On the water -- Lifeguards adjust when there’s no life to guard
Alex Coolman
NEWPORT BEACH -- Across the barren waste of sand, a truck crawls like
an insect, and inside is John Moore.
For miles and miles, Moore has been on patrol. A lifeguard specialist
for Newport Beach, he is charged with protecting the lives of beachgoers.
In summer, it’s a heavy responsibility. The sand teems with
Coppertone-slathered tourists, boogie board-wielding 5-year-olds and
wading grandmothers.
In winter, it’s a different story.
The truck rolls across the empty beach, its tires sliding slightly,
and for long, quiet stretches there is no human life to be seen.
“No one on the beach, no one in the water,” said Moore, 28. “There’s
two pelicans.”
What is a lifeguard to do when there’s no life to guard?
To an extent, Moore admits, he simply has to endure it. He drives from
Newport Pier to the Santa Ana River. Then he turns around and drives to
the Wedge. Then he turns around and drives back to the pier.
Once every other week, on average, something happens that requires
real medical attention -- often a laceration from a stray surfboard fin.
And compared to summer, when strong swells often mean three or four
serious medical situations each day, it’s a whole lot of slow cruising
and still water in the winter.
But winter also is a productive time for lifeguards, Moore said. It’s
the time when they lay the foundation for the fast, frenzied motion of
the hot months.
In winter, they go out into the community to give clinics on water
safety and cardiopulmonary resuscitation.
And they take care of basic maintenance, such as painting the 35
lifeguard towers that dot the city’s coastline.
Moore, who has been a lifeguard for 13 years, is so familiar with this
chore that he can rattle off the paint colors as if they were his name,
rank and serial number: “Butternut, New Bark, Gray Beige.”
Summer is the time of physical discipline, with long days, hot sun and
racing in and out of the water.
Winter means mental discipline. It’s the time for lifeguards to hunker
down, wait and watch. Moore said he doesn’t mind it as much as people
might think.
“I spend nine months of every year with this environment,” he said,
driving slowly along the deserted beach.
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