Great white shark sneaks up on Cape Cod paddleboarders: ‘Got to get out of here’

7 months ago 12
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Teenage paddleboarders enjoying the waters in Cape Cod on the Fourth of July had an unexpected — and unwanted — visit from a great white shark.

A photo taken by one of the teens captured the moment the shark's fin broke the water's surface. Not far from the fin, one of the teens, Margaret Bowles, can be seen lying belly-down on a paddleboard.

Bowles told CBS News that had been paddleboarding with her bestfriend Madeleine Cronin for a few hours near Stony Beach. Cronin then went to take a picture - but had no idea that there was a fin peaking out at the bottom of the frame.

"I was like, 'Take a picture of me!' right. Then next to her board, this, 8-inch out of the water, fin. It's like fleshy and grey and I'm like, 'Oh my goodness,'" Bowles told the broadcaster. "My heart kind of sank."

A second picture, after Bowles realizes what is in the water, paints a different picture.

“When I am looking through the phone and I see her face change from just like happy or whatever to, ‘Oh my God, there’s a shark,” Cronin told the outlet.

A great white shark came within feet of a pair of paddleboarding teens in Cape Cod on July 4, 2025. The teens quickly fled from the water and reported the shark sighting

A great white shark came within feet of a pair of paddleboarding teens in Cape Cod on July 4, 2025. The teens quickly fled from the water and reported the shark sighting

The shark eventually passed within a foot of Cronin, who said she could feel the animal moving past her.

"Immediately we kicked into like, 'We've got to get out of here,'" Bowles said.

Cronin agreed, saying from that point on their focus was just to "go, go, go" beach to the beach. She paddled so hard that she broke her oar on the way back to the shore.

"Not many thoughts after that," she told CBS News.

Once the teens were safely out of the water, they reported their sighting to the Sharktivity app. The app can be used by beachgoers to keep informed on the latest shark sightings.

John Chisholm, of the New England Aquarium confirmed that it was a great white — citing its pointed dorsal fin — and estimated that the animal was about the size of the teens' paddleboards.

White shark activity in the area is “pretty rare” though, he added.

After the chilling encounter, Bowles said she was proud of herself and Cronin for staying calm in a frightening situation, noting that it would have been "easy for one of us to freak out and fall off the board or something."

Cronin said she planned to take a break from the ocean for a "few days" but added that she would be back eventually.

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