The 23-year-old man was apparently bitten while diving near a bait ball off Haleiwa on Oahu’s North Shore.
A tour-boat employee in Hawaii is recovering from an apparent shark attack that occurred Saturday afternoon outside of Haleiwa on Oahu’s North Shore.
Hawaii News Now reported that the 23-year-old unidentified man was hospitalized with serious injuries.
The Star Advertiser, citing the Hawaii Department of Land and Natural Resources, reported that the incident marked the first shark attack in Hawaiian waters in 2025.
The DNLR had not issued a news release about the incident as of late Sunday.
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Daniel Casler of My Kailua stated via Instagram that he had spoken to a friend of the victim and added the following update:
“The victim is an employee of the shark tour company and was caught in a bait ball (where are large school of fish ball up) and the shark latched onto the forearm of the individual.
“His arm was saved and he’s retained feeling. There are more surgeries ahead for him but thankfully he will recover.”
It’s not clear what type of shark was involved, but tiger sharks are implicated in most unprovoked attacks in Hawaiian waters.
The discovery of a gopher snake underscores the heightened concern regarding invasive species as holiday deliveries ramp up.
It’s illegal to possess and transport snakes in Hawaii because if the non-native reptiles were to gain a foothold it could be devastating for native wildlife.
So when a gopher snake was discovered Saturday in a shipment of Christmas trees being unloaded at a store in Hilo, it sounded alarm bells.
“Store staff unloaded about half the container before they spotted the snake, then closed the container and called the Hawaii Department of Agriculture,” the agency stated in a news release. “Inspectors in Hilo responded and captured the two-foot-long snake. The inspectors checked every Christmas tree and the inside of the container.”
No other snakes were found, but the discovery underscored the high level of concern as Christmas trees begin to arrive for the holidays.
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The Hawaii Department of Agriculture stated that an estimated 135 shipping copntainers holding thousands of trees and wreaths will unload at Hawaiian ports this season. So far, about 46,450 Christmas trees have been delivered.
But for the Department of Agriculture, trying to control the presence of snakes, which have no natural predators in the wild, is a yearround effort.
Last April, a wellness check at an eldery resident’s home in Honolulu resulted in the discovery of a live python that measured 3-1/2 feet.
Last January, a 20-inch gopher snake was found in a shipping container that was being unloaded at a Molokai hardware store. Police arrived and killed the snake with a pellet gun.
Possession of illegal animals in Hawaii is a Class C felony. Violators face fines up to $200,000 and up to three years in prison.
The Irish are gonna get some sun before they get some turkey in a couple of years.
Imagine being a college basketball fan and knowing part of your team’s schedule two years in advance. It’s not college football when you often know who your team is playing a decade or more in advance. Both sports are just different.
This will be the Irish’s fifth appearance in the tournament, in which they have an all-time record of 8-5. They last competed in 2021 when COVID-19 forced the tournament to be relocated from Hawaii to Las Vegas. They won this tournament in 2017 with [autotag]Matt Farrell[/autotag] receiving tournament MVP honors.
So if you love Notre Dame hoops and want to do something during Thanksgiving week two years from now, might we suggest making the trip to Hawaii to watch these games?
Contact/Follow us @IrishWireND on X (formerly Twitter) and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Notre Dame news, notes and opinions.
A photographer in Hawaii has shared footage showing a blacktip reef shark swimming just feet from shore toward a lone snorkeler.
A photographer in Hawaii has captured footage showing what appears to be a blacktip reef shark swimming just feet from shore toward a lone North Shore snorkeler.
The footage, captured by Bryan Phillips and shared by Clark Little, features suspenseful “Jaws” music and a warning shout to the snorkeler: “Hey, there’s a shark right there! Look down!”
Treading water with a shark nearby would be unsettling for just about anyone. Check out the video to view the snorkeler’s response:
This area, known for its beaches and golf courses, was devastated a year ago.
Just a whiff of smoke is enough to transport Sue Brimeyer back to that day. To the acrid smell of charred homes as flaming debris rained down and fire raged through Lahaina. And to the earthshaking feeling her very heritage was going up in smoke.
“It was obvious people wouldn’t survive – you can’t outrun a fire like that,” she said, recounting her escape from the deadliest U.S. wildfire in more than a century, which swept through the Hawaiian island of Maui on Aug. 8, 2023.
The 77-year-old grandmother survived a harrowing night in the firestorm, her 10-year-old grandson in tow. But it scarred her in ways that make reliving it particularly painful, even now.
What the fire wrought marks a colossal loss for Hawaii, for Hawaiian families like Brimeyer’s, and the world. The wildfire devastated a people and a way of life already under threat. From rampant overdevelopment to soaring housing costs and from water shortages to the climate change that fueled the fire that day, Maui has long wrestled with a laundry list of crises.
The inferno took 102 lives, the most recent in March when 68-year-old Claudette Heermance succumbed to her injuries, and brought an international spotlight to the island’s struggles. A year later, there are signs of renewal emerging from the rubble, hints of Old Hawaii being reborn. But for Brimeyer, the memories are hard to get past.
She spent the night amid the embers, jumping from house to house to dodge the flames. When she found a safe spot for her grandson to rest, she assessed the remains of her burned-out neighborhood, where three generations of her family lived. Her own home, gone; her daughter’s home – built on land granted to the family in the Great Māhele led by King Kamehameha III before the illegal overthrow of the Hawaiian monarchy – torched.
“There was nothing left of it.”
A scramble to escape the Lahaina inferno
There was smoke in the sky earlier that day from a distant fire on the other side of town, but Brimeyer had assumed it was under control. Then it showed up on her doorstep.
“There was no warning, no sirens or anything like that,” she said. “I saw embers coming down outside the kitchen window. I went outside and I saw that the house across the street was on fire.”
That’s when survival mode kicked in.
A few blocks away, Brimeyer’s daughter, Kehaunani Kaʻauwai, was trapped as thick, black, smoke raced toward her home.
“It was a wall of smoke about six stories high,” she said.
Kaʻauwai needed to evacuate. She needed to find her mom. But she couldn’t drive away. The power was out, and her electric fence wouldn’t open. And she couldn’t call for help – the phone lines were down, too, or spotty at best.
“People were running down the street in panic,” she said.
Among them was a student from the school where she teaches Hawaiian Studies, who stopped and helped force open the gate. She wanted desperately to find her mom, but the smoke was closing in. She was out of time. The traffic to get out of burning Lahaina was “jam-packed” and dangerous.
“Rocks and branches and debris were flying and hitting the cars trying to leave. Trees were in the street,” Kaʻauwai recalled.
Not to mention the downed power lines and workers hastily trying to repair them while being pummeled by debris. But Kaʻauwai pushed through and escaped the heart of the fire to safety further down the Maui coastline, sleeping on the beach as Lahaina burned in the distance.
‘In survival mode’ as Lahaina burned
Brimeyer, unable to contact her daughter, quickly put a shirt on her grandson Kapono, who is nonverbal, and guided him from house to house, seeking shelter from the ash and smoke as fire consumed home after home around them.
When the winds died down, slowing the fire’s spread, Brimeyer found a pocket of safety on the lawn outside the Lahaina Hongwanji Mission. As Kapono rested, she looked across the street for her house.
Except it wasn’t there.
“Everything was gone. All the houses were gone. All the churches were gone. As far as I could see, it was nothing. It was just gone,” Brimeyer said. “Saw most of my neighbors’ homes burnt down and a body on the ground next to my neighbor’s walkway.”
Burned houses and buildings are seen in Lahaina. Thousands were displaced after a wildfire fueled by winds from Hurricane Dora and dry vegetation destroyed much of the town. The death toll from the fire makes it the deadliest wildfire of the past U.S.
She didn’t have time to mourn amid the ruins.
“It was kind of numbing. I couldn’t react to it. You just couldn’t react. You couldn’t have emotions. You were just in survival mode.”
It wasn’t until the next morning that Brimeyer saw and waved down a county worker passing by in a truck. He was stunned to see the grandmother and grandson in the rubble. She soon reunited with her daughter outside the burn zone.
“She was crying and I was crying,” Brimeyer said. “She thought we had gone in the fire – she thought we were gone.”
Kaʻauwai couldn’t imagine enduring the night in the center of the inferno.
“I just thought she was amazing how she found pockets of safety for her and Kapono – she just pushed through to find safety,” Kaʻauwai said. “I am just so glad she didn’t just say OK I’m done. It was unbelievable.”
Generations of Hawaiian history up in flames
The Lahaina inferno destroyed or damaged more than 2,200 structures and caused an estimated $6 billion in damage, closing many of the area’s golf courses.
Kapalua Golf’s Bay Course re-opened on Sept. 20, and its Plantation Course was back operating by October. Both golf courses had been closed since the Maui wildfires on Aug. 8. Located in West Maui, the golf courses and facilities at Kapalua Golf were spared from the fires.
Many historic Native Hawaiian sites and artifacts were destroyed. Among them, Waiola Church, the final resting place of Keōpuōlani, the highest-ranking wife of King Kamehameha the Great who united the Hawaiian Islands into one kingdom. The church was known as the site of the start of Christianity in Hawaii in the early 1800s.
Kaʻauwai said generations of homes were lost in an instant.
“My house went from a beautiful one-story family home to five inches of ash,” she said. “You can’t fathom the thought that everything is gone.”
The hardest possessions for Kaʻauwai to lose were deeply rooted in her Native Hawaiian culture.
A collection of rare Hawaiian books about Old Hawaii that belonged to her grandmother was lost in the flames. Hula implements she had since she was a child were gone. Her cherished poi board was burned to ashes.
Brimeyer was able to salvage a Hawaiian bracelet from the ashes of her home, a wedding gift from her late husband Gary whom she credits for her survival that day.
Kaʻauwai’s son now patrols the burn zone every day, working with Truth Excavation to clear debris and restore the land he grew up on.
Sue Brimeyer’s charred Kamehameha Schools class ring was recovered amid the remains of her Lahaina home, burned in the deadliest U.S. wildfire in over a century. (Photo: Keely Hassett)
Like his mother and grandmother, Keoni Hassett lost his home in the fire. One of more than 3,000 displaced residents, he’s been frustrated by a lack of government support and tedious requirements to get financial aid and housing. A recent survey published by the Hawaii State Rural Health Association found more than two-thirds of the survivors have struggled to buy groceries and housing stability remains an issue on the island.
“There’s residents that are camping on the beach or living in their cars,” Hassett said.
But he’s optimistic about the island’s future as reconstruction gets underway and he sees life re-emerge. Charred plants are sprouting new growth, and signs are appearing of the wetlands endemic to the area before it was heavily developed.
“As we’re pulling up concrete, all these springs with water – fresh water – are bubbling up that had foundations poured right on top of,” Hassett said. “We’re going to have springs in Lahaina again like the 1800s.”
Hassett is grateful his grandmother survived the harrowing ordeal.
“The fire went right over them and they didn’t get burned,” Hassett said. “It’s baffling. She’s got someone watching over her.”
Brimeyer purchased a home in Kihei after the fires but aims to soon return to Lahaina. Plans to rebuild her home are already in the works.
“Lahaina means a lot to us – my whole family,” she said. “I love Lahaina. It will always be my home.”
Ashley Lewis is a deputy managing editor at USA TODAY and is a Native Hawaiian born and raised on the island of Maui. She has known Brimeyer’s family since childhood.
Footage shows the apex predator’s close proximity to Magic Sands Beach Park swimming areas, prompting a temporary closure.
A popular beach on the Big Island of Hawaii was ordered off-limits to swimmers Wednesday after a drone operator spotted a large tiger shark cruising just offshore.
“BEACH CLOSED,” Sharks of Hawaii exclaimed via Instagram. “Big tiger shark closes down Magic Sands Beach Park this afternoon 7/31/24.”
The camera pans from the shark to shore, showing the shark’s proximity to swimming areas. But what some viewers noticed were the two small escorts directly in front of the shark’s snout.
Mariota is thrilled to be in Washington and helping Jayden Daniels.
Sunday’s practice was open to Commanders fans, and quarterback Marcus Mariota told the media afterward that he really enjoyed it.
“It was great. I love having the fans here at practice. It creates an energy, and atmosphere and its fun for me specifically to see Hawaii flags! That was really cool.”
Mariota, who will turn 31 in October, was born in 1993 in Honolulu, Hawaii. He played three college seasons for Oregon (2012-2014), won the Heisman Trophy (2014), and was the second overall selection in the 2015 NFL draft.
Jayden Daniels also was the Heisman Trophy winner (2023) as well as the second overall selection in the 2024 draft. “He’s done a great job,” said Mariota. “It’s not easy, and when you’re coming in to be the guy to kind of revitalize a franchise, it’s tough. But I think he’s got a good head on his shoulders.”
Mariota, having worn the same shoes as Daniels certainly knows something about the pressure to succeed in your rookie season. “I think we talk about it all the time in the quarterback room. When you are a young guy you really want to try to come in and be perfect. And that’s hard. I really think that can be detrimental in some sense to your growth.”
Of course, Mariota would have preferred his career to go a different, more successful path where he was still a productive starter. But he did add at the close of his time with the press, “I really love the Ashburn area, I love the DMV. I think it’s really been an easy transition for my family and I. We love the diversity, we love being able to go out and eat, and do all those types of things, and we’ve really enjoyed it. So, as this year goes on, we look forward to meeting fans and being a part of this, and we’re thankful we are here.”
Unmet expectations are difficult in life. Atlanta (2022) was challenging, even painful, for Mariota. However, it seems he learned from it and is now better prepared for his role with the Commanders.
They had ignored warnings before climbing onto the rocks, presumably for selfies. Footage shows the daughter engulfed by a wave.
A father and daughter who climbed onto rocks in pounding Hawaiian surf, presumably for selfies, nearly paid with their lives.
“They wanted a better picture, even through they were told not to go,” Hawaii News Report explained this week in footage credited to Shutter Lifestyle.
The footage (posted below) shows the daughter nearly being swept into the turbulent zone beneath the rocks.
“After climbing up and getting right to the edge they were hit with a wave that let them know they were in danger,” the Instagram report continued. “They decided to get out of there but by then it was too late. A series of waves pounded the cliff sending a wall of water over the side and on top of them.”
Viewers can see the daughter lose her footing and her shoes, “snatched off her feet,” washing into the ocean. Fortunately, the father reached his daughter before the next set of waves struck.
“The dad was able to get her to safety but not [before] she suffered cuts to her legs,” the report continued.
Hawaii News Report added: “All of us who live here in Hawaii know that had she entered the water in this surf it would almost certainly have been a tragedy.”
Our hundreds of raters weigh in on the best public-access and private courses in Hawaii.
Looking to play the best golf courses in Hawaii? Welcome to our annual Golfweek’s Best ranking of public-access and private courses.
Following are the rankings for both types of courses, as judged by our nationwide network of raters. The hundreds of members of our course-ratings panel continually evaluate courses and rate them on 10 criteria on a points basis of 1 through 10. They also file a single, overall rating on each course. Those overall ratings are averaged to produce all our Golfweek’s Best course rankings.
The courses on the first list allow public access in some fashion, be it standard daily green fees, through a resort or by staying at an affiliated hotel. If there’s a will, there’s a tee time – no membership required.
KEY: (m) modern, built in 1960 or after; (c) classic, built before 1960. For courses with a number preceding the (m) or (c), that is where the course ranks on Golfweek’s Best lists for top 200 modern and classic courses in the U.S.
* indicates new or returning to the rankings
Best public-access courses in Hawaii
Princeville Makai in Hawaii (Courtesy of Princeville Makai)
Houston Kaahaaina-Torres announced on social media that he is committing to Nebraska.
The Nebraska football team earned another big 2025 recruit as June concludes, almost two months before the start of the 2024 season. Houston Kaahaaina-Torres announced on social media that he is committing to Nebraska.
Kaahaaina-Torres made his decision after visiting Nebraska on June 21. The three-star lineman stands at 6-feet-3 and 290 pounds and is the No. 1 player in the state of Hawaii.
Kaahaaina-Torres has played varsity for St. Louis High School in Honolulu since his freshman year. He chose Nebraska over Arizona State, California, and Michigan State. He also received offers from Utah, Colorado, and Brigham Young.
This is the second straight year Nebraska landed the top recruit in Hawaii. The Huskers signed Preston Taumua from Waipahu (Hawaii) as part of the 2024 recruiting class last year. Kaahaaina-Torres is the 13th commit in Nebraska’s class and the second offensive line commit, joining three-star offensive tackle Brian Tapu, who committed to the Huskers on Thursday.