There is a elevated risk for rip currents along panhandle beaches so use caution if you are headed into the water.
A rip current, also known as a
rip tide, happens when a sand bar breaks causing a strong surface current that
can pull swimmers hundreds of yards off-shore.
About 100 people a year are
killed in rip currents nationwide – and they present a threat along all of
Florida’s coasts.
The current doesn’t pull people
down – it pulls them away from the beach, so most deaths associated with rip
currents occur when people panic and try to swim directly toward shore against
the current.
They usually become totally
exhausted and drown.
Since rip currents are normally
only about 10 to 30 yards wide, if you find yourself caught in one, the best
escape, especially for the weak or non-swimmer, is to wade or swim sideways
across the current, parallel to the beach.
Rip currents tend to extend on
average from 50 to 200 yards offshore, so another way to make it out alive 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.
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