Two teenage girls were enjoying a relaxing day on the water on July 4 when a shark crept up and disturbed their peace.
A terrifying image of Margaret Bowles, 19, may look like a college girl enjoying a day on the lake, but the corner of the photo reveals a shark fin cutting through the water.
Her friend, Maddie Cronin, 18, captured the shocking flick and didn’t even notice the shark heading towards Bowles until she saw her horrified expression.
The two high school friends were swimming off the coast of Cape Cod, Massachusetts, not too far from where the most infamous shark movie, Jaws, was filmed.
Bowles recalled the heart-dropping moment she spotted the fin, ‘It’s like 8 inches out of the water, sort of fleshy grey, and I’m like, “Oh my goodness, that’s a shark. We’ve got to go,”‘ she told local ABC affiliate, WCVB.
‘Fortunately, we both kept our heads and made a hasty retreat to shore on our paddleboards.’
When the girls returned to shore, they were in disbelief that they had narrowly escaped a shark.
Bowles’s father, Ian, the energy and environmental affairs secretary of Massachusetts, told the Boston Globe that he was proud of his daughter for remaining calm in the face of danger.

Margaret Bowles, 19, was posing for a photo when she spotted the fin of a great white shark

Bowles was gliding through the water on her paddleboard when the fin of a great white shark approached her

Maddie Cronin (L) and Bowles (R) quickly escaped the shark and were in shock when they returned to shore
‘I’m a proud and grateful dad — they did all the right things. Keeping their heads, getting away safely, and reporting it to the authorities.’
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The girls then sent the once-in-a-lifetime shot to experts at the Division of Marine Fisheries, who confirmed the fin resembled that of a great white shark.
John Chisholm, an adjunct scientist at the New England Aquarium, told the Globe that he also believed the fin belonged to a great white shark.
Although sharks are notorious in Cape Cod, he said they’re rarely spotted in Woods Hole, where the girls were swimming.
The sighting is the first reported great white in the area in over 20 years. He told the Globe that since there are fewer seals in that area, the sharks steer clear.
Despite the shock of encountering a great white, Bowles said she would still be getting back out on the water.

Despite the terrifying experience, Bowles told local news that she wasn’t afraid of swimming and was ready to get back out in the water

The sighting occurred in Woods Hole on Cape Cod. Even though the Cape is notorious for sharks, experts said they’re rarely spotted where the girls were paddleboarding
‘I’ve already gone swimming since then, I love the ocean, what happened was incredibly unlikely, and I’m gonna take a break from swimming back and forth over there in my wetsuit cause they seem unadvisable,’ she told local news outlet WHDH.
The girls affectionately named the shark, Steve, and joked that he was coming to them to ask for directions.
‘Hopefully Steve moves on and I’ll get back to it,’ Bowles told WHDH.
Cape Cod is known as a hotspot for shark attacks; however, they’re still a rarity, with only two attacks in the last six years.