Deadly Rip Currents: How to Survive

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  • Опубликовано: 19 май 2012
  • Ginger Zee suits up to show viewers how to survive the deadly currents.

Комментарии • 703

  • @monirogue1570
    @monirogue1570 3 года назад +364

    I survived an intense rip in Florida while on vacation. I was only 16 years old and I was alone getting carried off very far from shore. When I realized it, I didn't panic. I stayed behind the line of wave breaks and allowed the current to continue carrying me out, floating at times to save energy. It took me about 30-40 minutes to get to some water I could actually swim in and then I made it back to shore. I then walked miles from somewhere at Daytona Beach back to New Smyrna Beach where my family was. When I finally made it back they didn't even realize I was gone or what had happened. I'm so grateful I didn't panic and even though I was deeper into the ocean that day than ever in my life I made it out in one piece. Best tip is DO NOT PANIC.
    Edit: I was a tourist and so was my family. My family had told me at that time that where the cars were parked on the beach just a little ways down from where our hotel was located is where Daytona Beach started. This was incorrect information that some locals in the comments corrected me on! I was only 16 at the time and a visitor, but I did end up miles down the beach somewhere near the dunes at the end of New Smyrna Beach a ways north of the Moontide Condominiums we were renting out from., and I did walk back which took me about 30-40 minutes to reach where my family was which was my point of entry into the ocean. I was exhausted and it was a very hot day as well. The water was extremely choppy that day and the rip was strong that day as well. I had no previous knowledge of rip currents before the day I wound up in one.

    • @niles2836
      @niles2836 2 года назад

      🤍

    • @brettruss3359
      @brettruss3359 2 года назад +12

      Well done! How did your family act when you told them?

    • @person8834
      @person8834 2 года назад +6

      Don’t you swim sideways/diagonally? Since the rip current is only going perpendicular to the shore?

    • @monirogue1570
      @monirogue1570 2 года назад +7

      @@brettruss3359 I never told them 🤣

    • @monirogue1570
      @monirogue1570 2 года назад +22

      @@person8834 I wasn't sure what to do, my main concern was to not wear myself out so I wouldn't drown. My feet couldn't touch the ground, the water was cold and very choppy that day so I mostly just let it carry me out. It's possible there was a better way to deal with it, but no one saw me so if I had tired myself out I would have drowned

  • @stevebehr915
    @stevebehr915 4 года назад +268

    I was in Madeira Beach, Fl. in 1978 with my two doberman dogs by my side. They decided to run into the water. I thought no sweat, they just want to cool down. All of a sudden I see them going farther and farther out to sea. I jumped up and swam after them. Was really easy to catch up to them because I felt the water was actually pulling us out to sea. THEN, I realized we were in a rip-current. In the first moment I panicked, but then I remembered what a fisherman told me about rip-currents. So, I turned on my back and grabbing the collars of both dogs, I concentrated just keeping my and their heads out of the water. With my "turbo-prop" legs I tried to guide us to shore, going first parallel to the shore. Soon, I felt we were making progress and my feet touch bottom. Home with them, and never again did I take them to the beach.

    • @cryptozoomauler5505
      @cryptozoomauler5505 3 года назад +23

      Well done! I'm glad you knew what to do. Instead of swimming straight back against the current you swam parallel out of the riptide.

    • @potatospud7903
      @potatospud7903 3 года назад +5

      I have a similar story but I was at a 5 star reviewed beach in the bahamas

    • @touchofgrey5372
      @touchofgrey5372 3 года назад +3

      @@potatospud7903
      We are all lucky to have survived!

    • @alextogo8367
      @alextogo8367 3 года назад +8

      Damn. Nicely done. Rip currents sucks. Sometimes they're difficult to spot. Another owner would've probably let them drown.

    • @touchofgrey5372
      @touchofgrey5372 3 года назад +4

      @@alextogo8367
      Thanks, they mean (meant) everything to me!

  • @breckandy
    @breckandy 9 лет назад +984

    Would have been helpful seeing her swimming parallel to the beach for 20-30' out of the rip current rather than getting a ride every time. All they showed is that you need a Sea-doo or rescuer to get out of a rip current.

    • @TheElectricBuddha
      @TheElectricBuddha 9 лет назад +77

      Exactly. She showed people what a rip current does, but not how to safely get back to shore yourself. Like you said, let it take you passed the waves, and swim sideways out of the current, parallel to shore, and ride a wave back in.

    • @TechInspected
      @TechInspected 9 лет назад +29

      breckandy Cause news is all about fear cause fear gets more people to watch. Spending the few minutes explaining how you can get out of it is essentially wasted ratings. I bet you they actually filmed the part where she escapes herself but producers cut it.

    • @breckandy
      @breckandy 9 лет назад +17

      :-)
      They should have thrown in a shark or 2 and couple of buckets of chum to make it more interesting

    • @TechInspected
      @TechInspected 9 лет назад +9

      breckandy Like those survivor or reality shows where they'll cut into shots of some lion or snake that's not even in the same country as the contestant.

    • @kovuqui
      @kovuqui 9 лет назад +2

      breckandy exactly.

  • @GG-ou2tz
    @GG-ou2tz 6 лет назад +1384

    I'm a rip current expert I have my masters degree in ripology 101 and the best way to avoid get ripped by the rip as we call it, Is to not get into the water. I'm glad I answered all your questions now I must go back down into my mothers basement

  • @GlassGenius
    @GlassGenius Год назад +65

    From 25 years as a surfer I can tell you that that urge to head straight back in is a very strong urge. Don’t presume just because you know it’s bad that you won’t do it anyway in a panicked state.

    • @jerseyboy8017
      @jerseyboy8017 Год назад +10

      Yep. Happened to me today. First thing is to recognize it. I was exhausted by the time I figured it out and paddled parallel 🏄‍♂️

    • @GUMMYBEAYUH
      @GUMMYBEAYUH 11 месяцев назад +2

      With regards to surfing, I remember the biggest issue in Hawaii was tryin to swim OUT through the waves, but being an avid swimmer (including swim team) helped me stay conditioned and confident. When it comes to Florida I'm usually boogeyboarding if the water is rough, but the surf is usually hard for catching a good wave because you get so many right behind one another with very few easily defined sets. I've felt the strong pull a few times, but luckily if it's rough I'm not diving/snorkeling so I always have the board with me. Sometimes kicks alone don't move me strongly enough, even with my short board fins, so I tuck the board further under my stomach and then use my hands to add some power, and it gets me out of it. Nobody is outswimming the strongest rips, but the average or lower end ones I can usually handle. Still, respect the water, ALWAYS, and keep in mind that predators are out there too. I'll never get cocky about handling open water.

    • @jimmcneal5292
      @jimmcneal5292 2 месяца назад

      I would have this urge, but only because I want to test my swimming skills and see if I will be able to push through the current

  • @brianlam257
    @brianlam257 8 лет назад +668

    Shouldn't she try to get back the shore using her own tip? Instead she takes a ride

    • @les21forever
      @les21forever 8 лет назад +65

      It's hard not to panic swallowing salt water. I got swept out once but my girlfriend was with me and she'd served in the Navy.and talked me through it.

    • @armancz
      @armancz 5 лет назад +10

      You git the f@ck out with your logic 'n shit

    • @7475thomas
      @7475thomas 5 лет назад +36

      Right, I thought she was going to get back in the water and show how to ride the circle

    • @Winterx69
      @Winterx69 5 лет назад +13

      Apparently her trick didn't work out too well.

    • @josmargarcia7964
      @josmargarcia7964 4 года назад +2

      Winterx69 😂😂😂

  • @OrangeTack
    @OrangeTack 2 года назад +79

    one of my friends recently drowned in a rip current. its hard to think thats hes really gone even though i still hear his young voice in my head. wish he knew what to do. its would save his life and so many people from such saddness. truly rest in peace, i love you.

  • @alexashallcross9608
    @alexashallcross9608 5 лет назад +101

    I was sucked out and almost didn’t make it back. Scariest moment of my entire life.

    • @SkopeeProductions
      @SkopeeProductions 4 года назад +8

      Same, I was exhausted and thought I was gonna drown. I relaxed and swam along the wave and managed to get out safely. This was at Laguna Beach. Where were you?

    • @karinachavez2803
      @karinachavez2803 4 года назад +2

      Happened to me in ixtapa and I never learned anything about rip currents, I swam straight and tired myself out and drank so much water, after that I didn’t get in. It happened so fast where I couldn’t feel the ground

    • @AJ-dx6bn
      @AJ-dx6bn 3 года назад +6

      Once i swim in santa maria beach,i got condom stuck in my face
      Horror like that haunts you for life

    • @marcuslindsey347
      @marcuslindsey347 3 года назад +1

      did you swim parallel to shore? if so when you did that was it hard to get out of

    • @ggoog1845
      @ggoog1845 2 года назад +1

      happened to me too, in a bar last Saturday, her name was Kate. It was that good I almost didn't make it back to my Mrs. Wasn't the scariest moment of my life like your event though, even thought we experienced the same thing?

  • @AlyM721
    @AlyM721 8 лет назад +144

    Me and my mom went to the beach yesterday and we got caught in a riptide. We were enjoying the waves like everyone else at the beach and there was a lot of people swimming. We didn't even realize until our feet couldn't touch the floor anymore and the waves were pulling us away from the shore. It was terrifying to see my mom being pulled further and further away from me as she pushed me to save me but I kept swimming towards her because I'm not going to let her drown. On top of that, wave after wave kept on hitting us. We were swimming with all of our force but the riptide was taking us. Lucky, a lifeguard came to save us! One of the most scariest things ever.

    • @chiefbeef2475
      @chiefbeef2475 7 лет назад +9

      your lucky im 12 and my cousin is a big 13 year old thete was no life guard so there was a guy luckily watching us so he helped us

    • @Alexniclo
      @Alexniclo 7 лет назад +2

      Alyssa *My mom and I...

    • @jessicaheart1387
      @jessicaheart1387 7 лет назад

      AlwaysAJ I

    • @thedude030
      @thedude030 7 лет назад +8

      Alyssa & Jay well I was 13 alone when I caught up to a rip current on a non lifeguarded beach. I swam sideways and got out.😅😅😅

    • @saminsiddiquee2059
      @saminsiddiquee2059 6 лет назад +11

      Is this the right forum? Someone almost drowned, and you are correcting English?

  • @LB-lx8iq
    @LB-lx8iq 4 года назад +178

    Who is here after shad wen missing for saving his son

    • @ALR760.
      @ALR760. 4 года назад

      Luis Beltran I am

    • @kassandrarivera3578
      @kassandrarivera3578 4 года назад

      🙋

    • @tahjo7
      @tahjo7 4 года назад +7

      Me too, the local news in LA needs to rerun this PSA, I never knew this info, that's the least they can do, so he doesn't die in vain.

    • @alextogo8367
      @alextogo8367 4 года назад +2

      Somewhat yeah. I was actually at the same beach at the same spot today. Where his body was found. There was a squad of lifeguards. Those waves were strong. Felt like I was in one of those currents. And waves were coming back to back When I made it back to shore I was about 25 yards away from where I started😂 sucked ass.

    • @LB-lx8iq
      @LB-lx8iq 4 года назад

      @@alextogo8367 I'm from cali but recently moved to AZ I heard Cali was on lockdown cause of coviid or is it over and ppl can go out as they plz I was surprised I thought nobody can go to the beach that is awesome tho Az suck no beach only lake waterfall jeje

  • @rousseaupatrick94
    @rousseaupatrick94 7 лет назад +333

    Watch from 4:05 til the end of the video. You're welcome.

    • @lz4181
      @lz4181 6 лет назад +1

      rousseaupatrick94 lmfao! Hahahahahahahaha

    • @nxhuncho
      @nxhuncho 5 лет назад

      😂🤣 thanks

    • @mdeorian
      @mdeorian 5 лет назад +1

      Someone give this man a medal

  • @seeno1
    @seeno1 6 лет назад +32

    I got caught in a brutal current in Hawaii..got sucked out pretty far, initially tried swimming to shore but realized I wasn't making any progress, so swam across it..when I finally reached shore I was a good 1/3 mile away from where I entered...I didn't panic, good swimmer, pretty comfortable in open waters, but I can imagine if someone weren't it could've turned much worse

    • @GUMMYBEAYUH
      @GUMMYBEAYUH 11 месяцев назад

      In Molokini crater off Maui they had us swim to the 300' drop off at the edge, and they said that you'd face a very strong current (the water is only 2 feet deep at the edge, so it has a really big sucking action outwards), but not to panic, and let it carry you out and they'll pick you up in the zodiac. The minute I felt the pull I said "Forget that nonsense", as I looked down into the dark abyss and pictured a big old shark smiling up from the depths at me (which later on they did photograph a great white doing exactly that down there). I kicked my fins so hard and broke loose from the current and made it back to the boat in one piece.

    • @michaelmolitor7390
      @michaelmolitor7390 8 месяцев назад

      yes eveyrone with rip current in trouble , don't NO HOW to SWIM PEROD. THEY ARE FUN, I float on them float out at 50 yard tiil it stop, the current waves bring me back in no problem enjoy the ocean, swimming in the big waves is enjoyable. No big deal.

  • @barbaraalva2830
    @barbaraalva2830 5 лет назад +32

    I’m a great swimmer and I was in Miami couple of months ago, I was swimming and out of nowhere it got very deep and I started to get sucked into the ocean and I realized that swimming back was not doing anything, I started to get tired and I definitely thought this was it, I was gonna die, eventually I was able to get back , but best advise I can tell u is if u take your family to the ocean don’t go deeper than your knees and I will never swim in the ocean again, rememembering that experience I can tell u that any other person with mediocre swimming skills would have drowned, I was so lucky I didn’t die

    • @alextogo8367
      @alextogo8367 4 года назад

      Unless you have a surf board. You ride a wave back to shore

    • @elihuwilliams9346
      @elihuwilliams9346 3 года назад +2

      If this is what a "great" swimmer is, I'm not sure what adjective is left for those of us who are trying for open water anyway and won't be setting foot in the shallows for a couple of hours.

    • @opwave79
      @opwave79 2 года назад +1

      A caveat to the don’t go deeper than your knees - learn how to spot a rip current from the beach and avoid going into the water in that area altogether. Some rip currents are so strong that it can pull you out even if you’re wading calf deep in the water.

    • @GUMMYBEAYUH
      @GUMMYBEAYUH 11 месяцев назад

      Maybe "Elite"? Lol. Hey, I'll take the title if it's being offered.

    • @boynxtdoor5886
      @boynxtdoor5886 23 дня назад

      The same thing just happened to me a week ago in Puerto Rico I’m honestly scared to get back in the ocean after that experience I won’t go anything past my knees. It ruined my vacation for sure

  • @misskyekye
    @misskyekye 6 лет назад +115

    As we say in Australia white is nice, green is mean!

    • @billwilliams9897
      @billwilliams9897 4 года назад +13

      So the white foam is where the waves come to shore, and the green water without foam is going out?

    • @Mister_Soyuz_on_YT
      @Mister_Soyuz_on_YT 4 года назад +2

      Thank you. Can we make her comment the Top so everyone can see instantly.

    • @JohnFekoloid
      @JohnFekoloid 4 года назад +7

      This is the best advice I have got. Thanks so much
      I'm a Nigerian and over here we just fear the whole beach without understanding what's really happening. Many have died though. Always same story, "he/she got pulled far into the water and drowned... They couldn't find the body".

    • @loneshadow6692
      @loneshadow6692 3 года назад +4

      stop being racist.

    • @sonnybill8271
      @sonnybill8271 3 года назад +3

      @@loneshadow6692 can you explain exactly where in her comment is she being racist? and prior to that can you uppercut yourself please? Thank you

  • @conspiracylibrary2848
    @conspiracylibrary2848 6 лет назад +75

    4m 28s summed up as this.
    Dont try to fight the current.
    Swim to the side till out of the current, then swim back to shore.
    Done.
    Would have been cool if she showed us how it works...

    • @steadyfetti
      @steadyfetti 2 года назад

      Other than being hot she’s worthless

  • @reese3005
    @reese3005 8 лет назад +58

    How useless! She didn't demonstrate it in the clip, caught rides, but SPEAK about what one should do after? Booo! USELESS SEGMENT.

    • @MeepMeep88
      @MeepMeep88 7 лет назад +6

      It shows at the end of the video what to do. 4:07
      4:15 "and then you can get back to where you came from"
      as in AFTER you're out of the rip current, start swimming back to shore.
      But yea, they did brush through that quick. 4 minute video and only 10 seconds of saying what we should do after. Laziness on their part

    • @dubstepforever99
      @dubstepforever99 5 лет назад

      ye but its useless if she cant even use her own tip

  • @matthewperaza2420
    @matthewperaza2420 3 года назад +29

    I've experienced rips on the Atlantic ocean that move almost parallel to the beach. What I've been told is when the current is moving horizontal let it take you down the beach and relax. It will take you to a weaker part of the current where you may be able to swim back in on your own.

    • @pattyhustad8198
      @pattyhustad8198 Год назад +4

      Exactly, don't fight the current by swimming into it, trying to get back to land. Let the current take you where it will, probably very horizontal route, if you do not panic, you will find shallow water down stream to swim back to land. You can easily be a mile down the water stream (or more) but letting the current take you to a safer route to swim back to shore is the way to beat a rip tide.

    • @GUMMYBEAYUH
      @GUMMYBEAYUH 11 месяцев назад

      A buddy of mine who's a VERY strong swimmer was out for this usual workout one day, and he kept making slower progress than usual as he swan up and down the beach, and yeah, the current was the issue. It was kind of funny in hindsight, because it was more an obstacle than a threat since it was a parallel (to the beach) current.

    • @mikebranch7928
      @mikebranch7928 4 месяца назад

      The current that goes along the beach is not a rip. It’s a longshore current usually associated with swell. In summer long shore pushes from south to north in winter from north to south.

  • @AnswersEasy
    @AnswersEasy 9 лет назад +24

    Dr. Newdell here: Mind you, Ginger is a young phys. fit woman. Older, less fit people should understand to swim sideways parallel to the beach if they find they're suddenly distant from shore. Cold water and swimming when you have not for perhaps years will tire you quickly, so remember the advice given in this video and others here, wait at least 45-minutes after eating to swim, and observe the surf before going out. The low "valley"s on the beach and smooth blue green "roads" going out are rip-currents. They're like drains pulling you out. Avoid them. Swim where life guards say you're safe, between flags, and raise a hand and call out if you're in trouble.

    • @keithferguson734
      @keithferguson734 5 лет назад +2

      Way to plug your Doc status there Steve ... do you ask that everyone refer to you as "Doctor Newdell"? Hubris, ever heard of it?

    • @notveryrea1
      @notveryrea1 5 лет назад +1

      @@keithferguson734 He's giving help and you're being an asshole.

  • @SkopeeProductions
    @SkopeeProductions 4 года назад +7

    Got stuck in a rip current at Laguna Beach about 4 years ago. For some reason I remembered hearing somewhere to swim along the waves in order to get out and was able to make it out of the water safe.

  • @RedNumber19
    @RedNumber19 9 месяцев назад +3

    They are terrifying because of the way they just take you. You can’t feel it but, they do just grab you and suddenly, without knowing, you’re going 7 m/s away from the shore

  • @omnifilm
    @omnifilm 4 года назад +221

    How many people are watching this because of Shad Gaspard ?

  • @bmoni3663
    @bmoni3663 4 года назад +22

    I been in one on the ocean in Florida. It was VERY rough and a storm was approaching. The beach was closed for swimming and I went in. My smart friend stayed on shore. All of a sudden I was being swept out VERY quickly. I didn't panic but I knew I was in big trouble. Luckily I grew up on lake Erie and have been in similar situations but not quite as intense as this. What I did was dive to the bottom and basically claw my hands and feet into the sand like a dog and come up for air when I needed it. I was completely exhausted when I made it back to shore and the first thing I did was kiss the beach. Panama City Beach to be exact. That's my advice. Had I tried to battle the current by swimming I'd be dead FOR SURE

    • @Nourtrue
      @Nourtrue Год назад

      Thank you!

    • @mikebranch7928
      @mikebranch7928 4 месяца назад

      Lol was this written by an ai? This video explains the correct thing to do. Diving under water just increases your oxygen debt.

    • @tongsllc
      @tongsllc 3 месяца назад

      How deep is bottom? Claw your way to the bottom wastes energy! What then? Hold your breath?

  • @edgararcega3046
    @edgararcega3046 5 лет назад +30

    A while back I once unknowingly got caught in a RIP that pulled me out far from the beach. Luckily I had my boogey board and I just ended up using that to catch a wave back to the beach. I didn't even know or attempt to go back where I came from like most people do when they get caught in a rip. The whole time I didnt even know that my life was in danger. I just thought that I had lost track of how far I went out.

    • @lindseyhendrix2405
      @lindseyhendrix2405 2 года назад +1

      This has happened to me multiple times as a kid in the Gulf of Mexico in Texas. Realizing I was so far from my family and just dreading the way back or trying to catch a solid wave back in. Horrifying thinking back to how often and how young I was!

  • @-Muhammad_Ali-
    @-Muhammad_Ali- 5 лет назад +9

    I think they said half the story. The other half is it is basically close to impossible for an ordinary vacationer to escape the rip. Look at the girl, by the way of her swimming ahe is not a beginner. Even she couldn't make it out on her own without a help and she was prepared, equipped and aware. If it was an ordinary Joe, by the time he understands he is in a rip he will be very well disoriented. After he realizes that he is in a rip current comes the difficult part. How does he know where to swim? With those waves pounding you it is very difficult to make a right choise. Then after swimming diagonally there is still a chance of getting into the same rip current if it is kinda like a twisted in shape. To sum up, without a help or a floating stuff you are as good as dead. Very few people have capabilities to stay afloat for 30 minutes or more or who can swim 300-400meters.

    • @GUMMYBEAYUH
      @GUMMYBEAYUH 11 месяцев назад +3

      I appreciate your comment, because I never get cocky about just how dangerous water can be, despite the fact that I can swim for hours and miles at a time nonstop. No one is invincible, some of us are just more capable of handling it, but those if us who are more capable tend to respect the dangers and plan for them ahead of time. Pretending that dangers don't exist is not something that an experienced swimmer would ever do.

  • @MA-kx4oo
    @MA-kx4oo 4 года назад +10

    I was waiting for her advise but was shocked when the guard came to help 😂😂😂😂😂😂😂

  • @Ten4Ben
    @Ten4Ben Год назад +3

    Good to be tuned in to these “current” events.

  • @LimitlessBruce
    @LimitlessBruce Год назад +16

    I’m a really strong swimmer and I was caught in a rip current whilst swimming in Miami South Beach, November last year
    After a few alcoholic beverages I thought it would be a good idea to swim out ‘until my feet didn’t touch the ground’ There were a few waves crashing about so I swam in the water which looked “calmer”. Then I thought it would be cool to go past the floating buoys and then turn back.
    Then as I started trying to swim back I noticed I wasn’t getting any closer to shore and I was getting a LOT more tired than usual. There were no lifeguards on duty and I was so far out that I doubt anyone would’ve seen/ heard me even if I signalled for help.
    Luckily I remember watching a couple of RUclips videos about rips and the main thing they said to do is NOT TO PANIC. So I took a deep breath, filled my lungs with oxygen and started to float on my back. Once I got my breath back, I started swimming horizontally to shore doing what I call the “octopus” stroke 😂😂
    Took me around 15 minutes to get out of the rip and back to shore but it felt like a LIFETIME. (It didn’t help that I brushed alongside some jellyfish that I thought were deadly on the way back either)
    The day after the ordeal there were extreme rip current warnings for Miami Beach and lifeguards weren’t letting anyone go further than knee deep..
    I’m a very composed individual and even I was SURE I was going to die that day
    Safe to say I won’t be drinking next time I go in the sea..

    • @danielul05
      @danielul05 10 месяцев назад

      Drinking and then swimming is insane

  • @AnunnakiPriesthood
    @AnunnakiPriesthood 4 года назад +3

    I always just swim out, and the ocean whispers "not today..." and brings me back to shore...

  • @Aaronivoify
    @Aaronivoify 10 лет назад +111

    The number one thing to do when in a rip is to remain calm.... so ABC make it looks scary.... Logic.

    • @klixtrio7760
      @klixtrio7760 7 лет назад +8

      I agree...."IN SECONDS IM PULLED OUT"

    • @YouTubeExplore777
      @YouTubeExplore777 5 лет назад

      So calm you do nothing, just sink.

    • @maithilym4717
      @maithilym4717 4 года назад

      The bg music. Love it

    • @Luuhpan
      @Luuhpan 3 года назад +1

      It's scary, and If you can't get help or don't know exactly what do you have a high chance of dying, doesn't matter how good a swimmer you are.

  • @davep6977
    @davep6977 5 лет назад +12

    I was a teenager back in the 70's and lived in a beach town on Lake Michigan.
    This whole "new" strategy just came out a few years ago. Guess what RIP currents have been around for ever. We used play in the water during high waves. Loved the white caps and figured it out way back then. If it sucked you out, just do a float on your back. It might be aways, but eventually it bring you back to shore. Maybe the next town over, so you had a walk.
    So, when they came out with this campaign a few years ago, it was like No Shit lol.
    If it didn't work, I wouldn't be here. FYI I'm not a very strong swimmer. We figured it out watching drift wood. Human nature, you're going to take the easy way. So, float and don't wear yourself out.
    There more mishaps here because tourist come here and think Lake Michigan is a big swimming pool since it's an inland lake and not the ocean. They get surprised by the RIP currents. Know the water before you go into it. Stay safe!
    Oh, Hello Ginger. I was one your weather spotters when you were in Chicago doing wx and chasing tornado's.

  • @ethanthomas5393
    @ethanthomas5393 5 лет назад +7

    The waves aren’t supposed to break until they are close to the beach, so when you go far out you can just hop over the waves

  • @McNighthawk750
    @McNighthawk750 8 лет назад +5

    Remember to swim back to shore downward of the rip current otherwise you get caught in it again.
    In the illustration, the swimmer returned to the left of the rip, well... you go out again.
    Be cognisant of the wind direction/ general water current before entering for a rec. swim (pools excluded)

  • @kdooley3435
    @kdooley3435 7 лет назад +12

    me and my mom got stuck in one. I realized that we were getting pulled out pretty fast and told my mom she was too far out. she didn't believe me but listen and slowly tried to come in. thinking she was behind me I rode the few weak waves that were coming in along with kicking furiously no you're standard stroke more of like using my legs and feet as flippers, and somehow I made it into a relatively safer area only to look back and see my mom still struggling to get nearer to the shore. however it wasn't just her this time there was a little kid getting sucked out as well. a lifeguard came and asked my mom if she. needed help she declined and eventually made it to the. beach (it wasn't tremendously strong but it. was quick) however it was then that I noticed the kid bring pulled further away from us and the lifeguard began to swim to him and guide him in. two other kids eventually got. sucked out a little later on and the family and lifeguard had. to go get them. no one was hurt but boy was it scary. I don't know how I managed to get. myself in I never learned the standard stroke I have a more natural way of kicking. I chalk it up to God, my astrological sign Pisces a fish, and my respect of the ocean.

    • @Sorestlor
      @Sorestlor 7 лет назад +1

      I was at a beach near a reef for a day with my family. The water was crystal clear and the scenery was amazing. As we walked up (we were never there before) we couldn't see really any waves. It looked pretty much even. Im always pretty cautious at a beach for the first time but i got a little jump scare when i entered that water. As you enter the water the inital portion is a constant ~1 foot deep but then all of a sudden one stem and it goes down 2 more feet almost instantly think 80 degree slope. Man did i get scared and i could see the ocean floor too but i didn't see that. After that the beach is level for a long time and then barely slopes down. But again there were no waves but now i noticed swells coming in. They were not really tall maby 10 cm above the normal water level. But when the first one hit it moved me with it with incredible force. If you tried to stay still it would move you a few steps forward no matter what. But that was more of an interesting finding. These small swells with more force than 10 foot tall waves i sat at other beaches ive been to (thats the kind of beach my family likes. we likes being in the giant waves). That isn't the main thing though. Only when the swells came did the water move otherwise it was effectively a pool. But i walked out a little farther then as i was taking a step underwater the water my foot hit was all of a sudden old. From pretty warm to cold in an instant. I stepped in to cold and back out into warmth. Now i was a little spooked cause sometimes there are pokets of cool water but they tend to move and arent really actually cold. I took another carefull stem then a current crazy stong pushed my foot to the left. I stepped forward to get it back on the ground then it grapped and pulled at my whole body. I tried by best to stabalize but could only manage to slow my leftward motion i had to keep moving my feet left not to be pushed over. My body was sort of shoecked by the cold water and i was beginning to panic but i was able to step forward after only a few seconds in the current. But i had moved several metres left. I had check the water infront already so i new that was safe but i was suprized by the insane speed of the water. While this was the cause if panic i showed my family who could swill well the current and it became a source of entertainment after the lifguard showed up. I couldn't quite outswim it in its strongest spot put my dad and cousin could and i had seen that the current actually goes into a shallow reef and not out to sea so it was not any any point life threatening unless you panicked since you could still touch the ground. A crazy beach that really shows the power of the ocean. It just casually flings you around as if you were a feather in the wind.

  • @sunnirobertson4316
    @sunnirobertson4316 2 года назад +5

    When I was 13 my friends and I were surfing and we got stuck in a rip current and we were struggling for like 15 minutes to stay afloat and we were yelling for help. I got so tired and I felt like giving up. We got rescued and we were done surfing for the day after that.

  • @Spacegoat92
    @Spacegoat92 2 года назад +4

    I got caught in a rip twice at Byron Bay when i was about 12/13 years old. It really sucked because at that age i didn't know what to look for, and there was a rather deep channel running out to sea where the rip was. It was especially strong at high tide. First time i got out pretty quick as i was closer to shore and was able to get good footing, but the second time, hell, i put my feet down and could only barely touch, and i could feel myself getting pulled out.

    My brother was off snorkeling around a wreck so he was no good to me, suddenly i remembered my swimming classes at school and my teacher telling us what to do if we ever got caught in a rip, so i started swimming across the rip. I remember thinking "If MIss Ranger could see me now!!!" I made it out of the channel then it was about waist deep and i walked out. Never went swimming there again, and am pretty reluctant to go in the surf anywhere unless conditions are pretty much perfect.

  • @govindagovindaji4662
    @govindagovindaji4662 9 лет назад +28

    Not a very helpful video; seems done for show only & w the expense of the US Coast Guard. Seen much better demo videos.

  • @249erx4
    @249erx4 5 лет назад +6

    I went in one in Greece and made it back to the beach absolutely exhausted

  • @hustler-music
    @hustler-music 5 лет назад +9

    2:95
    Rips aren’t that obvious, most of the time they’re just darker patches of water, not massive swirls in the sea.

  • @sirih4085
    @sirih4085 6 лет назад +63

    "deadlier than lightning, hurricanes and tornados combined" .......... ok ginger.

    • @dubstepforever99
      @dubstepforever99 5 лет назад +13

      it claims more lifes because people dont know what to do when it happens.

    • @maggiedestinyrdzzz8393
      @maggiedestinyrdzzz8393 5 лет назад +6

      siri H it kills more people because we always see tornado safety videos and everything but this literally just says is your in a riptide call a lifeguard,well where I’m from there are no lifeguards so good luck getting out

    • @arman4chok
      @arman4chok 4 года назад

      That's called statistics - she hyped 4 sure that statement... This is how people steal your attention

    • @Tempusverum
      @Tempusverum 4 года назад +1

      That statistic is literally impossible. The Rip Current kills people in the water. On any given day at the beach, you might see a few hundred ppl on the shore, and 50 at most in the water, because news like this makes ppl into terrified landlubbers. Lightning covers the entire continent, and tornado’s most of the South. Several hundred thousand square feet vs. a coastline. Same goes for shark attacks, thought they lie with statistics there too.

    • @saltservice4024
      @saltservice4024 3 года назад

      @@Tempusverum Yeah lol I've been going to beaches to swim in the sea all of my life nearly, so about 30 years... Being absolutely honest I didn't even know these things existed.
      I knew about tide and currents and how much effect those things have....But yeah I agree, I don't think people need to be afraid to swim in the sea. As you quite nicely put it "terrified landlubbers", we don't need those.
      Useful video but the pretense was poor, I agree.

  • @madison8450
    @madison8450 5 лет назад +11

    My friend Matilda and I got stuck in it, luckily I'm a strong swimmer and I got out easily but she wasn't so lucky. She had to scream for help and she was far out for 5 minutes and I was so scared for her, I swallowed so much water and I though she was going to drown. But someone came to rescue her. And they weren't a lifeguard the lifeguards did nothing to help the swimmers were the people who helped. We were lucky that we got out.

    • @steadyfetti
      @steadyfetti 2 года назад

      You’re not a strong swimmer

    • @charleshoang7687
      @charleshoang7687 2 года назад

      @@steadyfetti You are correct strong swimmers don't swallow a lot of water.

    • @GUMMYBEAYUH
      @GUMMYBEAYUH 11 месяцев назад

      I'm a very strong swimmer, and I've taken gulps of water here and there. Sometimes it's next to impossible not to get a gulp when you're in really heavy crashing chop. I've never had to stop swimming because of it, though (just once as a kid, but I kept on swimming after I composed myself and finished the race at least). Everybody's definition of "good swimmer" is definitely different, though, my one friend thinks he's really good but he can't maintain a stroke for more than a lap or two at a time (25m pool). I worry about some people, and I say this as someone who's been in all kinds of water and can swim for many miles and hours at a time. If you're experienced, then you also understand realistic dangers and prepare for them. It's the somewhat capable but inexperienced and super lucky types that I worry about the most.

  • @Ttungpi
    @Ttungpi Год назад +1

    4 of my friends and I almost died due to rip current last week Saturday. Thank God we were able to get back to the short.

  • @phallachan4762
    @phallachan4762 9 лет назад +8

    I used to swim in deep water and strong wave when I was kid no equiqments..but then nothings happen to me sometime I go far and deeper is hard to comeback, I never know it was called (rip current) one time I experience like this I just follow the wave to take me far after that I come back.

  • @kpehr1
    @kpehr1 4 года назад +3

    They DO NOT always happen near piers and jettis. They happen on open beaches all the time!!!

  • @shanemachado1422
    @shanemachado1422 7 лет назад +55

    They are so overly dramatic! Rips are crazy dangerous and gnarly but really coast guard? A lifeguard on a board is all that's needed

  • @JK-cz6bu
    @JK-cz6bu 3 года назад +3

    Short version: stay calm. Don't swim against ripcurrent. swim parallel to the beach (perpendicular to ripcurrent) a relatively short distance until you are out of ripcurrent and then swim back to shore. 4:00

  • @ametexi
    @ametexi 5 лет назад +5

    Once i was at the beach during the night (dont ask why i was there so late....and no i didnt go into the water) and there was this group of people crying hysterically screaming someones name out into the ocean...i dont even want to know what happened but i think i already know...i feel so bad for them😢

  • @joannot6706
    @joannot6706 2 года назад +3

    I just realized more than a decade later that this is the thing that almost killed me when I was 8 in Madagascar.
    Luckily some white guy out of nowhere saved me, I was very lucky since that beach was deserted.

  • @Achcautli69
    @Achcautli69 2 года назад +3

    Who else was waiting for her to show us how to survive a rip current?

  • @dizzyplayz4507
    @dizzyplayz4507 3 года назад

    Thank you for the awareness and advice.

  • @velvet9724
    @velvet9724 11 месяцев назад

    I’m 26 just now learning about this. I feel so dumb to not know this was a danger. I’m happy to have the knowledge now for my kiddos.

  • @teryanceford1534
    @teryanceford1534 2 года назад +3

    when i was about 8 i was out in the ocean with my younger sister and cousin. we looked back and all of a sudden we were out left and way far away from where my family was. being so young i didn't understand what was happening but i think my cousin did. once we had feet on the ground we tried running towards shore but it just sunk us deeper and farther away from the shore. we eventually decided to go sideways and luckily we made it out.

  • @Okbroski
    @Okbroski 11 месяцев назад +2

    The only way to survive is to stay calm. Don’t fight the water. Wait it out. Float. Understand the situation and relax.

  • @lz4181
    @lz4181 6 лет назад +2

    I'm sure every life guard volunteered for this detail!

  • @billwilliams9897
    @billwilliams9897 4 года назад

    Ive been right there where she was. The Levee behind here is at the southern end of Mission beach. In 1988 I was 18 years old and traveled from Oklahoma to Mission Beach California on a adventure. I was a very good swimmer...and outdoors person growing up in the country. I was about to go out in the ocean in this exact same spot...right at the levee. This really young kid came running up and told me not to go in. I almost didn't listen to him, but something inside me made me stop. I had never seen the ocean before. Now 31 years later I see this. That kid saved my life.

  • @kareembrown1673
    @kareembrown1673 4 года назад +1

    You’re saving thousands this summer Shad. RIP

  • @Imprxss
    @Imprxss 4 года назад +8

    REST IN PEACE SHAD

  • @sabarca714
    @sabarca714 3 года назад

    Something to keep in mind thank you for this.

  • @x0o0ox_
    @x0o0ox_ 3 года назад +5

    Got Caught In A Rip Current When i Was 4 Years Old My Big Sister Knew How To Escape It And I Got Saved I Thank My Big Sister ❤️

  • @johnmchale6667
    @johnmchale6667 9 месяцев назад

    Good info,I could watch you all day.

  • @Lakeboii70
    @Lakeboii70 5 лет назад +2

    i was in Florida in 1990 by the sea pier and was caught in a rip tided i was at the end of the pier by the time i realized i was being swept ed out to see i tried to swim hard but to no good so i dove under-the water deep under the waves and swam back as hard as i could no one came to my aid as i was right by the pier at the of it and no one helped even as they could see that i was swimming hard to get back with no progress i had to save myself.

  • @notnono5342
    @notnono5342 7 лет назад +8

    what the people saying this is dramatic don't understand is that when you've got water left and right and below you and waves smacking into your face while realizing that you're really far from where you were moments ago, full blown panic hits you smack dab in the face with no mercy. it's not that easy to 'just swim away from it' or the death toll wouldn't have been so high

    • @-Muhammad_Ali-
      @-Muhammad_Ali- 5 лет назад +3

      amna exactly my point. You won't know where is parallel and where is that "diagonal path". By the time most people realize it is already 100 meters. That will be like 300 meters of swimming if you count all the floating, detouring and other maneuvers. Scary stuff..

    • @rital312
      @rital312 5 лет назад

      Yes, it is easy to swim away!
      It's just that people don't know how to and, as you said, they panic.
      Once you know, it's easy and even fun to play with

    • @SOVESOVE3
      @SOVESOVE3 5 лет назад +1

      @@rital312 yeah be carefull playing tho cuz sometimes you underestermate them most of the time its fine but if ur surfing point breaks on near jetties you dont wanna get smashed in the rock same with swimming

  • @MrMinecraft1445
    @MrMinecraft1445 8 лет назад +53

    Hundreds of yards? Are you kidding me? Not even 50 yards.

    • @mobamba6401
      @mobamba6401 6 лет назад +9

      Aaron M lol that was like 150 yards

  • @chrisridenhour
    @chrisridenhour 4 года назад +3

    Wish we could see her swim out of it parallel and back to shore like in the animation at the end. But very helpful anyway.

  • @thelastdefenderofcamelot5623
    @thelastdefenderofcamelot5623 8 лет назад +2

    our beach ball got caught in a rip current and we tried to retrieve it but the wind and the current just kept pushing it further away from the beach so I said forget it. its not worth it. we were still able to swim back to shore.

  • @kaylinhanna5240
    @kaylinhanna5240 5 лет назад +4

    I was never taught how to get out of on of these so last year, it was just like she described, I looked back to see my family shouting at me to get back after swimming out at least 50' and used common sense to swim not straight back but how they described it. Thought I was going to die

  • @someoneelse.2252
    @someoneelse.2252 9 лет назад +49

    60 degrees... ooooo.
    Must be cold, poor baby.

  • @bbdollqt
    @bbdollqt Год назад +5

    When I hear about this I think about how lucky I am, in the 90's when I was about 7 or 8 years old I would go boogie boarding in La Jolla and actually loved to find a riptide to take me out far, but I didn't know it was a dangerous thing back then, it was just like a fast way to get out far. Once I got so far I could barely see the beach, I would float around for a while out there where it was calm with my board and wait for some good waves to ride back. My parents didn't even care. Maybe they didn't know about riptides either since we were from AZ. For whatever reason though I just remember there being so many different people way out there in the ocean with me, people just chilling so far out in the calm waters, maybe they were surfing or boogie boarding too. It was really fun, just dangerous now that I think of it, and thinking of sharks now, ugh, lol.

    • @BanjoBitty
      @BanjoBitty Год назад

      I grew up in San Diego and I was always so scared of rip currents, even when I was little. The signs scared me. I never went into the deep water. I would just use my boogie board to ride the baby waves that were close to shore. Lol

    • @GUMMYBEAYUH
      @GUMMYBEAYUH 11 месяцев назад

      Yeah, all the swimming to get my surfboard out to a set in Maui would've been aided by the perfect rip, but it's definitely dicey IMO unless you really know where it ends and there's experienced people around to keep you company. In very rough chop, and/or by myself, I don't want to get pulled out, especially when the 100 yard mark represents a sudden dropoff where bull sharks are known to lurk.

    • @GUMMYBEAYUH
      @GUMMYBEAYUH 11 месяцев назад

      ETA: when I say "by myself", I ALWAYS have someone at least keeping an eye on me from shore. I hope nobody ever truly goes into the ocean completely alone.

  • @ManySadSmiles
    @ManySadSmiles 9 лет назад +16

    For the answer to "How to Survive", go to 4:05

  • @utilars
    @utilars 3 года назад

    Thank you, but is there any way to use these to your advantage in Ironman Florida? I can swim the 2.4 miles in calm water but choppy water and currents tear me up. I have less than half the power of a pro or elite swimmer so I'm struggling to make the 2 hour and 20 minute cutoff time. If I remember correctly, the pros can do that swim in less than an hour. It's likely going to take me the whole 2 hours and 20 minutes and I'm pushing hard...

  • @panzerdragon1121
    @panzerdragon1121 7 лет назад +2

    So I got pulled by a rip current then a giant ass wave went "Nope." And literally threw me on the beach. I had a pretty bad sprained wrist and a broken boogey board, but I was OK.

  • @Postermaestro
    @Postermaestro 4 года назад +1

    man hit that front double bi real quick after he saved her

  • @helloworld269
    @helloworld269 2 года назад +1

    Dealt with one Boca Raton. Didn't panic. Went opposite/diagonal got out.

  • @glennrosa234
    @glennrosa234 2 года назад

    When i was surfing alot in hawaii back in th 80s at a north shore spot as the tide got higher the waves do too , long story short 3 surfers & I in an instant were in a Rip going out several hundred yards moving paralel with the shore ,i was the most experienced only to know that this rip takes you to Kauai, i remember being told you can nevet swim against the current but you can try to go sideways ,in this case it would be to the shore, i explained to the others ,couple of them were scared and wanted to float to where ever it would take them & hope their friends would get help I told them No we stick together , we can do it long story short after 45 -50 mins of paddleing to reach shore we made it to shore several miles down from where we started with the help of the waves pounding us to shore but just glad to be alive , was an experience that will stand out in life, with the Moral of "never give up" very scary tho......thanx for the Vlog👊✌🤙

  • @dharmabeachbum6330
    @dharmabeachbum6330 11 лет назад +1

    Indeed, msmusik, the water did get deeper as you got closer to shore. You were walking down from a sand bar into slightly deeper waters. Rip currents form when water goes back to the ocean from the beach between side-by-side sand bars. You must relax and swim parallel to shore for a short time. As the reporter said, the rip currents themselves often aren't very wide. By swimming parallel to the beach, you will very likely reach less treacherous waters.

  • @alabamajenny8751
    @alabamajenny8751 Год назад

    Excellent video! Thanks 🌊

  • @420milesmemes
    @420milesmemes 10 месяцев назад

    Yesterday night i was out with friends celebrating birthday to a friend of mine. We stayed there all night i remember getting high with them and then go to swim in the sea. I spent almost the whole night just swimming in the sea while getting high with a break of 10 minutes after swimming for like an hour and repeat. Somewhere between 4AM and 5AM i decided to go swimming and my friend who was the birthday girl decided to join me. We went into the sea and i stated chilling like always and still touching the ground, and she liked to lay on her back and close her eyes, and thats what lead her to get caught in a rip. While i was still chilling in q safe zone, i remember her screaming my name and at first i thought she was calling for me from the shore because she was worried but then i realized that her screaming went from a deeper place in the sea. I rememver that i immediately started swimming towards her to try to get her out or at least help her but then i suddenly felt the intense water that was sucking me into the sea. We started swimming towards the shore with all of our power and i was so high i started panicking while screaming to her to keep on swimming. I was so close to give up because i was so tired and then she screamed at me that she feel the ground, and then i just started swimming as fast as i can and i felt that too. We eventually managed to survive that rip and get back to the shore but that was the last time of that night that i entered the sea.

  • @annabowen6835
    @annabowen6835 4 года назад +2

    I got caught in a rip current a month ago on the Fort Lauderdale beach while lifegaurds were on duty just not watching. I am still terrified to this day. I am just lucky my dad was able to grab me

  • @giannibleya7690
    @giannibleya7690 5 лет назад +1

    Those whirlpools at the end of the rip current are scary. You see, in nature nothing can be formed out of nothing and dissolve into nothing, so if you fill a glass with water you will never drink more water than it is in the bottle. Therefore, when the waves push the water towards the shore, it builds up and has to go back. It just can't stay above the normal water level. So it finds a nice spot to go back, and where water goes there is the whirlpool.

  • @ALLFORYOUCambodia
    @ALLFORYOUCambodia 3 года назад

    Thanks for sharing the useful experience. All best wishes and good health

  • @sethobrien3315
    @sethobrien3315 5 лет назад +1

    Once my dad told me that once he was on vacation with my mom and my grandparents and my dad was in the water and the RIP current was dragging him towards the ocean. He was trying to yell for help. He did get out of the water but what he told me was to swimm diagonal of the current.

  • @Soothsayer210
    @Soothsayer210 3 года назад +1

    it did NOT suck you hundreds of feet away from the shore as you claim. In fact it is more like less than 100 yard. Rip currents normally dissipate in about a 100 yard from shore where it is deeper so that the current does not have enough volume to carry on.

  • @abcdef2069
    @abcdef2069 2 года назад +1

    at oregon coast sometimes, the current flow along the shoreline was so fast (maybe 30 miles per hour) and so long, i couldnt even guess the size of this "rip current feeder area", and no visible waves there, i didnt see whirlpool there. this video was the only one that said about the size of the rip curent about 100 yards far out. but from oregon's news once i watched, "rip current feeder length to its mouth of it seemed like a mile long and not 50 yards , this kind of rip current i saw in real life reminded me a hell or ultima underworld 8 pagan's ocean, dreadful. so fast so big

  • @Alexniclo
    @Alexniclo 7 лет назад +2

    My father and I were caught in a rip current once. It was so scary!!!

  • @thomasjefferson6334
    @thomasjefferson6334 10 месяцев назад +1

    My neighbor just died yesterday due to a riptide sucking him and his 2 kids out. He drowned trying to save his kids. Luckily they survived but he didn't.

  • @kirztengaming9673
    @kirztengaming9673 5 лет назад +6

    3:35 I THOUGHT IT WAS A SHARK!lol

  • @jerseyboy8017
    @jerseyboy8017 Год назад

    Got caught in one today while surfing in Washington state on Straights of Juan de Fuca. No bueno. And I can confirm you cannot paddle faster than the rip current. By the time I figured it out I was 200 yards away from beach well beyond all others. Don’t panic and paddle or swim parallel to beach to get out of it. 🏄‍♂️🌊

  • @agt462
    @agt462 4 года назад +1

    I got caught in a Rip tide recently but remained calm and just called Uber. Lucky they were near by.

  • @conner2399
    @conner2399 3 года назад +1

    I got pulled into a riptide in Florida once, almost went unconscious and washed up about a half mile from where I got into the water

  • @colemccormick1671
    @colemccormick1671 6 лет назад +2

    Me and alot of people i know have gotten caught in rip currents before and all we've ever done is swim parallel to the beach for 1/4-1/2 mile then swim to shore

  • @msmusik2
    @msmusik2 11 лет назад +1

    me and my friend were out swimming to our upper hips when we realized all of a sudden the water was getting much much deeper and we never moved deeper into the water we only moved sideways, and it was pretty scary because as we were trying to get back to shore and every time we got closer it felt deeper. Was this a rip current pulling the sand back and making the water deeper or did we just hit a deep spot of some kind?

    • @GUMMYBEAYUH
      @GUMMYBEAYUH 11 месяцев назад

      You could've easily stepped into a wave/current induced ditch, or even stepped off a sandbar that was shallower. Rips can actually result from these aspects.

  • @topnotch676
    @topnotch676 4 года назад +1

    Got sucked up in one of those in Asbury park before knew it i was in the sea near some surfers waiting for a wave the same wave saved me

  • @williamstafford8324
    @williamstafford8324 2 года назад

    Thankyou for the great information. Thankyou ❤❤

  • @cvrxtc
    @cvrxtc 6 лет назад +4

    That's why I never learnt swimming; bastard would prove no help in times of need. When I feel adventurous I jump into my 2 feet really deep bathtub.

    • @marilynmitchell1644
      @marilynmitchell1644 3 года назад +1

      A reli, you had me laughing, you are funny, however, you are right. Make so much sense. As a child I heard my mother said don't mess with the sea it has no branches to hang on to, I agreed and never mess with it.

  • @danieltrellez6612
    @danieltrellez6612 4 года назад +18

    Who’s here after he was found dead

  • @SameerKhan-wz1pm
    @SameerKhan-wz1pm Год назад

    I survived RIP current after a successful CPR in Karachi, Pakistan.
    Now because of the PTSD, unfortunately, I can't go the sea water. I'm planning sessions with a coast guard's for systemic desensitisation.

  • @brysondavis2727
    @brysondavis2727 6 лет назад +2

    I was in the water with my sis when I was like 7 or so and we got sucked into a rip current and didn't even know it we looked back didn't know where we were so we swam back to shore and walked back to our parents

  • @thedude030
    @thedude030 7 лет назад +2

    ive been on one before and i was scared. So I swam sideways and then swan strait to the beach.

  • @DSJVNdsjnvf4356
    @DSJVNdsjnvf4356 2 года назад

    I heard someone say that as you're swimming try to keep you're arms below the water. If you have your arms in the air, that will push your head underwater and might cause you to drown.

  • @mark11967AD
    @mark11967AD 2 года назад +1

    She feels like the Avengers. Superhero. The “cool” crap people think they have to banter about nowadays. She could have just talked about the circumstances of one of her being pulled out instances etc. Or another person’s experience/story.

  • @younglobwedge
    @younglobwedge 4 года назад +3

    Actually, swimming parallel to escape the current is wrong. You just gotta chill , float untill youre out of it.

    • @cinders3117
      @cinders3117 4 года назад

      While waves are crashing on you?