Surfer’s leg washes up on shore in Australia after shark attack

Sign up now: Get insights on Asia's fast-moving developments

 Mr Kai McKenzie was just returning to the waves after breaking his back in 2023.

Mr Kai McKenzie was just returning to the waves after breaking his back in 2023.

PHOTO: KAI_MCKENZIE/INSTAGRAM

A surfer’s leg that was severed by a shark attack on July 23 later washed up on an Australian beach, where a police officer retrieved it and put it on ice.

CNN affiliate 7News reported that Mr Kai McKenzie, a 23-year-old surfer, was mauled by a shark in the water off North Shore Beach in Port Macquarie – a small town about 400km north of Sydney.

Mr McKenzie tried to fight off the shark, which severed his right leg, and was able to ride a wave back to the beach, bleeding heavily, before the quick thinking of a retired police officer on a dog walk saved his life, 7News reported an official as saying.

“He used the lead from the dog as a tourniquet to wrap around the young man’s leg and essentially saved his life until paramedics got there,” said New South Wales (NSW) Ambulance Service Hastings South duty manager Kirran Mowbray.

The NSW Police confirmed to CNN that emergency services had attended the scene of a “reported shark attack”.

Mr McKenzie underwent surgery at the John Hunter Hospital in the nearby city of Newcastle, where he remains in stable condition, according to a GoFundMe set up a neighbour of his family.

The severed leg was also taken to the hospital in case doctors were able to reattach it, 7News reported.

Surf wear brand Rage, which sponsors him, said on Instagram that Mr McKenzie was just returning to the waves after breaking his back in 2023,

“Sending love to… the toughest person that we know,” the company said. “He has been through a lot – breaking his back last year, he never once complained, always just got on with doing what he loved as soon as possible. He is an inspiring person.”

A long stretch of the beaches in Port Macquarie was closed for 24 hours after the shark attack, according to the town’s lifeguards, before they reopened in the afternoon of July 24.

The authorities are trying to track and identify the shark, NSW Police Chief Inspector Stuart Campbell said, according to 7News, using drones and “smart” drumlines – a type of trap that can move sharks without killing them.

There are several shark monitoring devices on the coastline at Port Macquarie. These detected two white sharks in the area in the morning of July 23 before the attack. CNN