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Newcastle Herald
Newcastle Herald
National
Anna Falkenmire

Drownings, off-duty rescues, lives saved: 'very busy' summer for water heroes

Clockwise from left, the emergency response to a drowning in December, Surf Life Saving NSW Hunter president Henry Scruton, and the search for a rock fisherman.

HUNDREDS of lives were saved, boaters were rescued, tragedy struck for some swimmers and heroic volunteers again proved they were well worth their salt when people flocked to beaches, pools and waterways this summer.

Rescue crews have looked back on what they described as a "very busy" summer season, and at times tragic.

Surf Life Saving NSW Hunter president Henry Scruton said there had been "terrific crowds" right along the coastline through December, January and February.

In a trend noticed last summer and continuing to increase, he said visitors from Western Sydney had been flocking to Newcastle and Port Stephens for a swim.

"We've had a lot of crowds at the beaches," he said.

Paramedics treated a man that was pulled from the water at Birubi in December. Picture by Marine Rescue NSW
The Westpac Rescue Helicopter at Birubi Beach in December, where a 47-year-old man drowned. Picture supplied
A packed Bar Beach in December 2023. Picture by Peter Lorimer
A packed Bar Beach in December 2023. Picture by Peter Lorimer
Beaches were closed for shark sightings in January. Picture by Peter Lorimer
A girl was rescued by life guards in January at Newcastle Beach. Picture by Peter Lorimer
A girl was rescued by life guards in January at Newcastle Beach. Picture by Peter Lorimer
Crews search for a rock fisherman swept into rough seas in February. Picture supplied
Surf Life Saving NSW Hunter president Henry Scruton. Picture by Marina Neil

Towards the end of summer on a Saturday evening, two boogie boarders that had not long ago arrived in Australia were pulled from a rip by off-duty mother-and-son life savers and a surfer near Cooks Hill surf club.

The beach was empty, the sky was overcast and all lifeguards had gone home for the day when the off-duty life savers noticed the boarders struggling in a rip and leapt into action.

The exhausted boys were brought back to the wave zone and the group on the shore was kept calm. They were assessed on the beach but didn't need further medical help.

Mr Scruton said off-duty lifesavers had performed other out-of-hours rescues along the Merewether to Bar stretch of beaches during the summer months, avoiding incidents that "could have been a lot more serious".

After a string of incidents at Port Stephens beaches including at least two drownings in December, extra dusk patrols were launched, extending coverage to 7pm at Fingal and Birubi.

"It was terrific - during their dusk patrols we had no further incidents," Mr Scruton said.

"We're looking forward at how to maintain that for the next season."

A 33-year-old man died after being pulled from the water at the Anna Bay end of Stockton Beach on December 27 and a woman was rushed to hospital.

It came less than two weeks after a Western Sydney father died at the nearby Birubi Beach.

Just last month, a rock fisherman was swept off rocks at Fingal Island in rough seas and a massive search failed to find a trace of him.

Despite the dangers, summer's hot weather saw thousands flock to Hunter beaches, from Catherine Hill Bay to Port Stephens.

Mr Scruton thanked the Surf Life Saving NSW crews, and said a warm start to autumn meant their work was far from over.

"They are absolutely wonderful people and they do it for the community - there's no big pat on the back and certainly no pay," he said.

He reminded all beachgoers to swim between the flags.

Across Australia, volunteer life savers carried out 5700 rescues, 25,000 first aid treatments and 1.3 million preventative actions.


Visitors also flooded to the revamped Newcastle Ocean Baths, with almost 56,000 visitors during patrolled hours in the past two months.

Others chose to hit the water with boats or jet skis, and Lake Macquarie Marine Rescue NSW commander Jim Wright said it had kept his team of volunteers on their toes.

Lake Macquarie is traditionally one of the state's busiest squads and Mr Wright said he estimated rescues this summer were up 10 per cent on last season.

"We've had jet skis, we've had mum and dads out there in their little tinnies with the kids," he said.

"We've had flat batteries right through to overturned boats and rescuing people in the water.

"Lake Macquarie gets a lot of visitors and a lot aren't really aware of what some of the dangers are on the lake.

"Our volunteers are very precious to us and we're very thankful to them."

One of the major incidents crews were swift to respond to were reports three teenagers were clinging to an overturned tinny near Pulbah island in late January.

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