It didn't go swimmingly :(
Author
Discussion

Dog Biscuit

Original Poster:

1,405 posts

17 months

Thursday
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Two men missing after coastguard called in to help Christmas day swimmers out of trouble

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c4g41v0dekgo

towser44

3,981 posts

135 months

Thursday
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I can't believe they went out swimming in all honesty. Several along the coast were cancelled yesterday so they knew the conditions were poor :-(

Dog Biscuit

Original Poster:

1,405 posts

17 months

Thursday
quotequote all
Well I agree tbh

The video in the link certtainly shows the sea looking a bit choppy

Madness, yet very sad indeed.

Downward

5,066 posts

123 months

Thursday
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“The sea is a cruel mistress and must be respected, I won’t lie”

21TonyK

12,731 posts

229 months

Thursday
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Given there were warnings on the local news all morning and most organised events were cancelled I can only assume herd mentality took over. One person goes in and hundreds follow because "it must be okay, everyones doing it". Suddenly you have a major incident on your hands.

Round my way two women decided to go for their "sea swim", in this...





butchstewie

62,518 posts

230 months

Yesterday (07:48)
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towser44 said:
I can't believe they went out swimming in all honesty. Several along the coast were cancelled yesterday so they knew the conditions were poor :-(
Sadly as terrible as this obviously is it's also one of those cases of "what were you thinking". I don't know what would possess someone to go into water that looked like what I've seen in reports.

Piginapoke

5,708 posts

205 months

Yesterday (07:54)
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A clear case of FAFO sadly

CountyLines

3,871 posts

23 months

Yesterday (08:00)
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And tied up massive amounts of the various emergency services as well.

fking idiots.

Blue62

10,056 posts

172 months

Yesterday (08:03)
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butchstewie said:
Sadly as terrible as this obviously is it's also one of those cases of "what were you thinking". I don't know what would possess someone to go into water that looked like what I've seen in reports.
There were plenty of warnings the day before but people still flocked to the beaches. Coastguards and life boats from Beer and Exmouth, spotter planes and emergency services all dragged out for something that was completely avoidable.

swanny71

3,274 posts

229 months

Yesterday (08:04)
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We were in Exmouth for Christmas with in-laws yesterday - the sea state, wind and wind chill were horrible. Saw the coast guard helicopter mid morning and kinda expected the worse.

Might sound harsh but anyone going for a swim in those conditions was an idiot, no excuses because there were plenty of warnings not to go in the sea.

mcelliott

9,853 posts

201 months

Yesterday (08:12)
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I sea swim every day, but looking at those conditions I would not have gone near the water, things can go tits up very quickly if you are not familiar with the conditions, I dragged a woman out a few years ago because she got trapped in a rip tide.

swisstoni

21,466 posts

299 months

Yesterday (08:24)
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Apart from the families who are now missing members completely unnecessarily, I feel sorry for the emergency services dragged into this nonsense at I time they might have hoped things to be a bit quiet.

borcy

9,288 posts

76 months

Yesterday (08:46)
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Some people feel they have to take on certain challenges regardless of warning or consequences. They certainly aren't interested in the cost of call outs etc.

DeejRC

8,433 posts

102 months

Yesterday (09:06)
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We have a reasonably obscure thread down in the Sports forum for sea and outdoor swimming. I regularly post pics of my local - Bude lido, usually when calm and sunny, but sometimes of heavy seas with it coming over and I’ve been in.
We were down at Bude yesterday for the Santa swim and it was easily the busiest day of the year. The huge advantage we have is the easy ingress and egress sandy shallow sloping beach.
We know Budleigh Salterton quite well and the beach there is horrible. It’s full pebbles with ingress and egress being absolutely horrible, steep, pebbles n stones all the way down and no long flat sandy aspects. Just around the corner at Exmouth you have much sandier conditions. What non locals don’t quite realise is that Exmouth actually has a huge and one of the main surf and life saving clubs. As does Bude and these Santa swims are usually organised, run and marshalled by the surf and life saving clubs. As the Exmouth Santa swim was called off it is highly silly the Budleigh swim happened frown

For reference, this is Bude yesterday. The field car park was completely full and that is the over spill from the main Crooklets car park that was chocka.




jmn

1,052 posts

300 months

Yesterday (09:38)
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I do know that particular stretch of coastline.

There is, to locals, a well known riptide on that beach. It would be bad enough to be caught in it during the warm Summer Months.

Very unwise to risk it in Winter.

g4ry13

20,368 posts

275 months

Yesterday (09:55)
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I personally don't see the appeal of plunging into cold water on Christmas day (let alone any day). It's a silly 'tradition' and they should stick to doing it in enclosed water if they have to do it.

Two people have undoubtedly paid the price, ruined Christmas for their families and kept the Coastguard / Emergency services busy all because they wanted a Christmas dip.

Vanden Saab

16,942 posts

94 months

Yesterday (11:25)
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g4ry13 said:
I personally don't see the appeal of plunging into cold water on Christmas day (let alone any day). It's a silly 'tradition' and they should stick to doing it in enclosed water if they have to do it.

Two people have undoubtedly paid the price, ruined Christmas for their families and kept the Coastguard / Emergency services busy all because they wanted a Christmas dip.
I sea swim all year round but not every day and never if the sea is rough. We are lucky in that part of our beach is very shallow so I can swim without ever being out of my depth and can just walk out if I need to
It is a completely different experience to pool swimming, you feel at one with the world when in the water and you feel really alive and buzzing for three or four hours once you are out and warm again.

PurplePenguin

3,676 posts

53 months

Yesterday (11:32)
quotequote all
g4ry13 said:
I personally don't see the appeal of plunging into cold water on Christmas day (let alone any day). It's a silly 'tradition' and they should stick to doing it in enclosed water if they have to do it.

Two people have undoubtedly paid the price, ruined Christmas for their families and kept the Coastguard / Emergency services busy all because they wanted a Christmas dip.
Darwin Award contenders

Blue62

10,056 posts

172 months

Yesterday (11:36)
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You’d certainly be buzzing after a swim off Exmouth or Budleigh given the amount of st South West Water have been pumping into it for the last couple of years, it’s disgusting

ecsrobin

18,444 posts

185 months

Yesterday (11:43)
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PurplePenguin said:
g4ry13 said:
I personally don't see the appeal of plunging into cold water on Christmas day (let alone any day). It's a silly 'tradition' and they should stick to doing it in enclosed water if they have to do it.

Two people have undoubtedly paid the price, ruined Christmas for their families and kept the Coastguard / Emergency services busy all because they wanted a Christmas dip.
Darwin Award contenders
You’d be amazed how common rescues are when there’s weather warnings out. I’ve previously been involved with a scout group caught in an amber weather warning on Dartmoor that needed rescuing by helicopter. The weather warning was known 2 days before but they pushed ahead.

Same with a uni mountaineering club in Scotland however that turned out fatal.