Knowing how to Float first saved Joseph’s life

Knowing how to Float first saved Joseph’s life

Joseph and Dad Jon
Joseph’s reply made Jon’s heart drop.

“I’m trying Daddy, I can’t. I can’t.

A rip lifted Joseph up and started quickly taking him away from the beach. “With little warning it goes from being…everything seems to be under control to everything’s certainly not under control. I feel like this is a very, very, very, serious situation now.”

“It creeps up on you. It goes from under control to: You need to move; you need to do something. I could feel the adrenaline building. The panic rising. I could feel the power of the water and I was thinking, I can go in with him or raise the alarm. In my mind I was trying to figure out the next thing to do.”

The next thing I remember is…looking at people directly and shouting and screaming, “kids in the water, kids in the water” saying that over and over very loudly. Waving my arms, shouting at people, people near me…a couple of surfers. And they’re saying “Where are they?”

They ran in and said, I see him. I see him. People on the rocks were waving and pointing. Because I was shouting and screaming, a lot of attention was directed at that spot.

Thankfully, a surfer brought Joseph back to safety. We are so grateful. We have our boy back.

It’s probably the best situation that I raise the alarm, he’ll be okay while I raise the alarm. Beyond that, I didn’t really know what to do. And that’s where there was so much uncertainty…an incredible sense of fear. I would say that’s the thing that really overcomes you…how scared you are.

Joseph had previously attended Drowning Prevention Auckland’s SPLASH holiday programme twice, where he practised water safety skills, behaviours and attitudes like floating, snorkelling, wearing a lifejacket, and more.

Joseph’s quick, calm thinking – and skills he practiced at SPLASH – saved his life.

Instead of trying to swim against the rip, Joseph recalled key drowning prevention messages.” Says Helen Meyrick, Drowning Prevention Auckland’s Aquatic Educator.

Joseph and Helen Meyrick – Aquatic Educator Drowning Prevention Auckland
Key drowning prevention message: Float first

  1. Float first
  2. Breathe normally and stay calm
  3. Signal for help
  4. Survive by continuing to float if caught in a rip.
Joseph’s advice to other children who may find themselves in a similar situation:

Don’t’ panic, be calm, float and raise your hand and save as much energy as you can.

We are hugely grateful and relieved everyone returned home safely that day. This is thanks in large part to Joseph’s quick thinking and ability to recall the key lessons he learned at SPLASH.

We’ll enrol our kids in another Splash holiday programme to keep their knowledge up. Your kids need training on staying safe in and around the water.” says Joseph’s Mum, Mina

Joseph and Mum Mina
Drowning Prevention Auckland is a charity. We are grateful for the generosity of our donors, partners and supporters who make it possible for us to continue to provide education for communities. If anyone like Joseph gets into trouble, they have the best chance of survival because they know what to do.

I want to donate to enable young people like Joseph to be safe when in or around water.

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Join the Flash Float!

Join the Flash Float!

Join the Flash Float Experience at AUT Millennium Pools on World Drowning Prevention Day – 25 July!

Can you float for 90 seconds? Bring your friends, test your floating skills, and have a blast while spreading the Float First message. It could save someone’s life!

Picture a flash mob, but in the water – no choreography required! Just lie back, relax, and Float First. It’s going to be fun. Plus, you could win exciting spot prizes, including sports gear and free pool passes worth over $100!

Sign up today and invite your friends, colleagues, and family. Together, we can raise awareness about Float First – a survival response for anyone in trouble in the water. Just 90 seconds of floating can reduce the risk of drowning.

This event is organised by Drowning Prevention Auckland in partnership with AUT Millennium. Don’t miss out on this opportunity to make a difference on World Drowning Prevention Day

When

Date: Thursday 25 July

Times:

  • Flash Float 1: 7.30am
  • Flash Float 2: 9.30am

Arrive at least 20 minutes before to make sure you are ready to join in the fun and get floating tips from DPA educators.

Learn more and register here for free entrance!

Stay for a swim and enjoy the pool facilities.

Find out more about the Float first survival response.
Developed by water safety educational charity – Drowning Prevention Auckland

You can also donate today to support our work to keep our communities safer when in, on and around water.

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Activating water safety in the community

Activating water safety in the community

Over the past month, Drowning Prevention Auckland has actively promoted water safety education to people of all ages and experiences across a variety of settings. Highlights include the Wai Wise workshop for Asian and Pasifika communities, lifeguard training at Mt Albert Aquatic Centre, community engagement at the Hutchwilco Boat Show, a fun-filled water safety session for under-fives, as well as the launch of the Tāmaki Herenga Waka pilot programme for schools.

Read on for the full stories…

Tāmaki Herenga Waka Pilot Programme

In early May, Drowning Prevention Auckland piloted a new programme for schools, Tāmaki Herenga Waka, with enthusiastic Year 10 rangatahi and kaiako from Aorere College. The group spent a day at Okahu Bay learning water competence, including kayaking and stand-up paddling, thanks to Fergs Kayaks, which was a new experience for many of the students.

Students self-tested their floating and swimming skills in open water, discovering valuable lessons about their abilities. A great learning moment for those who realised they could not float or swim as well as they thought they could. Despite the chilly water, they enjoyed the experience and learned important safety tips, such as checking the tide before entering the water and staying calm if things get difficult.

Thanks to funding from the Hugh Green Foundation, DPA will expand this programme to more Auckland secondary and intermediate schools in the coming year. For more information or to register for the programme, contact Lynley Stewart at lynley.stewart@dpanz.org.nz.

Fun learning for under-fives and parents

Heleine Vaka’uta Feki knows the importance of water safety in the Tongan community. The Managing Director of Kakapa Atu, a Tongan home-based care organisation feels so strongly about this issue that she has been working with Drowning Prevention Auckland to educate the carers and parents in her organisation on water competence and active supervision.

“It is paramount for everyone but especially Pacific Islanders, we have lost too many Pacific Islanders to drowning”, she says.

Last month the group brought smiles and laughter to Rescare Homes Village in Weymouth when a group of parents, carers and pre-schoolers from Kakapa Atu joined together for a Drowning Prevention Auckland water competency workshop.

During their pool time, the group learnt about what active supervision of under-fives around water looks like, how to enter and exit the water safely, as well as practicing floating, moving through the water and submersion. The session also provided an opportunity for parents and carers to bond with their children in a fun and safe environment.

Heleine Vaka’uta Feki is now looking to educate the teachers in her organisation around water safety and encourages other Pasifika education services to do the same.

As teachers we need to be confident when teaching our children around water and water play, it’s good to be aware of what we need to do to survive and keep our children safe.

Drowning Prevention Auckland would like to acknowledge and thank Rescare Homes Trust for the use of their pool facilities.

If you are an education service provider who would like to know more about water safety education for your teachers and/or parents and caregivers, please contact Helen Meyrick for more information: helen.meyrick@dpanz.org.nz

Engaging the Public at Hutchwilco Boat Show

Drowning Prevention Auckland attended the Hutchwilco Boat Show, engaging the public in water safety education and helping fit lifejackets for people enjoying the bumper boats. It was a day full of fun activities, with an emphasis on promoting water safety. Our team promoted the free DPA Lifejacket Hubs and gave away two free lifejackets to attendees who interacted with their stall, helping them stay safer in, on and around the water.

Oxygen and Defibrillator Training for lifeguards

Drowning Prevention Auckland teamed up with Mt Albert Aquatic Centre to train lifeguards in oxygen administration and defibrillator use. The training included practical and theoretical applications, as well as high-performance CPR scenarios.

Wai Wise Broadening Horizons

“A practical, but meaningful experience in the water!”

Michael Bao shares his excitement after attending the Wai Wise open water workshop hosted by Drowning Prevention Auckland (DPA) at Vector Wero Whitewater Park. He joined 37 other participants from Asian and Pasifika communities in learning essential water safety skills, including safe entry/exit, use of lifejackets, and cold-water survival.

Participants then enjoyed white water rafting, kayaking, and stand-up paddling, gaining valuable experience and improving their water safety knowledge. DPA plans to offer more Wai Wise programmes in the upcoming year to support communities in learning about water safety.

To find out more about this programme email ants.lowe@dpanz.org.nz.

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He Taonga Te Wai 2024

He Taonga Te Wai 2024

Commemorative Dawn Service

Drowning Prevention Auckland are pleased to invite you to our World Drowning Prevention Day dawn service – He Taonga Te Wai on 25 July.

We will gather at the Ngā Whare Waatea Marae in Māngere. This is a place where ancestors travelled to the city to start a new life and here we will remember the tragic loss of life of our loved ones to drowning. The hāpori at Ngā Whare Waatea continue to watch over everyone who lives here and believe that every life should reach its full potential. A huge mihi to the Manukau Urban Māori Authority (MUMA) for hosting us.

Please RSVP by 15 July and help us bring to light the impact of drowning in our communities, here in Tāmaki Makaurau Auckland, across Aotearoa New Zealand and to our loved ones overseas.

Event format:

6:50am – 7:00am – Arrival
7:00am – 7:45am – Pōwhiri and service
7:45am – 8:15am – Sharing experiences and hope for the future
8:15 – 8:45am – Whakawhanaungatanga – developing relationships

Breakfast provided

Please join us singing the waiata ‘Ehara i te mea’ and ‘Te Aroha’ during the service.

Location:

31 Calthorp Close, Favona, Auckland 2024
Parking is available in the car park and adjacent roads.
The event will take place both indoors and outdoors.

Ahakoa ko wai te tangata, ahakoa nō hea te tangata, ka waatea te marae mo te katoa.
No matter who you are, no matter where you are from, this marae is available for you

HE TAONGA TE WAI RSVP 2024

HE TAONGA TE WAI RSVP 2024

RSVP He Taonga Te Wai dawn event 25 July 2024

Please RSVP by completing this form before 15 July.

This question requires a valid email address.
5. Will you be attending our dawn service He Taonga Te Wai? *This question is required.

More information on World Drowning Prevention Day.

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School adds water safety into outdoor education

School adds water safety into outdoor education

Education Outside the Classroom (EOTC) provides the perfect opportunity for students to develop aquatic competencies. Bringing learning to life and finding out first-hand how to stay safer in, on and around the water.

Drowning Prevention Auckland (DPA) works with schools to implement drowning prevention competencies into existing educational experiences – providing teacher Professional Learning and Development resources and programme support.

Stanmore Bay School shares their story

Part-way down Auckland’s Whangaparāoa Peninsula, Stanmore Bay School is only minutes walk from Stanmore Bay and a short drive to popular beaches like Orewa Beach and Red Beach.

Knowing how accessible water is to their community, the school engaged with DPA in 2023 to upskill their teachers on aquatics education. But with their school pool out of action for the foreseeable future, they decided to focus on implementing water safety into their Education Outside of the Classroom (EOTC) programme.

They began by working closely with DPA educators on what resources and key learning ideas would best suit their students. It was decided that a focus on beach safety would be appropriate.

“We live on a peninsula and the majority of our students go to the beach on a regular basis,” says Senior Leadership Teacher Robyn Bennett.

“Every second year we organise a surfing day at Orewa Beach for our senior students, it helps with supporting classroom relationship building and water safety.”

After an initial consultation with the school, DPA provided them with learning resources on rip currents and beach risks and hazards to implement into their beach day programme.

Students learnt how to spot a rip and what to do if they were caught in one, there were also hands-on activities to be done at the water’s edge.

“It’s a lot better to learn out here (at the beach) than in the classroom,” says Teacher David Wood.
“It doesn’t mean much to them until they actually get out here and make those connections. Also, its fun, they get to have a great time experiencing the beach with their friends.”

Parent Courtney Gallen, who was a helper on the beach day, was impressed with the learning she saw. “It’s great that the school are doing this, it’s really valuable as we are surrounded by water so the kids need to be confident in the water.”

Robyn Bennett is encouraging all schools to consider implementing water safety learning into their next school camp, field trip, sports day or any EOTC event.

“Do it!!” she says.

“It is part of the health curriculum and it can be so easily integrated into other areas of learning.”

If you would like more information on how Drowning Prevention Auckland can help you implement aquatics education into your Education Outside of the Classroom, please contact Helen Meyrick helen.meyrick@dpanz.org.nz.

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