‘Count his toes’: Man says he was bitten by shark off Florida beach: report
A Florida man says he was bitten by a shark while body surfing off a Florida East Coast beach on Sunday.
Matthew Picarelli, of Stuart, was in the waves off Pepper Park Beach in St. Lucie County when he felt pain on his right foot while around 40 to 50 feet out from shore, according to a report from TCPalm. com.
The newspaper said Picarelli saw the fin and tail of what was likely a shark describing the pain as if a “car hit me with a machete blade at the end of it.” He said the incident was over in less than a minute, after which he told his friend Natalie Bella to help him out of the water.
“My first reaction was ... count his toes,” she told the newspaper as he was assisted by lifeguards on the beach.
Beachgoers told the bite victim they thought it was a 4- to 5-foot spinner shark, TCPalm reported.
The newspaper said Picarelli was transported by a friend to area hospital, and the bite left on of his tendons broken and chipped a bone, requiring surgery and 50 stitches.
Florida often leads the world in unprovoked shark attacks, with the majority on the East Coast, according to the University of Florida’s International Shark Attack File. In 2022, the state had 16 of 57 recorded attacks.
Volusia County usually leads the way in the state with many happening near Ponce Inlet where surfers and turbid water often mix. The county had seven in 2022, down from its five-year average of nine. It has 17 in 2021 and has hit double digits three times in the last 15 years earning it the moniker “Shark Bite Capital of the World.”
After Volusia, there were four bites in 2022 in Monroe County and single incidents reported in Martin, Nassau, Pinellas, Brevard and Palm Beach counties.
Not one of Florida’s 2022 incidents was fatal. Of the 41 U.S. incidents, only one was fatal, and that was in Hawaii.
From 1882-present, the shark attack file has documented 343 cases in Volusia with 156 in Brevard County to the south followed by 82 in Palm Beach County, 46 in Duval, 45 in St. Johns, 41 in Martin, 37 in St. Lucie, 22 in Indian River, 21 in Monroe and 19 in Miami-Dade counties, all from the Keys up the East Coast to Jacksonville.
https://news.yahoo.com/
“A Shark bite is only one of many possible endings to a Shark Attack”
“An UNPROVOKED Shark Attack is only one of many types of Shark Attack”
Caution:
When you see the words Unprovoked or Bite associated with Shark Attacks, someone is trying to hide shark dangers you may face should you enter the water. In most cases, the word unprovoked equals the number of incidents shared with the public. Any other type of Shark Attack is kept a secret from the public.
“An UNPROVOKED Shark Attack is only one of many types of Shark Attack”
Caution:
When you see the words Unprovoked or Bite associated with Shark Attacks, someone is trying to hide shark dangers you may face should you enter the water. In most cases, the word unprovoked equals the number of incidents shared with the public. Any other type of Shark Attack is kept a secret from the public.
03/12/2023 Matthew Picarelli St. Lucie County Florida
03/12/2023 Matthew Picarelli St. Lucie County Florida
USE COMMON SENSE
A simple explanation of the word unprovoked is chosen to be shared. Each year shark attack researchers choose certain shark attacks they share with the public. The ISAF website states, “All of the data publically available on the ISAF website is from unprovoked incidents.” Ocean users, beware that the ISAF has 6800 incidents on file, with only 3292, or 47%, being chosen to be shared with the public. In 2019 they chose 45%, and in 2020 they only chose 44% of the investigated incidents.
A simple explanation of the word unprovoked is chosen to be shared. Each year shark attack researchers choose certain shark attacks they share with the public. The ISAF website states, “All of the data publically available on the ISAF website is from unprovoked incidents.” Ocean users, beware that the ISAF has 6800 incidents on file, with only 3292, or 47%, being chosen to be shared with the public. In 2019 they chose 45%, and in 2020 they only chose 44% of the investigated incidents.