Tuesday, May 13, 2008

SYDNEY, Australia (AP) — A swimmer says he survived a mauling by a 16-foot shark by wrestling with the creature and finally getting free by poking it in the eye.

The shark, thought to be a great white, seized Jason Cull by the left leg as he was swimming Saturday at Middleton Beach in southwestern Australia.

The shark was one of three that swimmers reported seeing at the beach on Saturday. Officials closed the beach after the attack.



From his hospital bed, where he was treated for deep lacerations, Mr. Cull, 37, told reporters Sunday that he saw a shadow moving in the water just before the attack and mistook it for a dolphin.

“It was much bigger than a dolphin when it came up,” Mr. Cull said. “It banged straight into me [and] I realized what it was — it was a shark.

“I sort of punched it, and it grabbed me by the leg and dragged me under the water,” he said. “I just remember being dragged backwards underwater. I felt along it; I found its eye and I poked it in the eye, and that’s when it let go.”

Tom Marron, a spokesman for the lifeguards at the beach, said volunteer lifesaver Joanne Lucas leapt into the water to help Mr. Cull.

“She heard the cries and splashing and … just went straight in,” Mr. Marron said.

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“She got hold of the injured swimmer and brought him back to shore,” he said. “There was a fairly comprehensive mauling of his left leg, lost a lot of his calf, severe lacerations.”

A shark last month killed a 16-year-old surfer off Australia’s eastern coast.

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