Lifeguards a-leaping
- Share via
Deirdre Newman
Skylar Jacobs mustered all the courage he had one August morning and
stepped to the edge of the Balboa Pier, with only blue sky separating
him from the ocean about 25 feet below.
The 10-year-old was about to join other junior lifeguards and
fulfill a rite of passage of maritime-safety education -- jumping
from the pier into the murky water below.
But he just wasn’t ready.
So he stepped back, took a few more deep breaths and tried to
conquer his fears. The same thing happened last year when he had to
make the jump. But he did it then, so knew he had it in him.
He just wasn’t ready.
A fellow junior lifeguard waiting to do her jump offered words of
encouragement, as did one of the instructors.
But Skylar had to find his strength from within. He scrunched his
face in determination and paced around the pier, trying to channel
his nervous energy into action.
One of his buddies tried to console him, saying he wouldn’t jump
if Skylar didn’t.
But Skylar persevered.
He jumped, leaving his insecurities on the pier to infiltrate
someone else’s psyche, to a cheering crowd of junior lifeguards who
had already jumped and were hanging out on surfboards in the water
below.
“I felt great,” a confident and relieved Skylar said after the
jump. “I’m glad I did it.”
The Newport Beach junior lifeguard program is an eight-week course
for kids 9 to 15 to get them “ocean-proofed,” said John Mitchell, a
city lifeguard officer and the assistant coordinator of the junior
lifeguard program. There are about 1,200 kids in the program this
summer.
The most important part of ocean-proofing is instilling a strong
sense of the surf conditions so the junior lifeguards can easily
identify them, Mitchell said. Fun is also on the schedule, he added.
They practice on the beach on Balboa Peninsula in the mornings and
afternoons. On Aug. 9, they were sprawled out on the sand, a sea of
red bathing suits taking in their last day of junior lifeguard
training, making up activities they had missed.
Not all of them want to be lifeguards. Some just like learning the
skills.
“I’m not sure I want to be a lifeguard, but I just wanted to try
it and love the beach,” said Lauren Conway, 11, whose sister is a
lifeguard. “I like all the swim competitions.”
Most of the instructors came up through the junior lifeguard
program, like Ross Sinclair, 19, of Newport Beach. It’s all about
patience as a teacher, Sinclair said.
“I’ve got 30 kids who all want to jump up and down,” he said.
“They all want to body surf, but you have to take care of education
too.”
Instructor Ned Heiman, 22, took 11 junior lifeguards to Florida in
early August to compete at the Junior Lifeguard nationals. Allison
McCormick, of Newport Beach, was the national champion in the rescue
relay.
“It was an absolute wonderful experience because we took kids that
really had a desire to go,” Heiman said.
The lifeguard training naturally attracts an audience, especially
jumping off the pier.
As they went airborne, Gary Mull watched from above. Many of his
friends’ children were doing the jumps that day and he happened to
see them as he was riding by on his bike, he said.
“I’m ready to go sneak in line to see if [the instructor] would
recognize me,” Mull said. “This is a great training program.”
As they jumped, some nonchalantly stepped off the pier as
directed, arms straight at their sides, looking into the horizon.
Others flailed around in the air, and some leaped off the pier trying
to get as much air as possible.
“Kids are up there and waffle back and forth and then say, ‘why
was I so afraid?’” said Robin Jacobsen, group leader of instruction
for the 14- to 15-year olds. “It’s so fun and easy. Then they forget
that the next year.”
* DEIRDRE NEWMAN covers government. She may be reached at (949)
574-4221 or by e-mail at [email protected].
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.