Rip currents continue to wreak havoc
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Sue Doyle
NEWPORT BEACH -- There was nothing unusual about the powerful rip current
near 56th Street that pulled five beachgoers out to sea Wednesday.
It was at the very same stretch of beach where a San Bernardino man was
swept away and drowned earlier this month.
On Wednesday, the five inexperienced swimmers found themselves in serious
trouble because they ventured into the ocean after the lifeguard station
-- near the 56th Street jetty that produces the rip current -- had closed
for the night, lifeguard officials said.
Only a dramatic early-evening rescue made by lifeguard Arnie Van Dyke,
who was making one last patrol of the beach, saved the lives of five
Inland Empire residents Wednesday.
Van Dyke was in his Jeep around 7 p.m. when he saw one man clinging to
the jetty. Two more people then emerged from the water and found respite
on the jetty while waves crashed their exhausted bodies against the
rocks.
Van Dyke ran into the water to rescue the swimmers and then saw the tops
of two women’s heads just below the surface.
One woman, her mouth open, was already unconscious. Van Dyke held her
head above the water as he pulled her to shore, and wrapped a buoy around
the other woman, who stumbled behind him.
“I know they feel lucky right now, but we all feel lucky,” Van Dyke said.
“That was the closest I’ve ever seen a person at the point of no return.”
Paramedics were on shore and took four of the survivors to nearby
hospitals for treatment. The survivors were Lee Nguyen, 19, of Rialto;
Julian Tran, 18, of Highland; Peter Lam, 20, of Colton; and Bich Vo, 19.
Authorities did not release the name of the fifth survivor, but she did
not require medical treatment.
Rip currents, small “rivers” that flow under the surface and out to sea,
are caused by channels formed in the sandy bottom of Newport’s beaches.
Most of the rescues made by Newport Beach lifeguards are the result of
rip currents.
When swimmers are caught in a rip current, they should swim parallel to
shore until they escape it, lifeguards said.
That day, a typical day at the beach, Van Dyke had already made six
general rescues of people who had overestimated their swimming abilities.
Green flags indicating safe swimming conditions were posted Wednesday and
the swells were small. But beachgoers should always use caution, Van Dyke
said.
‘It’s not a pool out here,” he said. “People can die.”
In fact, a lifeguard pulled one surfer from the water at 56th Street on
Thursday morning, after a rip current knocked him down. The surfer did
not require medical attention, said Lt. John Blauer of the Newport Beach
Fire and Marine Department.
“When we have guards on duty, they can see people in the water,” Blauer
said. “We can’t staff 24 hours a day. If you swim when a lifeguard isn’t
on duty, you run into these problems.”
Still, the rip currents have not scared people out of the ocean. The
beach at 56th Street on Thursday was crawling with swimmers, surfers and
sun worshipers.
Former Newport Beach resident Ken Honingford, 43, played on the sand with
his daughter Ashley, 5. He’s been surfing for 20 years and feels
confident about swimming around rip currents. But he doesn’t think people
with less experience should venture into the water.
“The waves are small and the water is warm, so people think it’s OK. But
it’s not,” Honingford said. “They try to out swim the currents and don’t
make it.”
One Newport Beach family was so elated to hear of the rescues, they
wanted to do something special about it. The Sabatino family of
Sabatino’s Lido Shipyard Sausage Co. wants to hold a special reunion for
the survivors and their families with the lifeguards.
“We were so moved by this that we wanted to do something nice for all of
them,” said Jimmy Sabatino.
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