Hero teen who saved fishing guide from deadly croc attack stuns The Project hosts

A fishing guide is lucky to be alive after a saltwater crocodile plucked him from a boat – as the 14-year-old boy who saved his life detailed the terrifying ordeal to stunned hosts on The Project.

Sydney man Misha Hammond and his sons Oliver, 18, and Isaac, 14, joined Northern Territory fishing guide Sean Fiumara for a sport-fishing charter in the Top End last week

They set out from the Dhipirri Barra and Sportfishing Lodge in Arnhem Land, south-west of the Crocodile Islands archipelago. 

The group toured some of the most famous fishing spots in the area and spent the best part of the day fishing without a single crocodile sighting. 

But, when Mr Fiumara stood by one side of the boat showing the teens where to cast, a 3.5 metre crocodile leapt from the water and pulled the fishing guide in.

‘It was a bit of a shock when he first fell in. I sort of jumped up and didn’t know what was happening – but I did when I saw the big crocodile in the water,’ Issac told The Project on Tuesday night.

The fearless teen grabbed hold of Mr Fiumara as the guide tried to freed himself from the saltie’s jaws.

A keen, young fisherman has been hailed a hero after he pulled his fishing guide from the jaws of a saltwater crocodile

Isaac Hammond, 14, was on a fishing trip with his older brother and father, when their guide was snavelled from their boat by a crocodile

Isaac Hammond, 14, was on a fishing trip with his older brother and father, when their guide was snavelled from their boat by a crocodile

‘I grabbed him when he was in the water and pulled him in, then dad helped me pull him onto the boat,’ he said.

Shocked Project host Waleed Aly asked: ‘So Isaac, you’ve got him back onto the boat, what’s the crocodile doing at this stage?’.

‘(It was) at the back of the boat, tailing us and trying to get another go at Sean,’ the teen replied. 

Aly then asked what he did next, adding it couldn’t have been fun, getting chased by a crocodile.

‘Nah, it wasn’t,’ Issac said.

‘Sean had to get up and splash around in the water, like put his hand in the water, to try and get the croc to come over, and then hit it with a big pole’.

Co-host Sam Taunton commended Issac on being the most ‘chill’ young man given the circumstances. 

‘What were you thinking, so you know the moment you had to reach down to save him, what was going through your head when you put your hand do–, like I won’t put my hand–. I won’t put my hand anywhere now that I think about it,’ Taunton  joked.

‘But, you reached down to a crocodile to try to save him, what were you thinking about?’ he asked incredulously.

‘Um, I wasn’t really thinking,’ said the laid-back Sydney boy, 

‘I just wanted to get him out.’

Isaac agreed that the close croc encounter was not for the faint-hearted. 

‘It was intimidating,’ he said. 

‘Yeah, he was really aggro and he stayed around the boat until we actually had to drive off.’

He said Mr Fiumara’s injuries were ‘pretty bad’ after the incident. 

‘He had a bunch of punctures on his leg, and he used his hand to open the croc’s jaw,’ he added. 

‘So he was in a bit of a bad shape.’

Taunton asked if he’d ever go fishing in Arnhem Land again.

‘We’re going there in April,’ Isaac quipped.

Sean Fiumara was thankful for the youngster's quick thinking, he was flown to a hospital in Darwin to recover from the attack

Sean Fiumara was thankful for the youngster’s quick thinking, he was flown to a hospital in Darwin to recover from the attack

Mr Fiumara’s colleague at the sportfishing lodge Greg Campbell had previously told ABC Radio Darwin that he took the guide 30kmby boat to the nearest medical clinic.

The pair bounced over rough waters under ‘horrendous’ weather to Milingimbi Island, from there Mr Fiumara was flown to Darwin.

‘He’s glad that we took him to the clinic because originally he didn’t want to go, he thought he’d be okay,’ Mr Campbell said.

‘You don’t get thrashed around under water like that by a big croc and come out of it unscathed unfortunately, but he’s alive to tell the tale and that’s the main thing.’

Mr Fiumara’s injuries included five puncture wounds to his right knee, and damage to his ACL and hand.

He said he owed his life to Isaac.

‘Once under the water, I realised what had happened, the f***er got me,’ Mr Fiumara said, according to the ABC.

‘I could see him latched onto my leg … I stuck my left hand down on the bottom jaw and right hand on the top jaw, and managed to free my leg and kick him in the side of the head.’

He warned other fishers to remember that crocs can and will jump if they see an opportunity to feed. 

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