ON THE WATER -- Ready to save lives
Mathis Winkler
NEWPORT BEACH -- With a light drizzle falling on the beach from a
cloudy sky Thursday morning and sea gulls outnumbering people by far, it
seemed difficult to imagine that summer lurks around the corner.
But while Memorial Day weekend is widely considered to kick off the
warm season, Brian O’Rourke, a lifeguard lieutenant in Newport Beach,
said for them, summer’s still a few weeks away.
Memorial Day weekend “is really not the kickoff of summer for us,”
said the 34-year-old Newport Heights resident while sitting in an office
at lifeguard headquarters on Newport Pier.
About 150 seasonal lifeguards won’t start working until June 23, when
school ends and the beaches start to fill up all week long, O’Rourke
said.
“It’s really just weekends right now,” he said.
O’Rourke grew up in Glendale and came to Orange County for its water
polo teams. One of his coaches at Orange Coast College told him about
lifeguard tryouts and after several seasons as a part-time employee,
O’Rourke became a full-fledged team member six years ago.
He already sports a deep tan, but said it’s just part of the job.
“I get white in the winter,” he said, laughing. “It’s good to give the
skin a rest since I’m out in the sun all the time.”
While he now spends a big chunk of his time in the office and trains
rookies, he still gets his fair share of the action.
Just recently, he spotted three people trying to escape a rip current
and participated in their rescue.
“They were going to die,” he said, adding that the two girls and a guy
had been wading in waste deep water when the current caught up with them.
“They were drowning,” he said. “When you make rescues like that it
comes back to you: ‘This is why I love this job.”’
The biggest reason for trouble in the water is that people
underestimate the ocean’s power, O’Rourke said.
“They can’t recognize the dangers and go straight in the ocean,” he
said, adding that everyone should always check with a lifeguard about
water conditions and swim near a tower if there’s a lifeguard on duty.
“That’s how they get in trouble.”
And rip currents get lethal.
“It’s like a river going out to the sea,” O’Rourke said. “People need
to stay calm and need to swim sideways, out of [the current], and never
swim straight into the beach.”
Inadequate swimwear can also be dangerous. When people go swimming
with cutoff pants and T-shirts, it gets harder for them to fight
currents, he said, adding that swim fins should also be worn at all
times.
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