A whole family ended up caught in a riptide in a Florida beach. Other beachgoers formed a human chain and managed to save everybody. 80 or so people took part in it.
Honestly, these news are really great, and they have given me a major case of the warm fuzzies.
Cool story! … but, does Florida not have lifeguards? It took 80 people an hour to complete the rescue, while law enforcement officers stood by waiting for a rescue boat. No mention of lifeguards, or what happened to that boat.
Me too. The people on the seaward end of that chain have an awful lot of trust in the people on the landward end.
Wouldn’t the cumulative drag of the current on those people result in a whole lot of force on the floating people near the landward end? This seemed like it had a good chance of getting 40+ people caught in a rip current.
As Machine Elf has said, the physics of this as a “chain” stopping people being dragged away doesn’t make any sense. Every pair of clasped hands would have to withstand the force on the entire seaward length of the chain.
I’m sure that this was a noble effort with stronger people helping weaker people, but the idea that this was a human chain that worked like a long safety line to pull people in is a bit silly.
In the picture, most of the people for a good length of the chain were standing, so each one of them was also resisting the pull of the current to some extent.
But yeah, noble, but not all that smart. A rope, or a bunch of flotation devices would have been better.
Sure - a few people long. But in a linear chain, the entire force passes through every link of the chain. So if several dozen people with their feet planted are trying to help dozens of people at the seaward end who are being dragged away, it will not work to pass the cumulative force through a line of people in between, the line will just break. Adding more people at the landward end doesn’t help, because a line of people cannot apply that cumulative force through their interlinked arms. If all the people with their feet planted have their own grip on a strong rope, like in a tug-of-war, then their cumulative effort can help a lot of people on the other end of the rope.
Most beaches do not have lifeguards and you swim at your own risk. I’m really glad it all turned out okay. How many people were stuck out there at one point trying to help the boys? 7?
And what lawsuit would that be? Because of the rip tide? Every beach I’ve been to down here has plenty of signs stating there’s no life guard and you swim at your own risk