OT: Shark Attack in Destin, FL.

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This hasn't made the news as of now, but a 14 year old girl was attacked and killed by a 8 foot Tiger shark earlier this morning around 11:45 a.m.

The girl was near a sandbar when the attacked ocurred. The Tiger shark bit and severed her leg off hitting a main artery and the bleeding could not be stopped. Our condo is only 300 yards away from the accident. The beaches have been closed.

Just thought I'd pass this along.

I really feel sorry for the girl's parents.

CK
 

hacheman@therx.com
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I live in Florida, and ever since I was little I have had a fear of sharks. I cannot stand not knowing what is or isn't under me with my feet dangling out in the ocean.:neenee: Of course, my mother taking me to see Jaws when I was a small kid may have something to do with it! :lolBIG:


Not to mention the movie Open Water caused those fears to resurface....:neenee:
 

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Thats terrible news for the economy here and great news for the media who love this type stuff. Feel horrible for the childs parents. She was not attacked though, she was mistook for a fish. She was in the sharks feeding ground. Lots more kids will die from driving just tonite but thats not newsworthy. Media cant sell a boring traffic accident but get lots of mileage from sensational deaths, like 3 kids in NJ, the Fl girls kidnapped last spring etc. Thats why I stick to watching sports. This Wie kid is making a charge now.
 

Like a sinner before the gates of heaven
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I lived in North carolina for a few years and used to crab alot putting the pots around 10-50 feet from shore. On 3-5 different occasions i saw bullsharks as big as probably 8 feet long rummaging around the pots in some cases only 6 feet of water 10 feet from shore. Anyone who knows about sharks know that besides the tiger the bull shark is the nastiest son bitch in the bays and ocean and will attack for no reason.
If people only knew how close they are to them when they are wading around in shallow water they would be shocked. Wouldn't catch me in more then 2 foot of water from Va to Fla.I'm shocked it doesn't happen more and more.
 

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What year was "Summer Of The Shark" a REALLY big story? 2001, 2002?

I think there were only 1-2 more attacks than an average summer...but the media jumped on the story, and the public loved it.
 

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vegasisstilldead said:
I lived in North carolina for a few years and used to crab alot putting the pots around 10-50 feet from shore. On 3-5 different occasions i saw bullsharks as big as probably 8 feet long rummaging around the pots in some cases only 6 feet of water 10 feet from shore. Anyone who knows about sharks know that besides the tiger the bull shark is the nastiest son bitch in the bays and ocean and will attack for no reason.
If people only knew how close they are to them when they are wading around in shallow water they would be shocked. Wouldn't catch me in more then 2 foot of water from Va to Fla.I'm shocked it doesn't happen more and more.

:monsters-
 

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The majority of shark attacks down the atlantic coast are either bulls or tigers. The shocking thing about the bull shark is that there have been deaths by bull sharks up the missisippi (sp?) as far as St. Louis!!! :eek:
 

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SANDESTIN, Fla. - A young person was killed Saturday in a shark attack near a campground on the Gulf of Mexico, authorities said.

"We have had a confirmed shark attack. The scene is still under investigation," said Darlene Drury, spokeswoman for South Walton Fire-Rescue. Area beaches were closed to swimmers immediately afterward.

Details of the attack near Camping on the Gulf Holiday Travel Park in Walton County and the victim's name were not immediately released. Coast Guard spokesman Shawn McGivern in Mobile, Ala., said authorities were trying to track down the victim's relatives.

Patrick O'Neill, the campground's general manager, refused to comment.

Florida had the largest number of documented shark attacks worldwide last year with 31.

Associated Press
 

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I'm back from vacation. I found out late Saturday evening that the girl was from Gonzales, LA., which is about 15 minutes from where I live.

Small world. Horrible tragedy.

CK
 

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Turns out it was a bull shark.Kind of figured that from the fact she was hit right on sandbar. It's not uncommon to see a 10 foot bull in 3 foot of water this time of year in that area. son bitches attack for no reason.
 

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Brave act by the guy that tried to save her and bring her in to shore (even though they couldn't bring her back once he got her in). He even punched the shark in the nose.

TALLAHASSEE, Fla. - Beaches reopened Sunday with extra lifeguards along a stretch of the Florida Panhandle coast where a shark killed a 14-year-old girl, as coastal residents reported seeing at least one shark hunting fish close to shore.

Jamie Marie Daigle of Gonzales, La., was swimming on a boogie board with a friend at least 100 yards from shore when she was attacked Saturday in the Gulf of Mexico, said Walton County sheriff's Capt. Danny Glidewell. Jamie was vacationing with friends while the rest of her family was home.
Daigle was in an area not protected by sandbars or lifeguards when she was bitten, said the surfer who hauled her onto his board and headed for shore with the shark trailing them.

"The beach is the beach. Once you get past that second sandbar, you're in the gulf," said Tim Dicus, who pulled the unconscious girl onto his surfboard. "And when you're in the gulf, that's where big fish are. You go way down on the food chain."

An autopsy was planned for Monday, and a shark expert was invited to attend to help determine the type and size of the shark involved, Glidewell said Sunday.

After the attack Saturday, a 20-mile stretch of shore was closed to swimmers, with twin red flags warning people to stay out of the water, but beaches reopened Sunday with a double staff of sheriff's beach patrol officers, Glidewell said.

Residents of a condominium complex next to the beach where the girl was attacked said they spotted a shark that looked about 6 feet long Sunday morning.

"It was just right at the shoreline," said Jason Miller, who lives in a 10th-floor condo. He took pictures of the shark chasing fish while people stood in the white surf.

Although Jamie and her friend were farther from shore than recommended, it is common for boogie-boarders, surfers and people on personal watercraft to go beyond the two sandbars that separate the shallow beach area from the open gulf, Glidewell said.

"Our pilots who fly our helicopters have always reported to us that if you look offshore, there's always a large number of sharks — always has been because that's their natural habitat," Glidewell said.

Dicus, 54, said he heard a scream and saw Jamie's friend swimming for shore as fast as she could. Jamie was face down in a bloody circle of water, and the flesh had been torn on one leg from her hip to her knee. The shark, which was right next to her, appeared to be a bull shark about 8 feet long, Dicus said.

"He just followed us right to the beach," he said.

Two other swimmers came with a raft and used it to help carry Jamie to shore. The surfer said he punched the shark on the nose when it tried to attack him.

Paramedics were unable to revive the girl.

Florida averaged more than 30 shark attacks a year from 2000 to 2003, but there were only 12 attacks off the state's coast last year, according to statistics compiled by the American Elasmobranch Society and the Florida Museum of Natural History.

George Burgess, curator of the International Shark Attack File at University of Florida, said Sunday that bull sharks are common in the area, are aggressive and can be found in shallow water. He said that of 500 documented attacks in Florida, the fatality rate was 2.4 percent.

"Sharks are one of many hazards that one may encounter when entering the sea," he said. "There is no reason to think that this is the beginning of a trend."
 

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just read about it on miamiherald.com. 1st of it's kind in the area i understand. i feel for the parents as well. i couldn't imagine.
 

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I have fished out of destin before. Nice fishing town on the panhandle but you can catch tons of sharks just off the beaches. Just anchor, start a chumline (i think by law you can't chum within 2 miles of the beach for obvious reason)and within 1/2 hour they will find you. They also have piers within a couple miles of where the attack happened that you can see the son bitches swimming around. Its surreal because you are only 200-300 feet out from shore and you see them cruising around and at the same time the surfers and swimmers are right next to the pier oblivious to it.
 

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