Two sharks are spotted in latest sighting in Spanish waters

Sunseekers scream in terror after realising swimmers are just feet away from two sharks in latest sighting in shallow Spanish waters

  • Shocked beach-goers fled from the water and back to the safety of the shore
  • Other scrambled to a platform in the sea before being rescued by kayakers

Sun seekers have shrieked in horror after unknowingly swimming just feet away from two sharks in just the latest signing of the creatures off the coast of Spain’s beaches.

Footage showed two blue sharks moving through shallow waters near a beach in Portbou, Catalonia region, at around noon on July 16, according to local media.

Swimmers scrambled to flee from the water after spotting the sharp-toothed carnivores circling in the waves.

While some beach-goers made it to shore, others took refuge on a platform in the sea and had to be taken back to dry land by heroic kayakers.

It comes after a severe increase in sharks spotted off the coast of Spain’s beaches that has terrified tourists and locals alike.

Swimmers scrambled to flee from the water after spotting the sharp-toothed carnivores circling in the waves


Footage showed two blue sharks moving through shallow waters near a beach in Portbou, Catalonia region, at around noon on July 16, according to local media

Despite the panic of the latest sighting’s, no one was reported injured.

After footage of the incident was shared on social media, Portbou mayor Gael Rodrigues stated: ‘Portbou beach is completely safe.’

READ MORE: Moment enraged dolphin rams swimmer and pushes another under the surface in front of screaming tourists at Japanese beach 

He added that blue sharks are often spotted off beaches in the municipality because they are native to the area.

The incident is not the first shark sighting off the Catalan coast this year. On June 23, bathing was prohibited off three beaches in Alcanar due to the presence of two blue sharks.

The blue shark can grow up to 13 feet long and can weigh up to 450 lb. The species is listed as ‘near threatened’ by the International Union for Conservation of Nature.

One social media user commented on the footage: ‘We shouldn’t fear these creatures. And they often have more fear of us than we have of them! We are in their home.’

It comes after British holiday-makers were enjoying a relaxing day on a Malaga beach, soaking up the sun, when a shark was spotted through the waves.

The shark’s presence, just off the coast of resort town Torremolinos, caused the British holiday-goers to flee out of the water and back to safety on the shore.

Dozens lined the beaches, peering out over the water to spot the shark’s dorsal fin protruding from the waves.

Shark at Torremolinos beach this morning 🦈😳 #shark #beachday #holiday #torremolinos #malaga #spain #ohno #jaws #fypシ #foryoupage

British holiday-makers were enjoying a relaxing day on a Malaga beach, soaking up the sun, when the creature was spotted through the waves

The shark stuck around off the beach’s coast for about half an hour before a lifeguard encouraged it to swim back out to sea

Dozens lined the beaches, peering out over the water to spot the shark’s dorsal fin protruding from the waves

The sharks presence, just off the coast of Torremolinos, caused the British holiday-goers to flee out of the water and back to safety on the shore

Emily McEwan, took to social media after her holiday was interrupted by the panic over the shark.

She told The Sun: ‘It was a little bit of a surprise because we’ve all seen films like Jaws but you never really expect yourself to be in the sea when you see that fin.’

She said the sighting happened on the morning of June 27. She had been on a family holiday after just giving birth to a baby boy.

The shark was seen off the beach’s coast for about half an hour before a lifeguard encouraged it to swim back out to sea.  

The new mother said she tried to find out which species it was, but was still non-the-wiser. 

She posted the video of the sighting on social media, captioning the clip: ‘Off to the beach for what was meant to be a nice relaxing day.’

A previous sighting was seen off a dock on the island of Arousa in the Galician province of Pontevedra, home to spectacular white sandy beaches and small coves which are popular with tourists and locals.

This was also a blue shark seen in this sighting, which rarely bite humans but have been implicated in fatal attacks in the past. 

Footage showed the shark’s tell-tale fin appearing above the water line as it approached a fisherman’s boat. The clear, shallow water made it very easy to see.

A blue shark was spotted  off a dock on the island of Arousa in the Galician province of Pontevedra

It comes just days after a shark neared the shoreline off a Costa Blanca beach

Local fisherman Rogelio Santos Queiruga insisted the tintorera, which appeared to be injured from a harpoon, faced greater danger than humans.

He admitted: ‘If we try to touch it, it can hurt us with its teeth or rough skin.’

But he added, insisting these types of sharks are not great white sharks or tiger sharks which can be very aggressive: ‘The fact they are seen close to the coast is good news.

‘It is a sign that on the high seas, where they usually live, they may be recovering following decades of overfishing.’

The shark seen in the province of Pontevedra has been described as measuring around five feet and was thought to be not yet fully-grown.

Fishermen filmed it swimming in the shallow water because its presence so close to the shoreline is rare.

The water temperature in the area was around 20 degrees Celsius, which is higher than normal.


The shark seen in the province of Pontevedra has been described as measuring around five feet and was thought to be young and not yet fully-grown

This time the type of species seen was a blue shark, which rarely bite humans but have been implicated in fatal attacks in the past

Footage showed the shark’s tell-tale fin appearing above the water line as it approached a fisherman’s boat

Earlier in June, a fully grown blue shark measuring some seven feet caused panic off the Costa Blanca beach of Aguamarina in Orihuela Costa, south of Alicante.

Bathers were filmed trying to run to safety through waist-high water as it neared the shoreline.

Lifeguards blew on their whistles to warn locals and holidaymakers and urge them to get out of the sea as quickly as possible.

One woman, thought to have been an elderly person seen being helped out of the water by Good Samaritans, is said to have suffered a panic attack after realising the shark was beside her.

It washed up dead the following day by rocks at La Caleta Beach in Cabo Roig a couple of miles away.

The same day it emerged that species of shark had been spotted inside Ciutadella Port in Menorca.

Fishermen filmed it swimming in the shallow water because its presence so close to the shoreline is rare

A cow shark also approached a boat belonging to a group of fishermen in early July, off Cap de Formentor near Puerto Pollensa in Majorca.

The men turned the boat engine off to avoid hurting it.

Blue sharks rarely bite humans but have been implicated in several biting incidents, four of which are said to have ended fatally.

A blue shark was blamed for an attack on a holidaymaker in Elche near Alicante in July 2016.

The 40-year-old victim was rushed to hospital and given stitches to a wound in his hand.

First aiders described the bite as ‘large’ and said he had come out of the sea with blood streaming from the injury.

In August 2018 tourists fled the sea in panic after a blue shark, among the most common in Spain, appeared off the packed Majorcan beach of Calas de Majorca on the island’s east coast.

In April a near seven-foot shark also believed to be a tintorera was filmed in the surf on the south-east coast of Majorca at a nearby beach called Cala Llombards.

Initial reports pointed to a tintorera or blue shark which was about seven-foot long

The footage showed it was obviously disorientated.

A Spanish woman watched it as its fin appeared above the water’s surface and it headed towards the shoreline in the clear water before nearly beaching on the sand.

She could be overheard saying as it was knocked on its side in the swallow water and thrashed its tail around in a bid to get back out to sea: ‘This one is going to end up getting stuck here.

‘We have to get it out of the water, it’s going to stay where it is.’

Its efforts eventually paid off and it was filmed swimming back out to deeper water before disappearing.

Last month, Russian tourist Vladimir Popov, 23, was filmed being attacked by a tiger shark and dragged underwater off the Egyptian Red Sea resort of Hurghada.

His body parts were later recovered from inside the predator’s belly after it was clubbed to death by beachgoers.

Biologist Juan Antonio Pujol told a Spanish paper after it emerged the blue shark seen off Aguamarina beach last Thursday had been found dead at a nearby beach: ‘Coming across something like this when you’re swimming in the water makes an impression but you should stay calm because they’re not aggressive.’

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