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July 10th
marked the Cape May SuperAthalon Race’s
25th year. The
SuperAthalon
Race takes less than an hour – less than
48 minutes to be more exact – but this
“Iron Man” competition pits the
strongest and the fittest of the areas’
lifeguards against one another.
It is the creation
of Captain Buzz Mogck, head of Cape
May’s Beach Patrol. The event is
actually three races which focus on the
skills most needed in a rescue situation
– running, rowing and swimming. The
performance of the 15 lifeguards who
participated is scored the same as a
triathalon would be with trophies being
awarded to 1st, 2nd,
and 3rd, place winners.
Judges for the events included City
Manager Lou Corea, Robert Cwick, Pete
Pietras and Al Pappas of the Cape May
Beach Patrol and Bud Johnson of the
Wildwood Crest Beach Patrol. Lt. Harry
Back of Cape May was the event
coordinator.
Trophy winners
included Jeff Nickles, Brigantine Beach
Patrol; Martin Carson, Atlantic City
Beach Patrol; and Mike Tripician,
Ventnor Beach Patrol.
And now for the
point of the story. Cape May has
recently expanded its hours for beach
coverage. Prior
to this summer, the
beaches were patrolled from 10 a.m. to
5:30 p.m. This summer a new policy has
been in effect whereby a lieutenant and
two lifeguards stay in the lifeguard
station at Grant Street Beach until
sunset to be on hand in case a problem
arises. The program is called the
After-hours Aquatic Rescue Team (AART).
Just such a
problem arose Saturday July 21st
when a family decided to take a dip
around 8 p.m. Many people don’t
understand (and either don’t read or
ignore the signs) that Cape May’s
beaches are closed once the lifeguards
leave the beach. The currents, according
to Lt. Harry Back, had been particularly
bad all week. That evening a woman and
her two daughters went swimming and ran
into trouble off Broadway Beach. A 911
call alerted the Cape May Fire
Department and off-duty lifeguards, but,
because a team of lifeguards was already
in place with the necessary equipment
for a rescue at their fingertips.
The two daughters
got caught in the undercurrent and the
mother, who went in to save her
daughters quickly got into trouble as
well. By the time the fire department
arrived, the three victims were already
coming out of the water.
According the
reports from the Press of Atlantic City,
when the on-duty lifeguards arrived at
the scene the three victims’ heads were
just above water and woauld have drowned
had it not been for the quick response
of AART.
So, getting back
to the SuperAthalon Race, although
clearly a feats of skill competition
which is no doubt fun, the underlining
point is readiness both mental and
physical. These and the morning drills
conducted daily keep Cape May’s Beach
Patrol at top readiness and that’s a
good thing because, make no mistake
about it, the life they save could very
well be your own. |