The Gold Coast Bulletin

SHARK ATTACK SCARES

MAN’S SECOND GREAT WHITE DRAMA

- BRIANNA MORRIS-GRANT, KIRSTIN PAYNE AND SALLY COATES

A SURFER attacked by a shark at Byron Bay yesterday was witness to a horrific encounter 20 years ago, watching a great white take his mate who was never seen again.

Suffolk Park man Sam Edwardes was sitting on his board in the water at Belongil Beach about 7am yesterday when a shark tore a chunk out of his leg and board.

Nervous family and friends were awaiting his outlook from hospital last night as the 41year-old music teacher recovered from a four hour-plus surgery, understood to be the first of several for his wound.

Earlier, fellow surfers stabilised Edwardes before he was flown to Gold Coast University Hospital with his left thigh a bloody mess.

His condition was later downgraded from critical to serious.

The attack comes two decades after a fatal shark attack on his friend Tony Donoghue back in 1999.

Edwardes, Donoghue and two others were windsurfin­g at Hardwicke Bay on South Australia’s Yorke Peninsula when Donoghue decided to stay out in the water for a while longer.

His three mates were on shore when the 22-year-old suddenly disappear from sight.

His body was never found but his shredded wetsuit was. A coroner concluded the tears and punctures were from a great white shark.

Edwardes’ sister Lorelei recalled the 1999 incident derailed his life but he never left it stop him surfing.

“I think when his friend got taken he took that really hard and for a time it really wrecked his life,” she said. “Every year without fail he has done a pilgrimage back to that beach to pay homage to his friend who died.

“But it didn’t stop him surfing.”

The Edwardes family was not surprised at the news of his attack yesterday.

An avid surfer, his father and sister were especially worried that sooner or later he would be at the very least bitten, and at the most, suffer the same fate as his friend.

“My father is hoping this will get him to give up the surfing because in our family there’s almost a sense of inevitabil­ity with this thing,” she said, her voice breaking.

“He surfed virtually twice a day for 20 years and went on surf trips every year.

“I go down to the jetty near me every day and I see them all the time. They’re out there.

“In a way I’m not surprised. I am heartbroke­n and I badly want him to be okay but there was always a chance it was going to happen.”

Even though the incident brought up bad memories, in addition to the new horrors, Ms Edwardes said her brother was the type of man who preferred to be in pain himself then see others go through it.

“He loved to make others laugh,” she said.

“The news report said he was in good spirits when he was being taken to hospital; I think he’d take it better having happened to himself than it happen to one of his mates.

“I’m sure in a short time he’ll be showing his wounds off at a party.

“He’s a very likeable bloke, loves a joke, loves his mates and I think he’s come a long way. He’s just so keen to give others a laugh. I feel very sad for him. Very sad.”

Measuremen­ts and photograph­s of the bite have now been sent to the Department of Primary Industries to determine the size and species of shark responsibl­e.

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 ??  ?? Detective Inspector Matt Kehoe, Officer in Charge at the Byron Bay Police Station, with the surfboard showing the bite.
Detective Inspector Matt Kehoe, Officer in Charge at the Byron Bay Police Station, with the surfboard showing the bite.
 ??  ?? Attack victim Sam Edwardes.
Attack victim Sam Edwardes.

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