What You Need To Know About Surviving Rip Currents.
Many hundreds (if not thousands) of people drown after being sucked out to sea in rips each year, what do you need to know in order to escape this menace?
Rip currents kill more beachgoers each year than any other threat. Time to learn how to fight them. Photo:Todd Quackenbush/Unsplash
Conventional wisdom says that Rips flow seaward, out to deep water, so beach access signs across the world advise swimmers to paddle parallel to the beach in order to escape the them. The strong, sometimes unpredictable (flash rips) kill more beach goers each year than any other threat.





Today, rips kill more Australians than bushfires, floods, cyclones, and sharks combined.
There’s not one single message that works on all beaches. Sometimes swim parallel is great, sometimes it doesn’t work. Same for floating.
Rips are a complex, dynamic hazard and the multitude of variables—swimming ability, current strength, circulation, wave size—make the threat nearly impossible to solve with one-size-fits-all advice. No single “escape strategy” is appropriate all the time. If you’re not a strong swimmer, stay afloat and signal for help; if you can swim, consider paddling parallel to the beach toward breaking waves—though be mindful of the potential circulating current.
The best advise I can give is ALWAYS, ALWAYS swim at a patrolled beach, preferably between the red & yellow flags. If you get caught by a rip, relay float with it and raise an arm to attract attention of the Lifeguards. Remember the worst case is, when the Rip fades out, and they ALWAYS DO, you will have to simply swim or body surf your way back to the beach!
Rips don't kill, inexperience and panic does!
Don't be a statistic, stay calm, relax and you will eventually be able to make your way back to shore.

Rips don't kill, inexperience and panic does!
Don't be a statistic, stay calm, relax and you will eventually be able to make your way back to shore.
