Shark attack leaves surfer seriously injured in Northern California
A 31-year-old surfer in Northern California is recovering after a shark attack that left gruesome bites on his right thigh and leg.
Jared Trainor was knocked him off his board during a Sunday outing to Centerville Beach, he told the Times-Standard newspaper in Humboldt County. The animal had his right leg and board clamped in its jaws, he said.
Underwater, the experienced surfer grabbed the shark's body with one hand and kicked at its head with his free leg until it let him go and swam away, he said. Trainor returned to the beach where another surfer had a cell phone they used to call for help.
"I don't remember the initial contact," he told the newspaper. "It kind of happened so quickly."
Surgeons stapled shut his open wounds, which spanned nearly 19 inches or the length of the shark's mouth. Photos of a recovering Trainor and his wounded leg are posted at the Instagram account of The Shop, a surf shop in Arcata.
His sister, Haley Martino, said in a GoFundMe fundraising post that her brother was bitten by a great white shark.
"Jared is home recovering," the GoFundMe says. "He's so lucky. He's in pain but in good spirits!"
Humboldt County had 16 shark attacks since 1960, according to a 2017 news article in The Sacramento Bee.
In 2020, a kayaker narrowly escaped a great white shark in Humboldt County's Shelter Cove.
The Ferndale Volunteer Fire Department confirmed in a social media post that the bite was from a shark.
"To our recollection of our membership, we have not had an incident like this. This is a reminder that there are many hazards to be aware of when you are at the beach," the department said in its post.
Shark attacks in California are rare. However, Tomas Butterfield, 42, of Sacramento was killed in a shark attack in Morro Bay in central California last Christmas Eve.
Another man was bitten by a great white shark off the central California coast this June. Steve Bruemmer, 62, was released from Natividad Medical Center in Salinas three weeks after the shark bit him as he swam off Pacific Grove near Monterey, the hospital said.
Shark attacks increased around the world in 2021 following three consecutive years of decline, officials said in January. The U.S. once again reported the most unprovoked shark bites in 2021, with 47 confirmed cases — 64% of the worldwide total.