Toronto Star

Drone helps rescue boys in ocean swell

Lifeguards deploy device in raging riptide in what is being called a ‘world first’

- FRED BARBASH THE WASHINGTON POST

In what is being described as a “first,” lifeguards successful­ly deployed a drone to rescue two boys in trouble while swimming off the eastern coast of Australia Thursday.

It was all a bit of serendipit­y, too. Members of the Australian Lifeguard Service just happened to be training with the drone — which is being developed to spot sharks — when they got word that the swimmers were having difficulty nearby as they encountere­d a nine-foot swell in rough surf conditions, according to the surf life-saving website in New South Wales.

And the man piloting the drone at the time just happened to be Jai Sheridan, the 2017 New South Wales Lifeguard of the Year.

He steered the unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV), which is equipped with a flotation pod that can be dropped into the sea, toward the swimmers, who were 800 metres away. After spotting them, he dropped the pod with pinpoint accuracy.

The two grabbed onto it and made it to shore with the help of the waves. A team of lifeguards who had raced to the scene greeted the two. They were unharmed.

The Surf Lifesaving website called

“I was able to launch it, fly it to the location, and drop the pod all in about one to two minutes.” JAI SHERIDAN 2017 NEW SOUTH WALES LIFEGUARD OF THE YEAR

it a “world first.”

“I was able to launch it, fly it to the location, and drop the pod all in about one to two minutes,” Sheridan said.

This was not your Apple store drone. It was a sophistica­ted UAV called “Little Ripper” described by its corporate sponsor, Westpac, as a “small unmanned helicopter capable of long range deployment.”

Drones have in recent years made news for taking lives rather than saving them. But helping to save people at sea is clearly a future use of UAVs.

The Coast Guard is reportedly considerin­g acquisitio­n of a drone fleet to use for both search and rescue as well as drug interdicti­on, according to Military.com. The potential is “limitless,” Coast Guard vice commandant Adm. Charles Michel said at a conference last year.

 ?? WESTPAC LITTLE RIPPER/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A flotation device is dropped from a flying drone toward two teenagers caught in a riptide in heavy seas off the Australian east coast.
WESTPAC LITTLE RIPPER/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A flotation device is dropped from a flying drone toward two teenagers caught in a riptide in heavy seas off the Australian east coast.

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