heart surgery.

"All we are trying to do is take a vacation, but Mother Maui is spitting us out," Marion said.

Still, she plans to go back in the water as soon as she can and keep coming back with her husband to Maui, where they intend to continue their vacation after she gets out of the hospital.

"I just feel fortunate that I'm alive. If (the shark) had followed me, I wouldn't be alive today," she said. "It's nature. I'm just surprised it was me."

As for tips on what people should do, she said, "Just keep your first-aid kit filled."

SCUBA FORUM

  • DISCUSS THIS TOPIC - Dive in and have your say at Scuba Forum
  • KNOW BEFORE YOU GO

  • SCUBALINX :: Dive Hawaii
  • CYBER DIVER TRAVEL GUIDE :: Hawaii
  • CDNN DESTINATIONS :: Hawaii
  •  

    Scuba Diving

    CDNN TOP NEWS STORIES

     

     

       ADVANCED SEARCH

    site map         ::         notice         ::         privacy         ::         about us         ::         faq         ::         my news         ::         advertise         ::         contact

    © 1995 - 2007  CDNN GLOBAL NEWS NETWORK