Hairless Kitten
02-02-2010, 12:09
New Zealand girl, 14, uses body-board to fend off shark
http://www.insidesocal.com/prepsports/shark.jpg
A teenager from New Zealand has saved herself from the jaws of a shark by using her body-board to defend herself.
Fourteen-year-old Lydia Ward said she was at a beach near the southern city of Invercargill when the shark struck.
The shark, about 1.5m (4.9ft) in length, is reported to have lunged at her and tried to bite her hip.
Standing in water that only reached up to her waist at Oreti Beach, she said she hit the "big, grey, slippery thing" repeatedly with her body-board.
"I showed Dad and he didn't really believe me but then I showed him my wetsuit with all the blood coming out and he believed me," Lydia told Radio New Zealand.
Although not seriously injured, Lydia required hospital treatment for two of the deeper wounds.
Her mother told a local newspaper that Lydia thought she had accidentally stood on the shark before it had attacked her.
She said neither Lydia nor her 15-year-old brother, also in the water at the time of the attack, planned to go back into the sea in the very near future.
Shark attacks are very rare. Researchers say that more people are killed by bee stings and lightning strikes than sharks.
Source:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/asia-pacific/8492548.stm
Well...don't mess with this little girl! :)
http://www.insidesocal.com/prepsports/shark.jpg
A teenager from New Zealand has saved herself from the jaws of a shark by using her body-board to defend herself.
Fourteen-year-old Lydia Ward said she was at a beach near the southern city of Invercargill when the shark struck.
The shark, about 1.5m (4.9ft) in length, is reported to have lunged at her and tried to bite her hip.
Standing in water that only reached up to her waist at Oreti Beach, she said she hit the "big, grey, slippery thing" repeatedly with her body-board.
"I showed Dad and he didn't really believe me but then I showed him my wetsuit with all the blood coming out and he believed me," Lydia told Radio New Zealand.
Although not seriously injured, Lydia required hospital treatment for two of the deeper wounds.
Her mother told a local newspaper that Lydia thought she had accidentally stood on the shark before it had attacked her.
She said neither Lydia nor her 15-year-old brother, also in the water at the time of the attack, planned to go back into the sea in the very near future.
Shark attacks are very rare. Researchers say that more people are killed by bee stings and lightning strikes than sharks.
Source:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/asia-pacific/8492548.stm
Well...don't mess with this little girl! :)