LURKING IN THE DEEP I grew up on ‘shark highway’ isle where girl was ripped in half… I’ve seen pals die & I never know if I’ll survive waves

ON an infamous stretch of water known as “shark highway”, some surfers are still willing to risk it all to pursue their passion.

Jorgann Couzinet, 32, is one such daredevil who hails from the paradise island La Reunion – a honeymoon hotspot that has been plagued with the highest rate of shark attacks in the 21st century.

French champion surfer, Jorgann Couzinet, 32, shares his view of the La Reunion shark attacksCredit: Supplied

As an athlete who is pushing hard to qualify for the 2028 Los Angeles Olympics, Jorgann has to be willing to accept the risks when training in his homeland.

“I just kiss my girlfriend on the beach and say ‘I love you’, because I don’t know if I’m going to be able to come back,” he told The Sun.

Jorgann’s family relocated to the island – in the western Indian Ocean, located east of Madagascar and southwest of Mauritius – from France when he was just five-years-old, and learnt to surf in the company of the apex predators.

“I have so many memories surfing with friends, and sometimes seeing sharks underneath my board. We were all tripping out.

“I remember seeing big tiger sharks jumping out from the water only 200 metres from us while we were surfing a wave that was super far from the beach.

“We were like ‘What the f*** just happened?’ This thing was so big.

“I was really young, probably 14, so I wasn’t really scared of them because I knew they weren’t really interested in us.”

But a spate of horrific attacks and deaths in the 2010s forced him to return to France as his career was starting.

The gravity of the “la crise requins” – or the shark crisis – had become so troubling that sweeping swimming and surfing bans were put in place across the island.

Jorgann said: “The shark issue just became really, really bad.

“If you went surfing you would risk your life, but you were also getting fined. It was crazy.”

The four-time European champ still returns to the island during the winter months to soak up the sun, see old friends, and train on the waves where he honed his craft.

And despite the last shark-related incident happening in 2019, blanket bans on surfing still exist.

“They are not putting so much pressure on us because they’ve seen that a lot of people are surfing again.

“So now they let it happen, but we’re still not allowed to go surfing. So if something happens they’re not responsible for it,” he said.

“We just want to be able to surf without getting fined for no reason, because we are already risking our lives for the sport we love.”

Tragically, some lose their lives even if they exercise proper caution.

Such was the case for 13-year-old surfing sensation Elio Canestri, who died at the hands of a bull shark in 2015.

The boy reportedly left a note for his mum before heading out to the beach to let her know he wouldn’t go into the water unless there were dedicated shark spotters.

“Don’t worry, Mum,” he wrote. “I’m going surfing. If there’s no security, I won’t surf.”

Elio was sadly killed in shallow waters, only 15 metres from shore.

His heartbroken father, Giovanni, told French broadcaster RTL that his son had “always been very careful”.

He said: “He was someone who always listened to his parents.

“He analysed danger intelligently, he was a competitor.”

At that point, an extraordinary 16 shark attacks – seven of them fatal – had occurred in just four years on the island.

Giovanni added: “Titi was devoured by his passion.

“Fate decided one day to take him away and he is gone.”

The loss was also particularly harsh on Jorgann, who felt like something of a mentor to the boy.

“He was like a little brother to me,” he said.

“I was there for him. Supporting him. And this [incident] really shocked me.

“I was really sad about the situation because I didn’t know if I was going to lose other close friends.”

In 2013, a 15-year-old girl was killed while snorkelling just metres off shore near Saint Paul on the island’s west coast.

Sarah Roperth’s body was torn in two at the torso, with part of the body dragged to the depths by the shark.

At the time, St. Paul resident Jean-Philippe told French media: “This little girl was not a tourist. Her father has lived on Réunion for a long time and she has swam here since childhood.”

Jorgann counts himself lucky that he has avoided the same tragic end.

He said: “I was surfing every day, and then one day I was like ‘OK, well, I don’t really feel like surfing.’

“I just felt like the water was moving a lot. Normally I’m always out.

“By the time I was getting home – I lived probably 15 minutes from the beach – I got a message from a friend telling me that someone had been bitten by a shark and died. It was crazy.

“I realised that maybe I was lucky to survive this whole time.”

Jorgann became part of what is known as the “sacrificed youth”, who surfed on the island during a period of 25 recorded attacks, 11 of them resulting in death.

“When I was a teenager, the best surfers in France came from Réunion,” he told Le Monde. “There will be a generational gap because they took too long to act.”

French bodyboarding champion Mathieu Schiller was one of the first who tragically died during that period, succumbing to an attack on September 19, 2011.

His body was never found.

“It was a nightmare,” Jorgann said. “At the time of the first attacks, we felt like we were living through Jaws.”

But the young surfer continued to defiantly pursue his passion and eventually won his first French championship title in 2013 at the age of 20.

It was around this time that he decided to move to mainland France.

On top of the worrying surge in shark attacks throwing La Reunion into chaos, Jorgann felt the move would benefit his career.

“I thought it was the right time to start getting sponsors over there, showing myself a little bit more,” he said.

He funded his passion by taking on odd jobs as a pizza chef and jet-ski instructor before receiving a call up to the French team at the EuroSurf 2015 in Morocco.

The Frenchman saw his career take off after victory in the second division of the World Surf League (QS) in 2017 as sponsored poured in.

Jorgann then skyrocketed to the top of the QS world rankings in 2019 after being crowned European champion for the second time.

The trauma of the “shark crisis” could have easily driven Jorgann away from the sport forever.

Instead, he chose to carry the memory of the “sacrificed youth” with him into every competition.

Source : https://www.the-sun.com/news/15803353/shark-highway-island-pals-die-surfer/

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