The New Zealand Herald

Dad don’t drown, boy pleads in rip

Strangers save adults and children struggling in surf

- Melissa Nightingal­e and Kelly Dennett

Aformer surf lifesaver and ex-police officer who was caught in a rip with his twin children has told of their dramatic rescue by strangers.

Tauranga man John Richardson says the group saved their lives at Arataki Beach on Friday.

Richardson was visiting the unpatrolle­d beach with friend Rebecca Sandford, his 10-yearold twins Ruby and Ethan, and Sandford’s teenage daughter, Maggie.

After noticing the twins in difficulty, Richardson ploughed into the surf — and felt his Achilles rupture.

Undeterred, he continued, now accompanie­d by Sandford. It wasn’t long before the whole group was in trouble, with Richardson holding Ethan above the waves while Maggie helped Ruby.

“I was yelling out for help, trying to keep him up,” Richardson said.

“I’m a competitiv­e swimmer and was a surf lifesaver for quite a few years [but] with the injury and the adrenalin and holding my son up, I was getting pounded by the waves and not going anywhere.”

Ryan Donald, 26, and girlfriend Sam Hunchberge­r, 25, saw the scene unfold and launched in with another person’s boogie board to help.

Donald told the Herald Richardson appeared “absolutely exhausted” and Ethan “just terrified”.

The pair put Ethan on the board while Richardson struggled.

“I was panicking and running out of breath and not making any headway. I was trying to float on my back and kick and my son was calling out, ‘ Dad, don’t drown. Dad, don’t drown,” Richardson said.

“Ryan and Ethan started to panic because they couldn’t make any headway either. They were calling out for help.”

Donald said it ran through his mind, “S***, I don’t actually know if I’m going to be able to make it back in here”.

“If we didn’t have that boogie board there it could have been a whole different story.”

A woman in a blue swimsuit came alongside Richardson and began encouragin­g him.

“This lady just swam by me and said, ‘You’re going to make it, you’re going to make it.’ I could see it wasn’t easy for her [but] we just kept going,”’ Richardson said.

Eventually the whole group made it back and a call was put to emergency services and a nearby surf lifesaving club.

An off-duty lifeguard came to help with a rescue boat. It was immediatel­y dispatched back into the water after another family also got into trouble.

Donald and his girlfriend left the scene almost immediatel­y after reaching the shore, as Donald began having an asthma attack and needed to find an inhaler. They did not have time to speak to the family they helped.

The incident has been running through his mind since Friday.

“You just keeping thinking hypothetic­als. What if I didn’t jump in at that point? The guy was exhausted, I don’t know how much longer he would have had with that kid. What if we didn’t get back in?”

There were many people on the beach, but Donald wanted to give them “the benefit of the doubt” for not helping.

“On the beach it didn’t look as bad as when you were in there.”

He urged others who noticed someone in trouble to do something, even if they didn’t feel they could actually swim over and help.

Calling for help immediatel­y or providing flotation devices was a good option, he said.

Richardson said that as he sat on the beach after the ordeal, he burst into tears, realising he and his children had nearly died. He didn’t have a chance to thank the mystery woman who helped him.

“The way it unfolded, it was just crazy, and it was just fantastic, the public.

“The New Zealand Government has to fund New Zealand life saving in some way because New Zealand is a country where everybody goes to the beach, and everybody swims,” he said.

In November, Surf Life Saving Northern Region, which cover clubs in Auckland, Northland and the Waikato, said more people would drown if the Government didn’t start funding life saving services.

But Surf Life Saving New Zealand, which run clubs in the rest of the country, said Crown funding would change its volunteer culture. Surf life saving is funded by donations and council funding.

 ??  ?? John Richardson with 10-year-old twins Ruby, left, and Ethan Richardson.
John Richardson with 10-year-old twins Ruby, left, and Ethan Richardson.
 ??  ?? Rescuers Sam Hunchberge­r and Ryan Donald.
Rescuers Sam Hunchberge­r and Ryan Donald.

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