Dad describes dramatic moment he punched shark to save teen daughter

The father of a 17-year-old girl who was attacked by a shark has shared the dramatic story of how he rescued his daughter by punching the shark repeatedly until it let go.

Charlie Winter was in the water off the North Carolina coast near his daughter, Paige, earlier this month when he heard other teenagers swimming with them at Atlantic Beach shout: "Paige! Shark! Get her!”

But when he looked in the water, he saw only a five-foot trail of pink blood in the water.

Mr Winter dove in and grabbed his daughter, pulling a shark up out of the water along with her.

"It was a big shark... I immediately just started to hit it," he said at a press conference on Friday (local time).

North Carolina dad Charlie Winter saved his daughter from a shark attack by punching the animal.
Charlie Winter shared the moment he unleashed on a shark Rocky Balboa-style after it attacked his daughter. Source: AAP

"I don't know how many times I punched it, but I hit it with everything I could and it let go."

Then the former paramedic ran for shore, applying pressure on his daughter's badly injured leg while the shark chased him "at arm's length", he said.

In the struggle, Mr Winter added his daughter had been attempting to pry open the shark's mouth with her hands.

Afterward, he said she was calm and just kept repeating the word, "Dad", as he carried her to safety.

"She's a tough little thing," he said with emotion in his voice.

Doctors said the teenager's left leg and two fingers on her left hand were amputated after what was likely a bull shark attack, based on tooth markings found on her bones.

A photo of Paige Winter, 17, was bitten on her leg by the shark off the US beach. She had to have the limb amputated above the knee.
Paige Winter had her left leg amputated above the knee after a savage shark attack. Source: GoFundMe/Charles Winter

Mr Winter said he saw two sharks in the water just after the attack, but doesn't know what types of sharks they were.

Attacks like this are rare, according to Eric Toschlog, chief of Trauma and Acute Care Surgery at Vidant Medical Centre.

He was one of the doctors who treated Paige.

"I have not seen a wound of this severity, ever," Dr Toschlog said, adding there were usually only two or three attacks off North Carolina every year.

According to the University of Florida’s International Shark Attack File, a research organisation that tracks shark bite reports worldwide, there were a total of 32 unprovoked shark attacks in the United States in 2018, making up 48 per cent of the worldwide total. The number was down from 53 attacks in 2017.

Pictured is the water at Fort Macon State Park in Atlantic Beach, North Carolina, where Page Winter was attacked by a shark.
Paige was attacked at Fort Macon State Park at Atlantic Beach in North Carolina. Source: abc

Despite her injuries, doctors said Paige was in good spirits, and should complete physical therapy and rehabilitation within six to 12 months.

In a video shown at the conference, Paige said she wanted to use this incident to do something good for the environment and for sharks.

"Sharks are still good people and that's just kind of the truth, they're still so good and they're so cool," she said with a smile.

The June 2 incident was one of two shark attacks in North Carolina so far this month.

A 19-year-old surfer said he was bitten on his foot last weekend.

Just one week prior, a shark was filmed stalking a swimmer in crystal clear waters at Panama City Beach in the Gulf of Mexico.

Last year, North Carolina had three confirmed shark attacks, according to the International Shark Attack File.

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