Florida

She was wading in knee-deep water at this Florida beach. Then came a barbed sea creature

A Florida woman was attacked by a stingray at Bahia Beach in Ruskin, near Tampa Bay, and ended up in the hospital with the barb still attached to her back
A Florida woman was attacked by a stingray at Bahia Beach in Ruskin, near Tampa Bay, and ended up in the hospital with the barb still attached to her back

A Florida woman remained hospitalized Friday after a harrowing day at the beach near Tampa Bay on Tuesday.

Kristie O’Brien told Fox 13 News she was wading in knee-deep water at Bahia Beach in Ruskin and leaned back to get her hair wet, when she suddenly felt intense pain.

A stingray had pierced her back with its poisonous barb — and it was still clinging on.

“I was trying to stay as calm as I could, but I was certain that I was going to die,” said O’Brien, who couldn’t help but think of the late crocodile hunter Steve Irwin, who had a fatal encounter with a stingray in the Great Barrier Reef in 2006.

But O’Brien, a traveling nurse, didn’t die. Emergency crews used shears to cut the fish at the base of its tail, where the stinger is located, and rush her to the hospital.

A picture on a GoFundMe page set up by her husband for her continuing medical care shows the venomous spine still embedded in the Apollo Beach woman’s upper back.

The fundraiser, asking for $5,000, says the barb penetrated about three inches, narrowly missing her lung. Nerve damage is possible, but it’s “too soon to tell.”

So how likely are you to be impaled by a stingray?

Not very, according to the Florida Fish & Wildlife Conservation Commission, which says attacks on humans are rare.

Commonly found buried in the shallow coastal waters of temperate seas, the non-aggressive fish usually don’t bother you if you don’t bother them, as in step on them.

To avoid a run-in, the agency recommends you do the so called Stingray Shuffle: not lifting up your feet as you walk in the water so they sense your presence and move away.

Madeleine Marr
Miami Herald
Celebrity/real time news reporter Madeleine Marr has been with The Miami Herald since 2003. She has covered such features as travel, fashion and food. In 2007, she helped launch the newspaper’s daily People Page, attending red carpet events, awards ceremonies and press junkets; interviewing some of the biggest names in show business; and hosting her own online show. She is originally from New York City.
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