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Rip Current Fact Sheet
 

  • Rip currents, commonly called rip tides, rips, or run outs, and erroneously called undertows, affect most of the surf areas along Florida's Atlantic and Gulf coasts.
  • Rip currents, on average, kill more people in Florida than hurricanes, tornadoes, and lightning combined.
  • Rip currents can occur at any time of the year, but the majority of deaths in east central Florida occur from April through October when the combination of a large number of bathers and favorable meteorological/oceanographic conditions coincide.
  • Rip currents are most common when long period ocean swells break in the surf zone and pile up greater amounts of water than normal on the beaches.
  • Many victims are tourists who are unfamiliar with surf conditions. However, local residents also become victims.
  • A rip current is a strong surface current of water usually flowing from inside the sand bar into deeper water.
  • Rip currents are normally only about 10 to 30 yards wide, so the best escape is to wade or swim sideways across the current, parallel to the beach.
  • The rip current extends on average from 50 to 200 yards offshore, and thus another means of escape is to float with the current out beyond the breakers where the rip current will weaken, then swim shoreward at an angle away from it.
  • Most deaths associated with rip currents occur when people panic and try to swim directly toward shore against the current, become totally exhausted and drown.
  • The rip current does not drag a person underwater but moves them at speeds of up to five miles per hour into deeper water. Even the strongest swimmer cannot swim directly against it and even persons standing on the ocean bottom are sometimes powerless to walk against it.
  • Sometimes, would-be rescuers are also caught in a rip current and drowned.
  • The best safety action is to avoid getting caught in the rip current.
  • At guarded beaches, beach patrol or lifeguard personnel can recognize certain characteristics, such as a brown-colored plume, foam or a seaweed streak extending seaward from the breakers.  Always swim near a lifeguard!
  • Obey posted warning signs, flags or other displays and heed the advice of the beach patrol.
  • National Weather Service Rip Current Web Site

National Weather Service
Melbourne Weather Forecast Office
421 Croton Road
Melbourne, FL 32935
321-255-0212
Web Master's E-mail: SR-MLB.Webmaster@noaa.gov
Date modified: November 28, 2008

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