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Sunday, April 6, 2025

No lifeguards at beaches where drownings occurred

by

Kalain Hosein
614 days ago
20230801
Diagram of rip currents at beach

Diagram of rip currents at beach

Many peo­ple are won­der­ing what oc­curred in T&T’s coastal wa­ters over the last few days that led to the drown­ing of a 60-year-old woman at Dami­an Bay and the dis­ap­pear­ance of a boy, nine, and a teenag­er at sea.

While the haz­ard–rip cur­rents–are en­tire­ly nat­ur­al, the in­ter­ven­tion of life­guards could save lives. How­ev­er, at the three beach­es where the in­ci­dents oc­curred over the week­end, no life­guards have been post­ed in these ar­eas by the Min­istry of Na­tion­al Se­cu­ri­ty.

An­tho­ny Paul, a life­guard at the Mara­cas Beach Unit, ex­plained that at Dami­an Bay, Las Cuevas; Mis­sion Bay, To­co; and be­tween Ma­yaro and Man­zanil­la, where all three in­ci­dents oc­curred, al­though these ar­eas are pop­u­lat­ed, no life­guards pa­trol these beach­es.

How­ev­er, oth­er chal­lenges are afoot in ar­eas where life­guards are ex­pect­ed to be post­ed, like Mara­cas Beach and Tyri­co Bay. Paul said, “We’re still un­der­staffed. Most of the (life­guard) tow­ers at Mara­cas Beach are not func­tion­ing, on­ly two right now. All the rest of them are di­lap­i­dat­ed. The bench broke down, the roof leak­ing.”

When Guardian Me­dia vis­it­ed Mara­cas Bay fol­low­ing two drown­ings at the start of 2023, three of the sev­en tow­ers were deemed safe to use. As a re­sult, one of Trinidad’s most vis­it­ed beach­es re­mains at risk.

Over the week­end, there were no alerts, watch­es, or warn­ings from the T&T Me­te­o­ro­log­i­cal Ser­vice or any alert state­ments in any of the Met Of­fice’s of­fi­cial pub­lic weath­er fore­casts. Seas re­main near calm in shel­tered ar­eas, with Paul ex­plain­ing Mara­cas Beach looked as smooth as a lake at times through the week­end. Yet, life­guards had to res­cue two peo­ple be­tween Sat­ur­day and Sun­day.

How­ev­er, the coun­try is ex­pe­ri­enc­ing some of the high­est high tides and low­est low tides for the year–called King Tides. These sig­nif­i­cant vari­a­tions in tides can cre­ate a hid­den but dead­ly haz­ard un­der the tran­quil wa­ters called rip cur­rents.

What is a rip cur­rent?

A rip cur­rent is a strong ocean sur­face cur­rent that flows away from the shore. Dif­fer­ent fac­tors can cause a rip cur­rent to form, but the main con­tribut­ing fac­tor is large, break­ing waves. Rip cur­rents al­so oc­cur when there are breaks in the sand bars be­low the wa­ter’s sur­face as wa­ter re­turns to the ocean.

The pri­ma­ry dan­ger of rip cur­rents is their sea­ward flow, quick­ly pulling un­aware swim­mers. Rip cur­rent risk can de­pend on the weath­er, the shape of the beach, tides, and oth­er fac­tors.

The av­er­age rip cur­rent moves be­tween one to two feet per sec­ond, but if a cur­rent is pow­er­ful, it can pull you out in­to the open ocean at an as­ton­ish­ing eight feet per sec­ond. Even the best Olympic swim­mers will not be able to swim against such a strong cur­rent. Mak­ing the sit­u­a­tion worse, rip cur­rents tend to gain speed dra­mat­i­cal­ly over a short pe­ri­od.

Many may as­sume waist-high wa­ter is a suf­fi­cient refuge from rip cur­rents. How­ev­er, rip cur­rents af­fect all ar­eas where waves crash near the shore. This means if you are not able to re­main float­ing and swim, a trip to the beach can end trag­i­cal­ly.

Karl Her­nan­dez, the Pa­trol Cap­tain of the Mara­cas Life­guard Unit, who al­so shares life­guard­ing du­ties with Tyri­co Bay, ex­plained, “Over three years now, it has no life­guard in Tyri­co be­cause of the short­age. The last time they (the Min­istry of Na­tion­al Se­cu­ri­ty) take life­guards was 17 years ago.

 “If it had any life­guards across there, I could al­most guar­an­tee it would nev­er have any drown­ing. The places they drown it’s the rip cur­rents in Tyri­co and Mara­cas. We have the worst rip cur­rents. We al­ways mark there with a flag.” Guardian Me­dia con­tact­ed Fitzger­ald Hinds, the Min­is­ter of Na­tion­al Se­cu­ri­ty, for a re­sponse, but there was no re­sponse up to late yes­ter­day.

The ex­pert's ad­vice

Al­lis­ter Liv­ingston, who leads Wa­ter Safe­ty Ed­u­ca­tion with­in the Life­guard Ser­vices of the Min­istry of Na­tion­al Se­cu­ri­ty, ex­plained that peo­ple are un­aware of all the dan­gers of go­ing in­to the wa­ter.

“Peo­ple have to be safe when they go to the beach­es. Kids should not go deep­er than waist depth. Non-swim­mers should not go deep­er than waist depth. No flota­tion de­vices. Know the depth when­ev­er you go in­to any aquat­ic en­vi­ron­ment, like rivers or beach­es.”

Liv­ingston added, “Do not try to go in­to the wa­ter be­yond your swim­ming abil­i­ty. Peo­ple tend to take chances when they see wa­ter calm, and as I said, you have beach­es like Mac­queripe where you see wa­ter calm, the bot­tom drops, and you lose your foot­ing, and that’s it there.”


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