by
Amy
Painter
As
a
crowd
gathered
on
the
beach,
all
eyes
focused
on
a
helicopter
positioned
some
50
yards
from
shore.
The
aircraft
whisked
the
surface
of
the
water
as
it
hovered
above
a
swimmer
in
distress.
Suddenly,
the
helicopter’s
side
door
opened
and
two
men
leaped
from
the
aircraft
into
the
churning
waves.
The
men,
experienced
lifeguards
with
the
Dewey
Beach
Patrol
(DBP),
swam
toward
a
victim
in
the
water.
Meanwhile,
on
the
shore,
the
drama
was
no
less
intense.
As
one
lifeguard
signaled
the
guards
in
the
water,
directing
them
around
a
hazardous
rip
current,
another
communicated
with
the
helicopter
pilot
using
a
hand-held
radio.
Minutes
later,
the
helicopter
delivered
the
victim
safely
to
shore
and
the
rescue
team
celebrated
its
victory.
From
the
cockpit
of
the
Delaware
State
Police
rescue
helicopter,
coastal
processes
specialist
Dr.
Wendy
Carey
filmed
this
demonstration
exercise
on
July
28th.
The “mock
rescue” was
part
of
a
beach
safety
effort
at
Dewey
Beach,
which
included
a
variety
of
rescue
exercises
and
scientific
demonstrations.
Carey,
a
scientist
with
the
University
of
Delaware
Sea
Grant
Program,
is
a
key
member
of
a
new
task
force
created
to
conduct
and
share
science
that
will
lead
to
improvements
in
rip
current
prediction,
monitoring,
reporting
and
education.
The
task
force
is
a
multiagency
collaboration
involving
NOAA’s
National
Sea
Grant
College
Program,
the
National
Weather
Service
(NWS)
and
the
U.S.
Lifesaving
Association
(USLA).
The
NOAA-USLA
partnership
seeks
to
leverage
the
expertise
and
resources
of
each
organization
to
address
the
dangers
of
rip
currents;
develop
a
unified
and
consistent
public
education
message
and
campaign;
and,
increase
the
dialogue
among
local
beach
patrols,
coastal
NWS
forecast
offices
and
Sea
Grant
Universities.
The
July
demonstration
event
brought
together
NOAA
Sea
Grant
scientists,
meteorologists
from
the
NWS
Marine
and
Coastal
Weather
Services
Branch,
the
U.S.
Coast
Guard,
the
DBP,
the
Delaware
State
Police
Aviation
Division
and
others.
As
Carey’s
camera
continued
to
roll,
lifeguards
dispersed
red
food
coloring
into
the
surf
zone
to
highlight
swirling
rip
currents.
The
camera
captured
the
red
dye
as
it
was
swept
seaward
in
a
rip
current,
illustrating
just
how
turbid
and
swift
the
flows
can
be. “It’s
thrilling
to
get
footage
of
the
rips,” said
Carey. “Exercises
like
this
allow
us
to
learn
a
great
deal
about
surf
dynamics.”
Carey
is
studying
rip
currents
to
better
understand
the
forces
that
drive
development
of
rip
currents
along
the
Delaware
coast.
Her
videotape
will
be
used
in
the
future
as
a
teaching
tool
for
rescue
personnel
and
as
part
of
an
educational
public
service
announcement.
To
collect
additional
rip
current
and
wave
information,
Carey
is
working
with
lifeguards
throughout
Delaware.
The
data
on
waves
and
coastal
processes
are
entered
into
a
database
that
will
enable
researchers
to
better
predict
the
dangerous
currents.
Carey
is
also
working
very
closely
with
meteorologists
from
the
Mount
Holly
(NJ)
Weather
Forecast
Office,
which
began
a
Surf
Zone
Forecast
for
the
Delaware
and
New
Jersey
shoreline
several
months
ago.
Thirteen
coastal
National
Weather
Service
Forecast
Offices
initiated
Surf
Zone
Forecasts
this
summer.
The
forecasts
include
a
Rip
Current
Outlook—standardized,
qualitative
rip
current
information
that
is
available
to
the
public.
Feedback
received
in
active
dialogues
between
meteorologists
and
local
lifesavers/beach
patrols
will
enhance
the
Outlook
forecasts.
“
This
partnership,” said
Tim
Schott,
a
meteorologist
with
the
NWS
and
a
catalyst
in
the
formation
of
the
task
force, “is
a
national
model
in
that
it
addresses
a
major
public
safety
issue
at
the
federal,
state
and
local
levels,
and
translates
research
into
information
that
will
save
lives.
The
NOAA-USLA
Partnership,” he
continued, “is
publicly
recognizing
the
ongoing
work
of
each
partner.
Instead
of
working
independently,
we
are
working
together
to
put
out
a
unified,
consistent
message
nationally.”
Rip
currents
account
for
80
percent
of
all
surf
zone
drownings
and
fatalities
and
are
the
number
one
cause
of
drownings
on
ocean
beaches,
according
to
the
USLA.
According
to
DBP
Captain
Todd
Fritchman,
his
crew
made
126
rescues
this
summer—an
unusually “light
season,” he
noted,
in
part
because
rainy
periods
this
summer
have
lowered
beach
attendance.
Fritchman
is
concerned
about
swimmers
over
the
Labor
Day
holiday
and
in
early
September. “Lots
of
people
come
to
the
beach
for
one
last
summer
weekend.
What
they
don’t
realize,” according
to
Fritchman, “is
that
rip
currents
can
be
very
strong
this
time
of
year
and
lifeguard
staffs
are
stressed
with
so
many
patrols
heading
back
to
school.” He
cautioned
vacationers
to
be
especially
vigilant
when
swimming
over
the
holiday
weekend
and
into
the
early
fall.
Over
the
last
several
years,
a
number
of
rip
current
drownings
have
occurred
along
the
East
Coast
in
September
in
response
to
dangerous
currents
generated
by
tropical
cyclones
well
off
the
coast.
Local
and
state
park
beach
patrols
play
an
integral
role
in
the
development
of
the
rip
current
forecast
models,
providing
rescue
data
and
real-time
observations
of
ocean
conditions. “Predictive
models
for
rip
currents
may
be
based
on
rip
current
rescue
data
as
well
as
physical
parameters
such
as
wind
speed
and
direction,
wave/swell
height
and
period,
and
the
stage
of
the
tide,” Carey
explained. “The
models
also
will
incorporate
research
on
surf
zone
physics
and
rip
current
development
conducted
by
the
University
of
Delaware
Center
for
Applied
Coastal
Research,
Stevens
Institute
of
Technology,
and
other
research
institutes.”
So
just
what
are
rip
currents?
Rip
currents
are
coastal
hazards
that
pose
daily
threats
to
life
and
safety,
causing
over
100
drownings
every
year. “They
occur
along
all
surf
beaches,
including
the
Atlantic,
Pacific
and
Gulf
coasts
as
well
as
the
Great
Lakes,” according
to
USLA
member,
Dr.
Peter
Hartsock.
A
current
behaves
like
a
powerful
river
of
water
running
from
the
shore
out
to
sea.
The
rips
can
range
in
width
from
50
feet
to
over
50
yards
and
may
flow
just
past
the
breaking
surf
or
hundreds
of
yards
offshore.
Although
rip
currents
may
occur
at
anytime,
they
are
most
common
during
storms
and
high
surf
conditions.
Swimmers
caught
in
a
current
are
instructed
to
swim
parallel
to
the
shoreline
until
the
current
relaxes,
or
to
let
the
current
carry
them
until
its
force
diminishes
at
which
point
a
swimmer
can
swim
back
to
shore.
Through
local
partnerships,
NOAA’s
NWS
and
Sea
Grant
have
already
established
rip
current
education
and
awareness
programs
and
public
information
campaigns
in
many
coastal
states.
Lessons
learned
through
the
success
of
these
projects,
especially
those
in
Florida
and
North
Carolina,
have
been
used
as
springboards
for
new
Sea
Grant
outreach
efforts
in
many
locations,
including
Delaware,
and
for
the
national
partnership.
In
partnership
with
the
NWS
and
local
municipalities,
North
Carolina
Sea
Grant
has
placed
hundreds
of
rip
current
informational
signs
along
the
North
Carolina
coast.
Delaware
Sea
Grant
has
worked
with
several
coastal
towns
and
the
State
of
Delaware
DNREC
to
place
interpretive
signs
about
rip
current
safety
on
boardwalks,
beaches
and
lifeguard
stands.
In
New
Jersey,
Sea
Grant
coastal
engineers
are
working
with
NWS
personnel
to
develop
nearshore
wave
and
circulation
models
that
may
improve
rip
current
prediction
capabilities.
Next
steps:
The
task
force
is
developing
a
NOAA-level
rip
current
brochure
and
poster
with
the
USLA.
The
participants
are
planning
a
May
2004
national-level
press
conference,
in
conjunction
with
National
Beach
Safety
Week,
to
publicly
acknowledge
the
partnership
and
to
advertise
the
first-ever
NOAA-level
rip
current
brochure
and
poster.
The
task
force
will
encourage
increased
dialogue
among
the
nation’s
weather
forecasting
offices,
state
Sea
Grant
Universities
and
lifesavers,
and
will
lead
a
unified
public
education
campaign
to
inform
the
public
of
the
rip
current
threat
and
of
sources
for
information.
To
learn
about
daily
rip
current
threats,
the
National
Weather
Service
website
is
an
excellent
resource.
North
Carolina
Sea
Grant,
Michigan
Sea
Grant
(Great
Lakes)
and
the
USLA
also
offer
information
on
how
to
identify
currents,
and
what
to
do
if
caught
in
a
rip.
National
Weather
Service
North
Carolina
Sea
Grant
Michigan
Sea
Grant
USLA
Top | Story archive
FOR MORE INFORMATION: Ben Sherman, 202/662-7095, E-Mail: sherman@nasw.org
|