Brave husband punches shark to save his wife’s life during a surfing trip at a popular NSW beach
Hero husband fights shark to save his wife’s life as she’s mauled by a great white that left her with wounds so severe she had to be airlifted to hospital
- A 35-year-old female surfer has been mauled by a shark on the NSW coast
- Chantelle Doyle was attacked while surfing at Shelly Beach in Port Macquarie
- Her husband Mark Rapley rushed to her side to save her by punching the beast
- She received serious lacerations after being bitten multiple times
By Louise Ayling and Lauren Ferri For Daily Mail Australia
Published: 20:34 EDT, 14 August 2020 | Updated: 07:07 EDT, 15 August 2020
A female surfer has been saved by her heroic husband after being mauled by a great white shark on at a popular beach on the New South Wales coast.
Chantelle Doyle, 35, was surfing with her husband Mark Rapley at Shelly Beach in Port Macquarie, on the mid-north coast when she was attacked about 9.30am on Saturday.
The beast attacked her right calf and the back of her thigh before Mr Rapley launched into action, repeatedly punching the predator in a bid to save her.
He leapt onto its back and fought off the animal until it finally let his wife go.
Chantelle Doyle, 35, (pictured) was surfing with her husband and friends at Shelly Beach in Port Macquarie, on the mid-north coast when she was attacked about 9.30am
The beast attacked her right calf and the back of her thigh before Mr Rapley launched into action, repeatedly punching the predator in a bid to save her
The young couple have a three-year-old son together who they are raising at Cromer on Sydney’s Northern Beaches, reported Nine News.
Emergency services rushed to the beach where the woman was found with significant lacerations to her right leg.
It is the third serious attack NSW Ambulance has responded to in recent months.
The 35-year-old was rushed to Port Macquarie Base Hospital with serious leg injuries, but has since been flown to Newcastle where she will undergo surgery.
Her loving husband was forced to punch the two metre juvenile white shark until it let go.
A young bystander described watching the shark swim up and down the beach after the attack, leaping out of the water with the victim’s surfboard in its mouth.
‘The shark wouldn’t release her and so a nearby surfer paddled over and essentially jumped on the shark and started hitting it to make it release,’ Surf Life Saving NSW chief executive Steven Pearce told AAP.
Heroic husband Mark Rapley punched the shark in a bid to save his beloved wife Chantelle (pictured together)
Chantelle Doyle mauled by an enormous shark on at a popular beach on the New South Wales coast
The surfer described it as a ‘tremendous act of bravery’.
‘We’ve had some really serious and tragic shark encounters over the past couple of months along the NSW coastline so to paddle out of your own safety zone, in to an area where you know there is a large shark, I think is amazing.’
Mr Pearce is urging swimmers and surfers to be ‘shark smart’ as summer approaches, but says the number of daylight attacks in recent times concerns him.
‘As we’ve seen this morning, there are occasions where people can be shark smart and they think they’re doing all the right things, but unfortunately, they’re just in that wrong place at the wrong time.’
The young couple have a three-year-old son together who they are raising at Cromer on Sydney’s Northern Beaches
Mr Pearce said lifesavers would search the waters with jet skis and drones to confirm if the shark was still nearby.
He explained lifesavers were on call and not on duty because it was off-season but arrived to the scene quickly.
Lifesaver James Turnham said the incident would have been quite an ordeal for the victim.
‘It did take a bit of effort to get that shark off her,’ he told Nine News.
Three paramedic crews and a specialist medical team in the Westpac Helicopter responded to the incident, which a NSW Ambulance spokesman said is the third serious shark attack on the north coast in the past few months.
The 35-year-old was rushed to Port Macquarie Base Hospital with serious leg injuries, but has since been flown to Newcastle where she will undergo surgery
Lifeguards at Port Macquarie have closed beaches in the area following the attack
Duty Operations Manager at NSW Ambulance Inspector Andrew Beverley said paramedics were on the scene within eight minutes.
‘The bystanders on scene that rendered assistance should be commended,’ he said.
‘They did an amazing job before we arrived.’
Ms Doyle remains in a stable condition after undergoing extensive surgery at the John Hunter Hospital in Newcastle.
Her family rushed to be by her side after hearing the horrific news earlier this morning.
Lifeguards at Port Macquarie have closed beaches in the area following the attack.
‘Beaches in Port Macquarie will be closed for the day due to a shark attack at Shelly Beach,’ Port Macquarie ALS Lifeguards wrote on Facebook.
The 35-year-old woman was surfing with a male friend at Shelly Beach (pictured) in Port Macquarie, on the mid-north coast when she was attacked about 10am
Mr Pearce said there would be a ‘heightened vigilance’ in shark surveillance across New South Wales beginning in September.
He explained 400 lifesavers would pilot drones across 40 locations to monitor the water for shark activity.
Mr Pearce said this aerial observation would work in conjunction with SMART drum lines that alert authorities if a tagged shark is in the area.
The long stretch of sandy white beach located on the NSW mid-north coast is surrounded by rainforests and popular among families and tourists.
There have been five fatal shark attacks in Australian waters in 2020.
Experienced diver Gary Johnson, 57, (pictured with partner Karen Milligan) was taken by a shark near Cull Island, close to West Beach in Esperance
On July 12 Mani Hart-Deville, 15, (pictured) was mauled to death by a shark at Wooli Beach, north of Coffs Harbour while surfing.
One of them was in WA in January, when experienced diver Gary Johnson, 57, was taken near Cull Island, close to West Beach in Esperance.
In July, a 10-year-old boy suffered shock and cuts when a shark ripped him from a fishing boat about five kilometres offshore from Stanley in northwest Tasmania.
Days later, on July 12 Mani Hart-Deville, 15, was mauled to death by a shark at Wooli Beach, north of Coffs Harbour while surfing.