View Full Version : Surfing Star in Stable Condition After Shark Attack
Joshua
11-04-2003, 02:54 PM
Surfing Star in Stable Condition After Shark Attack
Tuesday, November 04, 2003
LIHUE, Hawaii — The 13-year-old surfing star who lost her left arm in a shark attack last week off Kauai (search) was in stable condition Monday night after a second surgery.
The surgery to close and clean Bethany Hamilton (search)'s wound was successful and the girl may be able to return to her Princeville home this week, according to Lani Yukimura, the spokeswoman for Wilcox Memorial Hospital.
Hamilton was attacked Friday a quarter-mile off Makua Beach near Haena. Her arm, bit off near the shoulder, was not recovered and officials said the shark has not been spotted again.
State wildlife experts estimated the tiger shark (search) to be around 14 feet long, based on the massive chunk taken out of Bethany's surf board.
Bethany was a competitive surfer who already had secured sponsorships and was expected to go pro, according to the Hanalei Surf Online Web site.
The shark attack was Hawaii's fourth this year. The last shark attack was Oct. 5, when a woman was bitten while swimming near Kihei on Maui, officials said.
bachviet
11-04-2003, 03:41 PM
That really sucks because her surfing career is over. I hope she would recover and go back surfing once again.
Cantacuzene
11-04-2003, 03:57 PM
There is a one armed guy that I see surfing all the time. He rips. Its definitly possible for her to still surf, but a pro career is prolly out of teh question sadly.
CynJon
11-04-2003, 04:09 PM
Everyone here in Hawaii is talking about this...that was a big a$$ shark--tiger sharks don't care what they eat. Everything looks like food to them...
http://www.lemonizer.com/upload/uploadsNov/surfboard.jpg
Joshua
11-04-2003, 06:42 PM
<fatbastard>
"I'm bigger than you! I'm higher on the food chain! GET IN MY BELLY!
</fatbastard>
<goingtohell>
I wonder if she can only swim in circles...
</goingtohell>
Joshua
11-04-2003, 07:19 PM
Originally posted by Nija
<goingtohell>
I wonder if she can only swim in circles...
</goingtohell>
bwahahahahaha.. umm, I mean.. :disa:
baggio248
11-04-2003, 08:33 PM
I was in Hawaii when it happened, and all the surfers they interviewed said its behavior went against everything they've been told. It wasn't early morning, it wasn't a sharks normal pattern. Not that I think they can have a normal pattern, if they are hungry or irritated, they'll bite whenever they please, it's their water.
goyo2
11-05-2003, 03:14 PM
That's why I don't eat shark fillets anymore.
I used to spearfish down in Lajolla and saw some pretty big leopard sharks, but they will pretty much just try to gumm you to death because they don't have huge teeth. Kidding though, they don't attack unless you grab their tails. Still, I was with my 11 year old nephew swimming right by La Jolla shores and there were two 7 footers just kinda kicking it by the shore. We watched them from a couple of yards away, they were awesome, but still frighnening. There was a guy who waded out and then wouldn't move because he was afraid the sharks would bite him if he did. I swear I could see one of the sharks snicker!
Further out I have seen blue sharks, they are stealth looking and will definitely chomp on you if they are hungry or just think you're a punk!
CornMonkey
11-05-2003, 07:10 PM
Originally posted by baggio248
I was in Hawaii when it happened, and all the surfers they interviewed said its behavior went against everything they've been told. It wasn't early morning, it wasn't a sharks normal pattern. Not that I think they can have a normal pattern, if they are hungry or irritated, they'll bite whenever they please, it's their water.
i was with my gf when we heard about this. she speculated that it could be that she was on her period when it happened. in any case, i hope she makes a full recovery and head back to what she obviously loves doing.
Burzhui
11-06-2003, 08:14 AM
Originally posted by goyo2
That's why I don't eat shark fillets anymore.
I used to spearfish down in Lajolla and saw some pretty big leopard sharks, but they will pretty much just try to gumm you to death because they don't have huge teeth. Kidding though, they don't attack unless you grab their tails. Still, I was with my 11 year old nephew swimming right by La Jolla shores and there were two 7 footers just kinda kicking it by the shore. We watched them from a couple of yards away, they were awesome, but still frighnening. There was a guy who waded out and then wouldn't move because he was afraid the sharks would bite him if he did. I swear I could see one of the sharks snicker!
Further out I have seen blue sharks, they are stealth looking and will definitely chomp on you if they are hungry or just think you're a punk!
for some reason your story reminded me of that scene from The Beach, when the guy got attacked by the shark
baggio248
11-21-2003, 06:41 PM
It's good to see her in good spirits, best of luck to her.
http://the.honoluluadvertiser.com/dailypix/2003/Nov/21/localnews1a_b.jpg
"KILAUEA, Kaua'i — Three weeks after a "gray blur" bit off her left arm, Bethany Hamilton is putting her life back together.
The stitches covering the wound caused by the 14-foot tiger shark were to come out yesterday afternoon, and she was eager for her doctor's permission to get back in the water. Bethany is still listed among the top-ranked women surfers, and she insists that she'll be back on the waves soon.
The 13-year-old Princeville girl woke up at 5 a.m. on Halloween morning, eager to surf the reef at Tunnels because the waves had been good nearby the night before. She had cereal for breakfast before her mother drove her to the beach. Her dad was going into the hospital for knee surgery.
Bethany paddled out with her best friend, Alana Blanchard, and Alana's brother, Byron, and father, Holt.
They surfed for about a half-hour and she caught maybe 10 waves before she took a rest, lying on her surfboard parallel to shore, her right hand holding the board, her left dangling in the water.
"We never saw it, or anything, before it bit. It shook me. It lasted about three seconds long. All I saw was, like, a gray blur.
"It let go and I just looked at the red blood in the water."
Holt Blanchard and his son pushed Bethany onto a small wave, then they dragged her in the water, one or the other of them paddling while she held on to their board or their shorts with her remaining hand. When they got into an area shallow enough to stand, the elder Blanchard wrapped his rashguard around her arm. As they reached shore, he used a surfboard leash as a tourniquet.
Until that moment, Bethany had been conscious.
"I was talking. I was praying. I don't know the exact words. I just asked for help," she said.
She passed out as she came ashore, but came to again quickly.
"I woke up and they had a lot of towels on me. I was thinking that the ambulance should hurry up," she said.
She recalls details uncannily, like firefighters asking about the kind of cars her parents drove, like her asking ambulance attendants where they were during the 30-mile ride to the hospital.
And she remembers her mother, trying to keep up with the ambulance to follow her daughter to the hospital and being pulled over by a police officer for speeding. Ambulance attendants radioed the police to explain the situation and her mother was free to go.
At Wilcox Memorial Hospital, Tom Hamilton was hauled out of the operating room to make room for his daughter. He already had been sedated for his scheduled knee operation, and was not able to see Bethany before she underwent surgery.
He got the knee surgery later, and yesterday afternoon, he and Bethany were to have their respective stitches out at the same time.
Within hours of the shark's bite, her story became an international sensation. The family was barraged by media and well-wishers. Friends who saw that they were too fragile to handle the stress stepped up and began trying to manage the situation.
Part-time Kaua'i resident Roy Hofstetter, a Los Angeles entertainment agent, was asked to help handle the media. He is making arrangements for Bethany to be paid for many of her appearances to help secure her future. Although the family has medical insurance, there will be additional uncovered medical costs, including the development of artificial limbs that will have to be replaced as Bethany grows.
Bethany seems to handle the turmoil with aplomb. She credits church and kin for her personal strength and resilience.
"Strong faith and strong family helps me, does it for me," said Bethany, whose family attends North Shore Christian Church.
She seems hesitant to go further, but it's just that she's said it all so many times before. She looks at her dad.
"I wish we had recorded my answers, so we could just play them back," she said.
To some extent, she has been insulated, spending most of her time since the injury with family and a few close girlfriends, including best friend Alana, and that feels normal. Yet, undeniably, life is different.
"Everything's changed. If you just think about it, there's all these people saying, 'How are you feeling?' I just wish I could say, 'I'm fine. You don't have to ask.' But then, I guess I'd ask, too."
She looks fine. Surfer's blond hair frames lively eyes and a ready smile. A gold and diamond pendant around her neck is in the shape of a surfboard with a bite taken out of it — looking much like her board did after the attack. It was a gift from a friend who prefers to remain anonymous, she said.
Bethany's right hand is fidgety during the interview, toying with a lacquered chopstick that she uses to arrange her hair. At her left shoulder is a mound of flesh where an arm used to be, a semicircle of scar tissue closing the wound. Bethany appears comfortable with herself, and makes no attempt to shield the injury from view.
This slim, strong teenager doesn't appear to dwell too much on the loss of her arm. It's done, and she said she's ready to move on.
"Consciously or unconsciously, she's doing a lot of stuff on her own," Tom Hamilton said.
"I saw her sitting on the floor, cutting oranges and tangerines, using her feet to hold them."
Bethany is hoping to salvage her semester at school, but it will take hard work. She has been recovering for three weeks, and a couple of weeks of Mainland visits are scheduled in December for national media appearances. The family is talking to her teachers at her online charter school, the Myron B. Thompson Academy, and they're working on bringing her up to speed.
Once she and her dad get their doctor's approval to return to the water, Tom Hamilton said, "we'll probably do some workouts together in the local pool."
When they're ready, it's on to the surf — something they haven't been able to do together for several months because of Tom's bad knee.
"We look forward to surfing together," Tom Hamilton said.
Bethany has a specific goal when she paddles back into the ocean.
"When I first go surfing, I want to make sure I catch the first wave myself. Then, they can help me," she said."
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