A fearless surfer has been praised after he picked up a struggling shark with his bare hands and carried it back out into the ocean.
Paul Myles saw the shark stranded on the shore at Eastern View on Victoria’s Great Ocean Road and decided to try his best to push it back into deeper water with his surfboard.
But after a few unsuccessful attempts, he realized he may have to take matters into his own hands – literally.
The brave surfer was captured picking up the flailing shark and rather nonchalantly carrying the deadly fish back out to the ocean.
“I just thought I’d give it a chance, I wasn’t sure if it was just disorientated or sick or whatever,” he told the ABC.
“I thought I’d get it out in the water a bit further out, see if it would swim out to sea but it didn’t seem too well.”
Myles told the outlet that he believed the creature to be a blue shark.
He added that he had been surfing at that particular beach for over 40 years, and had rarely ever seen a shark there.
“It had a long pointy nose, blue color,” he said.
“I’ve never seen one that close to the beach, that’s the important thing. I once saw one off the rocks about 20 years ago but that’s enough I think.”
He said he wanted to help the shark because he is “a bit of a softie, really.”
“I think it might earn some brownie points next time a shark comes past me,” he joked.
Myles promised that he would be back in the surf the next day.
People on social media hailed him a hero for risking his life to save the shark, when many others may have been too frightened to pick it up.
“What a hero! Thank you for showing kindness” one wrote.
“Brownie points with Mother Ocean, safe waves my friend.” said another.
“Wow what a great human being,” posted a Facebook user.
“What a legend!”
Shark sightings across popular beaches in New South Wales have increased, with the implementation of drones to thank for the early warnings.
Surf Life Saving NSW announced a further funding commitment had been made for a “vital public safety program” which uses drones to monitor for sharks across 50 key locations.
The new $3m funding package from the state government means unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) will continue monitoring for sharklike figures in the ocean.
SLS NSW public safety manager Brent Manieri told NCA NewsWire the UAVs are able to cover a vast amount of coastline and are providing reassurance to beach users.
“We’re able to proactively pick up a shark that might be in the vicinity, and actively track it and alert beach authorities a lot sooner than we would have previously,” Manieri said.
He said during the 2021-2022 season, nearly 33,000 UAV flights had monitored the coast, with only 65 water evacuations.
In comparison, across the 2020-2021 season, beaches were evacuated 121 times.
Shark alarms are on the rise, rapidly rising from 148 sirens in 2014, to 575 in 2018.
Since 2019, there have been 668 sharks detected.