FOUR people have been left nursing their injuries after joining thousands of thrill-seekers running for their lives in the annual bull run in northern Spain.
The four injured daredevils were involved in the dangerous run as tourists and Spanish locals alike tested their agility and courage as they ran from the fighting bulls through the streets of Pamplona.
Navarra Hospital Dr. Manuel Montesino said three people suffered head injuries while another suffered an arm injury in the first run of 2016.
Many people suffered falls and were trampled on by the beasts or even other runners.
In one incident, four bulls crashed into a bunch of participants close to the end of the race, and several people narrowly missed being gored.
In the nationally televised morning runs, participants must dash along with six bulls and accompanying steer down a narrow 930-yard course from a holding pen to Pamplona's bull ring.
Each day during the nine-day fiesta, runners try and test their luck and skills at getting close to the stampeding wild bulls.
The bulls then face matadors and almost certain death in afternoon bullfights.
Thursday's run lasted 2 minutes, 28 seconds.
The San Fermin festival attracts thousands of tourists every year but the four injured in Thursday morning’s run were all Spaniards.
Bull runners often use rolled-up newspapers to point at a small san Fermin statue with candles inside a niche on the Cuesta Santo Domingo, singing a song to the saint to protect them before the start of the morning's 'encierro,' or running-with-the-bulls in the famed Fiesta de San Fermin.
The nine-day fiesta became world famous with Ernest Hemingway's 1926 novel "The Sun Also Rises" and is now one of Spain's most important tourist events.
Bull runs, or "encierros" as they are called in Spanish, are a traditional part of summer festivals across Spain. Dozens of people are injured each year in the runs, mostly in falls.
Ten people, including four Americans, were gored in last year's festival.
In all, 15 people have died from gorings in the San Fermin festival since record-keeping began in 1924.
The festival started Wednesday with the traditional midday launching of a firework rocket known as the "Chupinazo" from Pamplona's town hall balcony.