BODEGA BAY (KPIX) — A surfer bitten by a shark Sunday morning in waters near Bodega Bay suffered severe injuries but is in stable condition, authorities said.

The man was attacked shortly after 9 a.m. in the surf off North Salmon Creek Beach. There were several surfers in the water, including Jared Davis who was paddling out with his friend, Eric.

That’s when a swell rose up between Davis and a man floating next to him.

“When he was back into view, I saw the dorsal fin of the shark and then I saw the tail fin of the shark kind of going down into the water,” Davis said. “It definitely wasn’t a quick attack. It was nice and slow.”

The surfer, a man in his 30s, was yelling “shark” and “help” and Davis began paddling in with him.

“He had kind of caught up to me and I saw his leg. It looked like he had a red stripe on his wetsuit, which is pretty common but that was actually blood,” Davis said.

 

Among the crews responding was California Highway Patrol air operations, who said they were transporting the victim with a severe leg bite to Santa Rosa Memorial Hospital.

The surfboard provided the most shocking evidence — a wide arc of teeth marks, indicating the size of the shark. When paramedics Jonathon Bauer and Tim Saluzzo arrived on scene they were wondering if the report was even real.

“I asked the patient, ‘did you get a chance to see it?’ And he did get a chance to see it and it was a pretty large shark that did bite him,” Bauer said. “He actually said he had a struggle with it, as well.”

The injured man suffered a serious leg injury including arterial damage. Fellow surfers applied a tourniquet made of surfboard leashes and carried him on a board up to the parking lot where he was airlifted to Santa Rosa Memorial Hospital.

After the attack, the park district closed the area to the public for a length of two miles, patrolling the beach to keep visitors out of the water.

The North and South Salmon beaches are located along Highway 1 and are a popular local surfing destination.

While shark attacks are not common, there was an attack at the same beach in May 2019.

Local surfer Katie Wilson was paddling out to catch her first wave when she suddenly found herself in a life-or-death struggle with a great white.

She was 100 yards offshore of North Salmon Creek Beach and the shark caught her surfboard leash in its mouth, gave it a yank and began to thrash.

Her ordeal was over in seconds. The shark severed the leash with its teeth and the board was released. Wilson escaped shaken but unharmed.

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