| 10/13/05 |
| Surfer: 'Happy I’m alive' |
|
HONOKOWAI – Lifelong surfer Clayton Sado was
unhurt, but not unaffected by a shark he encountered Thursday afternoon in
waters off Honokowai. The 22-year-old from Kahului, who surfs practically every day, said he planned to take a break from the ocean for about a week. He also has no intention of returning to the ocean by Embassy Vacation Resorts, formerly the Embassy Suites, where he fought off a shark that left teeth marks in his board in the incident about 100 yards offshore. Sado said he’s been surfing since he was a child and had never encountered a shark until Thursday. He had been swimming at Honokowai before, but this was the first time this fall season that he’s been out there. In his recounting Friday, Sado said he went surfing with a buddy immediately after work. The two were in the water off Honokowai sometime around 3 p.m. With good surf from a big northwest swell, they had surfed for several hours. Sado got tired around 6 p.m. and decided to return to the shore. He was paddling with his stomach on his 9-foot board when something troubling happened. “I feel something hit my board and then my knee,” he said. “I was thinking it was a big turtle.” Sado likened the impact to a sledge hammer being slammed down on his board. “It was a hard hit, like a tug,” he recalled. Sado immediately turned around and saw a shark, which was about an arm’s length away from him. He pushed the shark off to his right while paddling fast toward the shore. The shark reacted by swimming away from Sado, but not before the surfer was able to see a gray, blunt head and estimate the length of the animal at about 7 feet. “I can’t tell for sure but it looked like a tiger shark,” Sado said. At 5 feet 8 inches tall and 160 pounds, Sado said he was no match for the shark he saw in the water. He told his swimming partner, who was surfing about 15 yards away from him, about the attack and that they should both get out of the water. His surfing partner had seen Sado splashing in the water, but didn’t know what to make of it. “He thought I was playing around. We goof around a lot . . . but not like that.” Once they reached shore, they informed the few people on the shore about the incident. There have been other shark encounters reported earlier this year that are similar to the one experienced by Sado. State aquatics specialists recorded an incident on May 2 when a surfer in Kuau had an encounter with a shark that left teeth impressions consistent with a tiger shark on his surfboard. He was unhurt. On May 14, a shark bit into a kayak in turbid waters in North Kihei. Again, the individual in the kayak was unscathed. On June 18, a swimmer in waters off Kamaole Beach Park II punched a shark when it approached him in the water. The shark moved away and the swimmer got to shore safely. Ocean safety officers closed off the beach for several hours after the incident and posted shark sighting signs. |