Los Angeles Times

Shark bumps into teen swimmer in Huntington

Beach reopens a day after 14-year-old told authoritie­s that fish hit his chest and swam away. He wasn’t hurt.

- By Frank Shyong frank.shyong@latimes.com

Officials reopened the waters of Huntington Beach on Saturday afternoon after a boy’s encounter with a shark a day earlier prompted an overnight closure.

A 14-year-old boy was swimming about 25 yards offshore at about 8 p.m. Friday when he noticed a dorsal fin jutting out of the water, said Huntington Beach Fire Department Lt. Claude Panis. The boy felt the shark butt him in the chest, then saw a tail fin moving away, Panis said.

“Based on the size of the fin, it was likely a juvenile between 5 and 8 feet long,” Panis said.

The boy was unharmed, but officials closed the beach. A police helicopter and boat crew searched the waters Saturday morning and found no signs of sharks. Officials reopened the beach at 1 p.m., Panis said

Contact between people and sharks is “extremely rare,” Panis said. Shark sightings at Huntington Beach are not as common as they once were. Officials logged just 19 sightings last year, compared with 36 in 2016 and 75 in 2015, Panis said.

The last shark encounter occurred Feb. 8, when a surfer felt a shark bump into him.

Shark attacks are even rarer than shark sightings, Panis said.

“The experts say you have a better chance of being struck by lightning than actually being attacked by a shark,” Panis said.

 ?? Katie Falkenberg Los Angeles Times ?? A SHARK encounter prompted the closure of Huntington Beach, but the area is open again after crews found no signs of sharks. Above, surfers in Huntington.
Katie Falkenberg Los Angeles Times A SHARK encounter prompted the closure of Huntington Beach, but the area is open again after crews found no signs of sharks. Above, surfers in Huntington.

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