• Join the Puerto Pollensa Community Forums

    Provide or get advice on everything Puerto Pollensa, ask questions, gain confirmation or just become apart of a friendly, like minded community.


    Join our Community!

Jellyfish Reports

  • Thread starter Thread starter whaleywanderer
  • Start date Start date
whaleywanderer

whaleywanderer

Active member
Joined
Feb 12, 2008
Messages
1,369
Age
78
Location
Puerto Pollensa ;-)
Jellyfish seem to appear at various beaches throughout the summer, depending on tides, weather etc. Thought it would be helpful to have a thread warning where they have been spotted recently.

I will be visiting Formentor with the family next week and would love to swim in the lovely, clear, turquoise sea there (jelly's permitting:eek:). Have any been spotted there recently?
 
We were there just over 2 weeks ago and there was no sign of them at Formentor Beach :)
 
Nothing sighted at pine walk beach either & i am VERY jelly fish phobic!
 
Just returned from a fantastic week and I can report no jellyfish sightings. We swam at Formentor, Muro and PP. However, cannot comment on CSV, where there can be quite a lot,
 
You timed it to perfection Whaley-we were there the week after you,loads at Formentor but none at PP thank goodness.

Have been stung only once in all the visits made (by jellyfish) over the years,not a nice experience.

Bodge
 
from the on-line version of the Bulletin (20/07/10):

Less jellyfish expected in the Balearics this year - Majorca Daily Bulletin on-line -
http://www.majorcadailybulletin.es/

MADRID/PALMA
THERE are to be less jellyfish invading Spanish beaches this year, although the population at a global level is growing due to contamination, the Spanish Oceanographic Institute said yesterday.

Ignacio Franco, marine investigator at the Institute’s branch in Murcia said that it was the Mediterranean coast which was most likely to be affected although it remained difficult to predict exactly when and where the jellyfish would emerge because much depended on winds and currents.

He said that the areas where the jellyfish are likely to congregate this summer are in Catalonia and in the Balearics but numbers will be significantly less than last year. Franco added that coastal waters off Alicante and Murcia will also get their share but the jellyfish are not expected to reach the shores there until September. Franco said that the Atlantic coast will not be immune to jellyfish shoals and pointed to periods in 2005 and 2006 when there were sightings of the Portuguese Man of War, a jellyfish with a particularly nasty, and potentially deadly, sting.

However, predictions of jellyfish movement in the Atlantic, said Franco is considerably more difficult because of the ocean’s vastness and range of currents. He said that to really understand the movement of the shoals, it is necessary to have tracked the jellyfish over a much longer period of time than the Spanish Oceanographic Institute has hitherto endeavoured.

Franco claimed that the Institute only has only had official ongoing records since 2007 whilst other regions of the Mediterranean, such as the Adriatic, have been tracking jellyfish for 30 or 40 years. Observers there have said there are cycles of ten years when there are plenty of jellyfish followed by ones of 4 or 5 years when there are few.
 
It would seem that you can never work out where they are going to end up and when they do arrive, how long they are there for.

We love CSV for swimming but unfortunately, the last couple of years have been really bad (not to be outdone we took a pedalo and had great fun). Not sure though whether all the beaches are affected, we mostly use the beaches near Don Pedro, I think Cala Clara and Cala Barques, when there are jellyfish there are they also at Cala Mollins? The bonus is the water is so clear you can see them.

It's such a shame for CSV, such a beautiful place but due to a number of factors, including the jellyfish, tourists seem to be staying away.
 
Last edited:
I'm getting worried now, I had forgotten about the jellyfish, last year it was ok in CSV because we did not go till October,but the two previous years we could hardly get near the water there were masses of them. Has anyone got any news on this we are arriving in the next couple of weeks. Also I believe there is no longer a doctor in CSV what are the best remedies for stings? and where is the nearest clinic etc. Thanks
 
I did not see any at Cala Molins when there a few weeks ago. If you get stung on the beach,go to the Red Cross guys.
 
Francesca - the lifeguards always carry anithistermine? sprays so in the event of a jellyfish sting, head for them first.
 
Hi, we are coming to Puerto Pollensa for the first time next month. We have booked an apartment without a pool as we prefer the beach. We are so worried now as have just read reports in Daily Mail that the Jelly fish have reached Alicante, Denia. Have there been any spottings on Puerto Pollensa beach yet, and do they usual appear there. Thanks for any feedback
 
Dont panic BL the jellyfish there are the tiny ones, you will have to be very unlucky to get stung, of all the years we have been going we have never been stung, well not by the jellyfish anyway ;), dont worry the are not a major problem. :)
 
Thankyou for your replies. I knew I would probably get stung (drink prices wise), but was not counting on Jellyfish stings. Are the tiny jellyfish you mentioned at puerto pollensa. I don't like the thought of any jelly fish big or small
 
I know that there were jellyfish spotted at CSV last week, but (so far) PP has not had a problem.....fingers crossed it stays like that. In the chemist they sell sun protection with anti-jellyfish ingredient added, also (I was told this by a fisherman!) if you do get stung the best stuff to put on the sting is ammonia solution (on a cloth damp with sea water), which you can also get from the chemist.

I have been taking to those in the know this year, because jellyfish seem to be attracted to my 7 year old son...last year,every time he went in the water he would be stung!!
 
I think CSV gets them worst because of the way it faces into the prevailing wind and currents, they tend to get pushed past the entrance to the Pollensa bay and only when there are strong winds or rough seas they get pushed in.
 
Back
Top