Surf Life Saving Australia
Surf Life Saving Australia
  • Видео 692
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2024 SHARKSKIN Interstate IRB Championships - Finals
2024 SHARKSKIN Interstate Finals Races. Commentary from Harold Marshall.
Race Timecodes
0:00 Female Tube Rescue
02:21 Male Tube Rescue
04:57 Female Mass Rescue
08:07 Male Mass Rescue
10:26 Female Teams Rescue
13:45 Male Teams Rescue
16:02 Female Surf Rescue
17:49 Male Surf Rescue
19:52 Mixed Relay
Просмотров: 432

Видео

2024 SHARKSKIN Australian IRB Championships - U23s Finals
Просмотров 480День назад
2024 SHARKSKIN U23 Finals Races. Commentary from Harold Marshall. Race Timecodes 0:00 U23 Female Tube Rescue 3:11 U23 Male Tube Rescue 5:52 U23 Female Mass Rescue 8:45 U23 Male Mass Rescue 11:45 Female Teams Rescue 15:12 U23 Male teams Rescue 18:08 U23 Female Surf Rescue 19:48 U23 Male Surf Rescue
2024 SHARKSKIN Australian IRB Championships - Masters Finals
Просмотров 2,2 тыс.14 дней назад
2024 SHARKSKIN Open Finals Races. Commentary from Harold Marshall, Simon Tate (Cudgen Headland SLSC), and special guest Nathan Fife (Broadbeach SLSC). Race Timecodes 0:00 Masters Female Tube Rescue 3:33 Masters Male Tube Rescue 5:47 Masters Female Mass Rescue 9:02 Masters Male Mass Rescue 12:30 Masters Female Teams Rescue 15:55 Masters Male Teams Rescue 18:37 Masters Female Surf Rescue 21:08 Ma...
2024 SHARKSKIN Australian IRB Championships - Opens Finals
Просмотров 86614 дней назад
2024 SHARKSKIN Open Finals Races. Commentary from Harold Marshall, and IRB racing legend and SLSA Hall of Famer Andy Kelckhoven. Race Timecodes 0:00 Open Male Surf Rescue 1:59 Open Female Surf Rescue 3:04 Open Male Teams Rescue 5:23 Open Female Teams Rescue 7:31 Open Male Mass Rescue 9:42 Open Female Mass Rescue 12:08 Open Male Tube Rescue 14:01 Open Mixed Relay Unfortunately due to an technica...
Aussies 2024 | Open Female 2km Beach Run
Просмотров 2 тыс.3 месяца назад
Nathan Breen and Jock Campbell take us through the Open Female 2km Beach Run at Aussies 2024. 🎥 Jock Campbell
Aussies 2024 | Rescue & Resuscitation
Просмотров 1 тыс.3 месяца назад
The traditional R&R competition boasts some of the oldest events at the Aussies. Discipline and teamwork were rewarded outside Alexandra Headland SLSC this year, here's a quick look!
Aussies2024 | Champion Lifesaver Competition
Просмотров 5203 месяца назад
The Champion Lifesaver Competition tests a competitor's brain, brawn, and skill to find the most well-rounded surf lifesaver at the Aussies. Athletes complete an exam, navigate a resuscitation scenario and race each other to be named the Champion. Hear more from some of the participants and officials of the 2024 competition!
Aussies 2024 | Adaptive Competition Highlights
Просмотров 1,4 тыс.3 месяца назад
For the first time in history of the Australian Surf Life Saving Championships, Adaptive Competition was introduced this year, allowing athletes of all abilities to take part. Here's a look at the competition at Mooloolaba! 🎥 Nelson Kahler Visuals
Aussies 2024 | Opens Competition Highlights
Просмотров 3,8 тыс.3 месяца назад
Go behind-the-scenes and hear from some of the stars of Aussies 2024 in this epic look at the Open Championships by Salt Diaries! Click here to read more about the top clubs and performers from the Aussies this year: bit.ly/4aIhsRX
Aussies 2024 | Masters Competition Highlights
Просмотров 4,2 тыс.4 месяца назад
Aussies 2024 | Masters Competition Highlights
Aussies 2024 | Youth Competition Highlights
Просмотров 3,8 тыс.4 месяца назад
Aussies 2024 | Youth Competition Highlights
What does a typical day as a volunteer Surf Life Saver look like?
Просмотров 8024 месяца назад
What does a typical day as a volunteer Surf Life Saver look like?
Super Surf Teams League 2024 Highlights
Просмотров 1,7 тыс.7 месяцев назад
Super Surf Teams League 2024 Highlights
Interstates 2024 | Highlights
Просмотров 1,8 тыс.7 месяцев назад
Interstates 2024 | Highlights
Want to re-join or update your awards?
Просмотров 4668 месяцев назад
Want to re-join or update your awards?
In Depth Proficiencies
Просмотров 5008 месяцев назад
In Depth Proficiencies
Give an F About the Flags (30s)
Просмотров 6518 месяцев назад
Give an F About the Flags (30s)
Give an F About the Flags
Просмотров 6 тыс.8 месяцев назад
Give an F About the Flags
National Coastal Safety Report Launch 2023
Просмотров 1818 месяцев назад
National Coastal Safety Report Launch 2023
National Awards of Excellence 2023 - Red & Yellow Carpet
Просмотров 9429 месяцев назад
National Awards of Excellence 2023 - Red & Yellow Carpet
National Drowning Report 2023 Launch in Canberra
Просмотров 30511 месяцев назад
National Drowning Report 2023 Launch in Canberra
National Drowning Report 2023
Просмотров 61711 месяцев назад
National Drowning Report 2023
2023 National Leaders' Masterclass
Просмотров 26611 месяцев назад
2023 National Leaders' Masterclass
National Centre of Excellence - Flood and Swift Water Rescue
Просмотров 1,7 тыс.11 месяцев назад
National Centre of Excellence - Flood and Swift Water Rescue
Ocean Thunder Surf Boat Series 2022/23 Clips
Просмотров 2,1 тыс.Год назад
Ocean Thunder Surf Boat Series 2022/23 Clips
2023 SHARKSKIN Australian IRB Champs - Opens Finals
Просмотров 7 тыс.Год назад
2023 SHARKSKIN Australian IRB Champs - Opens Finals
2023 SHARKSKIN Australian IRB Champs - Masters Finals
Просмотров 1,1 тыс.Год назад
2023 SHARKSKIN Australian IRB Champs - Masters Finals
2023 SHARKSKIN Australian IRB Champs - U23s Finals
Просмотров 3,6 тыс.Год назад
2023 SHARKSKIN Australian IRB Champs - U23s Finals
2023 SHARKSKIN Interstate Finals
Просмотров 1 тыс.Год назад
2023 SHARKSKIN Interstate Finals
Behind the scenes at the 2023 SHARKSKIN IRB Champs
Просмотров 1,4 тыс.Год назад
Behind the scenes at the 2023 SHARKSKIN IRB Champs

Комментарии

  • @Soljigham
    @Soljigham 12 дней назад

    Step one: Find a lady running down to it

  • @twotwinningcavs
    @twotwinningcavs 13 дней назад

    As both a volunteer and paid lifeguard I thought this ad was beautifully done, I even chose it as my topic in my high school psychology assignment. Still know it by heart.

  • @prashantpoudel3628
    @prashantpoudel3628 14 дней назад

    why the fuck am i even watching this , i live in a landlock country .

  • @TNG88
    @TNG88 19 дней назад

    Quite a name : RIP current = death current

  • @TNG88
    @TNG88 19 дней назад

    Thank you Sir, very informative.

  • @ciganyweaverandherperiwink6293
    @ciganyweaverandherperiwink6293 19 дней назад

    Any time an Australian talks about the beach, I'm listening.👍👍👍

  • @Chaz-videocreator
    @Chaz-videocreator 23 дня назад

    I’ve never been one to underestimate the sea because so many people die every year because they don’t realise the force that is our oceans. I’ve been lucky enough to never be caught up in a rip current: but if I ever see the tell tale signs of a rip current, I stay the heck away. I always check whenever I get into the water and I never swim too far past the groynes. I’ve been lucky to be warned about these from a young age. Never underestimate the sea! 🌊

  • @hotelvasthorizon
    @hotelvasthorizon Месяц назад

    Maybe I'll just stick to pools 😭

  • @charlespackwood2055
    @charlespackwood2055 Месяц назад

    Give a rip about rips

  • @LegendOfMoonDragons
    @LegendOfMoonDragons Месяц назад

    I got to teach my Russian friend when I was 13 what a rip was. Her English was ok but not great at that point, so I took her into one I knew ran sideways at Dee Why. After a few minutes, I told her to look how far we'd gone, and her eyes went wide, and I told her 'rip'. She seemed to get it. Would never do that these days haha, that was not clever. We were both strong swimmers but still. Especially now I kniw that's called a 'feeder' rip. That's mildly terrifying 😅

  • @J.a.q.
    @J.a.q. Месяц назад

    Definitely got caught in one today… took like three strokes into the ocean and when I went to stand up, I couldn’t- water was too deep. So treading water I turned around and saw I was way further out than I am comfortable with…. Tried to swim to shore and that’s when I felt the ocean push back on me. I was ALL ALONE on this beach. Stupid, yea, but I really didn’t realize I had gone so far out so fast… Thankfully I told myself to not panic and if I was in a rip current I needed to swim parallel to shore, which I did, and eventually was able to swim back to shore. It was one of the more terrifying 6-7 minutes I’ve ever spent in the ocean.

  • @miket2916
    @miket2916 Месяц назад

    Bro I cannot see shite... the arrows would be nice irl

  • @lengthmuldoon
    @lengthmuldoon Месяц назад

    They get on my nerves

  • @P3rf3ctBodyboarder
    @P3rf3ctBodyboarder Месяц назад

    That’s north Avoca 💪

  • @tamekajenkins23
    @tamekajenkins23 Месяц назад

    R.I.P. current indeed 🤦🏿

  • @mundoglory7071
    @mundoglory7071 Месяц назад

    Great advice. But Ive been swimming and snorkeling in the sea many many times and never been caught in a rip - because I only swim in designated areas or where I know there is no current. If in doubt, stay out.

  • @uberfu
    @uberfu Месяц назад

    Good explanation.

  • @sirich7751
    @sirich7751 Месяц назад

    In a nut shell, be honest with yourself. Am I a strong swimmer? Most of us who can swim would probably think I'm good enough. If you learned to swim in a pool or lake...you will underestimate the ocean. On the plus side, we're more buoyant in salt water. As I've gotten older (now have a little more body fat) I can float in the ocean and raise my hands, feet and head out of the water. Stay calm is the best advice but that really only works if you've swam in the ocean enough.

  • @veramae4098
    @veramae4098 Месяц назад

    Walk in ankle deep, and you can feel it but be safe.

  • @my2009Babies1
    @my2009Babies1 Месяц назад

    Excellent video! I didn't realize the darker stream of water heading back to sea as a warning.

  • @AngusMurray
    @AngusMurray Месяц назад

    Great explanation

  • @taino4281
    @taino4281 Месяц назад

    Scary! Here in the US many people drown as a result. Those of us that are not avid swimmers are most at risk😩

  • @sue450
    @sue450 Месяц назад

    caught in a rip swim to the side they tend to be narrow also if there is foamy water on 2 sides and dark clear strip of water down the middle >> that strip of dark water is a rip tide

  • @user-ll7bg5pw7r
    @user-ll7bg5pw7r 2 месяца назад

    No more rippies

  • @microcfdadmin7855
    @microcfdadmin7855 2 месяца назад

    Great video, but it falls short by not telling you how to get out of a rip current. Stay calm and swim parallel to the shore until you are out of the rip current, and then swim back.

  • @JudithSnowMusic
    @JudithSnowMusic 2 месяца назад

    Excellent video! Ty🙏🏽

  • @onlyyou7171
    @onlyyou7171 2 месяца назад

    Don't give a rip your life.😂 Seriously though I encountered many in Hawaii over the 3 years I lived and surfed there. If you don't know how to get out of one I would not advise getting in water above your knee. It's just a fact of how they operate and you a shea bit more advanced swimming ability than the average tourist that doesn't live by an ocean.

  • @jamessmith8360
    @jamessmith8360 2 месяца назад

    Just wanted to say this is very nicely done and extremely helpful. After watching this i have a total understanding. Visuals were great.

  • @bogse
    @bogse 2 месяца назад

    So if you get into rip current it is better just let it drive you where it goes and then swim back to shore in amny cases. They will dissolve into sea and lose all its strenght pretty soon. One way is to swim away from rip meaning if it would be a river you would swim to the beach and eventually you get off from rip. They never take you underwater for sure. Main thing is to stay calm, if you are strong swimmer you can try to slowly swim away from it to the side, if you are not strong swimmer then maybe better just let it carry where it goes and then calmly swim to shore but never ever swim against it, even the stronger swimmer in world cant win swimming against rip. 1. Never fight against it 2. Always stay calm in water, always, water is your friend when you stay calm. you were born to be in water like all mammals. 3. Never use all your endurance, if you start to feel tired just let it drive you and swim back when it dissolves and try to swim calmly back from a different path you came if rip appears again. They usually appear at same places.

  • @xeinahpets27
    @xeinahpets27 2 месяца назад

    at my big age I still can’t swim 😭

  • @johnattfield4728
    @johnattfield4728 2 месяца назад

    Great commentating,spot on at all times 👍

  • @UnclePutte
    @UnclePutte 3 месяца назад

    While I don't live anywhere near the deep warm seas, I've always wondered about riptides. The very idea is terrifying. Thank you for your public service.

  • @the6ig6adwolf
    @the6ig6adwolf 4 месяца назад

    I don't need to identify a riptide because sharks keep me safely on the beach. Thank you sharks 👌

  • @rileyhandby5394
    @rileyhandby5394 4 месяца назад

    This video needs to be part of the school education system

  • @VEC7ORlt
    @VEC7ORlt 4 месяца назад

    Is this some local thing that you have and Baltics don't? Been going to swim in the sea almost every year and haven't seen anything remotely like it - we don't even have a word for it. Does this have to do anything with the grade? Coz I swear sometimes you can walk 100m away from the shore and sit on your ass with head poking over.

    • @lium24
      @lium24 23 дня назад

      It can happen anywhere at anytime.

  • @jUncAp65
    @jUncAp65 4 месяца назад

    Not enough people know this shit it needs to be taught in schools, nearly drowned in one of em couple days ago, I was trying to swim against it and somehow broke out don,t know how i did it.

    • @509734
      @509734 4 месяца назад

      I got into a rip current at Hawaii and it pulled me out like super far before it dissipated and I had to do a very slow and easy breast stroke my way back to shore for 45 minutes, constantly adjusting my trajectory. It gets old real quick

  • @Aquablecs
    @Aquablecs 4 месяца назад

    Incredibly informative and well put together video. Wish they had more stuff like this for avalanches

  • @montyhall2805
    @montyhall2805 5 месяцев назад

    Just heard about this dad who saved his daughters from a rip current in florida. I still can't tell the difference. I'm going to have to really study the video.

  • @AndreiPetunin
    @AndreiPetunin 5 месяцев назад

    Having just come back from the Caribbean Sea, I had to look this up because it’s the first time I experienced a current so strong that no matter how hard I swam it appeared I wasn’t at all moving. My sunglasses are now somewhere in Cuba.

  • @edward9884
    @edward9884 5 месяцев назад

    Okay. You forgot to mention that to get out of it, you have to swim out to sea and once you’re out of the current, then you can swim back in.

  • @Droidzi
    @Droidzi 5 месяцев назад

    01:13 what's that dark object bobbing just beyond the break, beyond the diagonal "feeder" rip to the right? Essential viewing for all beach goers, globally.

  • @deanpd3402
    @deanpd3402 5 месяцев назад

    You little ripper.

  • @WillyOrca
    @WillyOrca 5 месяцев назад

    I don't understand how these are dangerous lmao just swim into and away from it then swim back?

    • @lium24
      @lium24 23 дня назад

      Some people know nothing about them, so when they get caught in one they dont know what to do.

  • @miriam26
    @miriam26 5 месяцев назад

    Who before gets in the water stops and checks for this?? Not enough education about it in Australia.

  • @calvinnwoohoo
    @calvinnwoohoo 6 месяцев назад

    Raise your hand if you’re here after surviving 😅

  • @Heartadia
    @Heartadia 7 месяцев назад

    it's no joke... i was caught in a riptide in my teens - i was being tumbled around like a yarn underwater and before i knew it i was maybe 20-30 feet away from shore. i choked on water while doing 360's underwater. luckily there were also other people 20-30 feet and even further out and i waved at them for help once i reached the surface. it's incredible how deep the water felt 20-30 feet away - maybe around 10-15 feet deep. very terrifying.

  • @Varza
    @Varza 7 месяцев назад

    I almost didn't make it out at an unpatrolled beach in NSW yesterday. Before I realised what was going on I was pulled a further 20m out from shore and while I'm a decent swimmer I was already fatigued from having gone to the gym in the morning. The ocean didn't care how much I could deadlift. For a few minutes I genuinely thought it was over and that I was going to become a statistic. I'm grateful I was able to recall advice to stay calm and try to swim parallel to the shore... But I now have a whole new appreciation for the potential dangers.

  • @brownpunk1794
    @brownpunk1794 8 месяцев назад

    thanks..as someone who died in a rip in 2018..I can confirm this is accurate.

  • @rmoz2729
    @rmoz2729 8 месяцев назад

    I recall swimming on a low tide sand bar at Shelley Beach near Bateau Bay. By the time I decided to head in the tide had grown and the channel between the sand bar and the beach head had become quite deep. It was only about 3 metres wide but I could not swim across the current and found myself heading sideways a mere 2 metres from the edge of the water, there was nothing I could do and had to go with the flow. Luckily, I hit a shallower bit, got my footing and hauled myself out. It was really strange not being able to swim to the shore which was right in front of me and quite terrifying.

  • @Tv_bro127
    @Tv_bro127 8 месяцев назад

    I remember this time I went boogey boarding and I was looking for rougher waves that are more bumpy and choppy so I turn to my left and I see this darker and deeper patch of water with rough looking waves that appeared to be crashing into each other a bit and since that’s what I was looking for I went to it but as I came closer I felt this strong sweeping force pulling me closer and I realised that it was a rip current I almost got sucked in but I got away with a struggle