Texas Star
US Veteran
Haven't had a shark thread in a while...
Did anyone else see the news report of the fellow in New Zealand who was bitten by a shark a couple of weeks ago? He drove off or killed the shark with his knife. Then, being an M.D., he was able to dress his leg wound on the beach, after which his mates took him to a pub to "recover".
This was a very short TV report, and I didn't see the knife, nor did they name the shark species. But it was an impressive victory for man against shark. I'm sure that antagonism existed even before we became fully human.
I once wrote an article for a knife magazine on knives as a defense against sharks. ("National Knife Magazine", Aprii, 1989) I was able to obtain some statistics from a Navy shark researcher. If anyone is interested, I'll post the percentage of times a knife helped vs. times it may have only angered the attacking shark, to times when no real effect was seen.
My son stabbed a grey reef shark to death when it went after him off of Guam. He shot it with a spear gun first, but had to finish matters with a Katz dive knife. I'd have preferred a Randall Model 16 or a Fallkniven A-1 in synthetic sheath, but the Katz is okay and is what he had.
I suspect that my Gryphon M-30A1 knife would also do well in this role, but will happily probably never have to learn the hard way. It's a Bob Terzuola- designed complete revision of the old M-3 trench knife that was morphed into the M-4 carbine bayonet.
Puma used to make good dive knives, too.
One sad case I encountered involved a teen who tried to use a surplus trench knife to stab a big (20 feet) shark off of California as it attacked a friend. The blade didn't penetrate, and the boy was killed, although the friend and others got the body ashore. I think the victim lost a leg. The young hero got a medal, but I'm sure he'd rather have had his friend alive.
Anyway, I was impressed to see that short news footage of the doctor who repaired his own injury. I wonder if he found a way to file an insurance claim...
Any other entertaining shark stories here?
Did anyone else see the news report of the fellow in New Zealand who was bitten by a shark a couple of weeks ago? He drove off or killed the shark with his knife. Then, being an M.D., he was able to dress his leg wound on the beach, after which his mates took him to a pub to "recover".
This was a very short TV report, and I didn't see the knife, nor did they name the shark species. But it was an impressive victory for man against shark. I'm sure that antagonism existed even before we became fully human.
I once wrote an article for a knife magazine on knives as a defense against sharks. ("National Knife Magazine", Aprii, 1989) I was able to obtain some statistics from a Navy shark researcher. If anyone is interested, I'll post the percentage of times a knife helped vs. times it may have only angered the attacking shark, to times when no real effect was seen.
My son stabbed a grey reef shark to death when it went after him off of Guam. He shot it with a spear gun first, but had to finish matters with a Katz dive knife. I'd have preferred a Randall Model 16 or a Fallkniven A-1 in synthetic sheath, but the Katz is okay and is what he had.
I suspect that my Gryphon M-30A1 knife would also do well in this role, but will happily probably never have to learn the hard way. It's a Bob Terzuola- designed complete revision of the old M-3 trench knife that was morphed into the M-4 carbine bayonet.
Puma used to make good dive knives, too.
One sad case I encountered involved a teen who tried to use a surplus trench knife to stab a big (20 feet) shark off of California as it attacked a friend. The blade didn't penetrate, and the boy was killed, although the friend and others got the body ashore. I think the victim lost a leg. The young hero got a medal, but I'm sure he'd rather have had his friend alive.
Anyway, I was impressed to see that short news footage of the doctor who repaired his own injury. I wonder if he found a way to file an insurance claim...

Any other entertaining shark stories here?
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