Surfer Survives Two Great White Bites, Credits Prayer


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“Surfer Attacked By Two Great Whites Says Prayer Saved Him [WATCH]” tells the raw moment a surfer survived back-to-back shark strikes, reached shore, and credited a prayer for getting through it. This piece looks at what happened in the water, how the rescue unfolded, and why experts say the close call offers lessons for anybody who spends time in shark country.

The incident began like many surf sessions do: routine, sunlit, and focused on waves. Two great white sharks closed in and one managed to bite, dragging the man off his board before a second bump left him bleeding and shaken. Witnesses and fellow surfers moved fast, pulling him to shore and applying pressure while emergency services were alerted.

On the sand, the tone shifted from chaos to a fierce, practical calm as people improvised tourniquets and comforted the injured surfer. He later said a prayer during those moments, a detail that stuck with him and those who helped, because it revealed how people reach for whatever steadies them when everything else feels out of control. First responders praised the quick actions that limited blood loss and kept a bad day from being a tragedy.

Shark experts stress that close encounters like this are rare but not impossible, especially in areas where seals and other marine life draw predators nearer to shore. Timing, board control, and strong situational awareness are the kinds of habits that reduce risk, and surfers are urged to watch for signs like sudden fish splashes or circling birds. Authorities also recommend avoiding dawn and dusk, when visibility is lower and many predators are more active.

Local lifeguards and rescue teams say training and community readiness were crucial to the positive outcome. The team used basic but effective tools and techniques—direct pressure, elevation when possible, and rapid transport to higher-level care—exactly the kind of response paramedics drill for in trauma scenarios. Those practices, combined with quick bystander help, are why survival rates are better now than they might have been decades ago.

There’s also a human side that goes beyond procedures: the way adrenaline and faith played out as the surfer held on. He described a flash of clarity where panic receded and purpose took its place, a reaction that saved precious seconds and kept rescuers coordinated. That interplay of mental focus and practical action is something trainers try to simulate because calm, directed responses save lives.

This event will prompt fresh conversations about how to balance ocean enjoyment with sensible precautions, and how communities can prepare for low-probability, high-impact incidents. Scientists will keep studying why sharks move into certain coastal zones and how changing ecosystems alter those patterns, while beachgoers can take away simple, actionable precautions to stay safer. Nobody wants to think about being in that position, but knowing the facts and practicing readiness makes a huge difference.

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