A serious shark attack in the Turks and Caicos islands on
November 14 is a cautionary note to all divers that sharks are wild
animals that can be a significant threat
Michelle Glen, 41 years old, a longtime resident of Fort Walton
Beach, Fla., was on a Peter Hughes Sea Dancer trip, diving at a site
off French Cay. She had finished her dive and was snorkeling with
others while waiting for her husband, who was taking photos
immediately below, to finish his dive. There were about a half
dozen Caribbean reef sharks, 4 to 5 feet in length, in the area at a
fairly shallow depth.
Out of the blue water a Caribbean reef shark in the 6- to 7-
foot range appeared, then rapidly dived down and attacked from
below with a single, lightning fast strike. It hit her right upper
arm and shoulder, ripping the triceps and most of the biceps,
severing the brachial artery and leaving exposed bone.
The massive blood loss that such a strike can occasion hardly
requires mention. It was to her astounding good fortune that her
husband, Michael Glen, a respected orthopedist in Fort Walton
Beach, and another physician on board, a seasoned vascular
surgeon, could stem the hemorrhaging.
A craft from the Turks and Caicos Marine Police Force
brought her to shore, where she was evacuated by a U.S. Coast
Guard Falcon jet to a Coast Guard Station outside Miami and
taken by helicopter to the Ryder Trauma Center at the University
of Miami's Jackson Memorial Hospital. She was admitted in
critical condition, eight hours after the attack. Among other
physicians, she was attended by Dr. Anne Ouellette, Chief of the
Hand Surgery Division, who remarked that it was the most
damaging shark wound she had yet observed.
After several surgeries, she was released about three weeks
later. As of now, it looks like the arm has been saved, but how
much use she'll have of it remains quite uncertain.
While most people on the cruise have refused to talk, the word
is that people on board the boat were tossing food into the water
before the attack. Furthermore, two dive operators and an official
from the Turks and Caicos Fisheries Dept. have said that
surreptitious feeding does take place in this area, presumably to
assure that tourist divers see sharks.