The diver-biting barracuda stories keep coming to us. Last year, we posted a couple of first-person stories
about divers who got their hands bit by barracudas in popular Caribbean dive sites, such as Belize and
Cozumel. Recent encounters have gotten worse.
In Negril, Jamaica, Rick Brine from Prince George, B.C. was in the middle of a three-week trip in April
to celebrate his retirement. He was 10 minutes into his second dive when he saw a large barracuda with
its mouth wide open, darting back and forth in the water. "It came close enough to me that I saw its eyes,"
Brine told the Prince George Citizen. "We all turned around and watched it veer off. "
Minutes later, while Brine was at 50 feet, the barracuda attacked him, sinking its inch-long teeth into
the back of Brine's head and cheek. "It felt like a baseball bat hitting my left temple and I thought, 'what
the heck is that?' It knocked my regulator out and my mask was gone. I had a big pain on the back of my
head. I found my regulator and got it back on my mouth and I was pretty sure I was bleeding. I saw all this
green water around me and I couldn't figure out what it was. I yelled out my divemaster's name, hoping he
would hear me, and he turned around. When I yelled his name again, I lost my regulator again and started
holding my breath, but I know you're not supposed to hold your breath."
All Brine could think about was getting to the surface. "I knew I was bleeding, so I thought I'll either
bleed out or do risk getting the bends and get the hell up there. I remember being out of air, and the surface
was still another 10 or 15 feet, and I was thinking, 'Damn, I didn't make it.' All of a sudden I saw the emergency
regulator and put it in my mouth and shot right up to the surface."
Bleeding profusely from head and cheek, Brine and the divemaster swam to shore and walked through
the resort restaurant to the medical clinic. It took a half-hour for the bleeding to stop, then Brine was transported
by ambulance to a hospital. He estimates the fish's mouth was about 10 inches wide. The upper jaw
bit the back of his head and left four grooves from where the teeth raked his scalp. The lower jaw caught
his cheek in a ripping motion, which left a gash shaped like the letter K. The wounds in both areas each
required 12 stitches to close. The doctor found a tiny tooth fragment in one of the cuts. After losing about
two liters of blood, Brine was about to leave the hospital but developed a stomachache and fainted. He
spent another five hours in the emergency ward hooked up to an IV. He wanted to head back home but the
doctor asked him to stay in Jamaica another week.
While Alex Thomson (Scarborough, UK) did not have a barracuda encounter while diving, he did so
between dives, while enjoying the beach at Cancun with his family in early May. "We were on the beach of
the Iberostar Paraiso Maya hotel, standing in three to four feet of water. My wife was holding my 11-yearold
son, and he had his feet out behind her. She felt something tug her backwards, and when my son
screamed, she looked round and saw a big silver fish and a pool of blood. When she screamed for help, I
was on the sand and didn't realize what was happening. A lifeguard was pulling him out of the water, and I felt like my heart had been ripped out when I saw his right foot. The barracuda had bit through a toe bone
and two tendons, and damaged two more tendons. He was in surgery for three hours and has about 60
stitches and a eight-inch-long steel pin through his foot. We couldn't fly home as planned because he needs
to be kept on IV because of the exposed fracture and risk of infection. I've seen many barracuda in the Red
Sea, Indian Ocean and the Caribbean, but never dreamed for a minute that this could happen in such shallow
water."
Barracuda have a reputation as fierce predatory fish, but unprovoked attacks on divers are extremely
rare. They have been known to follow snorkelers or divers but usually will not attack. What makes them
so unpredictable is the randomness of these incidents, especially in clear water. Divers have been attacked
when carrying speared fish, splashing around or while wearing flashy jewelry, but neither Brine nor
Thomson's son were doing either. The lesson is, I suppose, while most divers have come to see barracuda
as benign fish and don't give much thought to their potential threat, the smart diver will be wary. After all,
with sharks disappearing, the barracuda is at the top of the food chain in warm waters.
- - Vanessa Richardson