Ayrshire Post

Plea to leave inflatable­s at home after rescues

- RYAN THOM

A lifeboat crew has urged beachgoers to leave inflatable­s at home after two people were rescued last weekend.

Troon RNLI dealt with seven callouts in just 24 hours as beach visitors enjoyed the summer scorcher.

In two separate emergencie­s, the crew raced out to save casualties who were stuck on inflatable dinghies that had been swept out to sea. In a weekend that saw tragedies in Scottish waters, experience­d lifeboat operators

urged visitors to the shore to stay safe.

Coxswain Jim Millar said: “One thing we cannot stress enough is for people to leave inflatable­s at home. They are designed for the pool, not the sea.

“Last week between Thursday and Wednesday the wind changed direction to a north shore wind.

“That means anything with inflatable­s is only going one way – that is out to sea. Inflatable unicorns, rubber dinghies – they are all for swimming pools.

“If you are on one, then very quickly you could be a half-mile to a mile off shore – in the blink of an eye.”

Lifeboat crews had to rescue two people on inflatable­s, one near Ardrossan and another near Stevenston who was helped by a paddle boarder on Friday, July 23.

The crew was also called to several ‘false alarms’ which saw inflatable­s adrift – which rescuers fear could delay response times to real emergencie­s.

At one point the team hauled at least 12 castaway dinghies to prevent further confusion.

Coxswain Millar added: “When we were returning from a call we must have collected at least a dozen more of the inflatable­s which had drifted offshore.

“We recovered them to save someone else calling it in. From a yacht or smaller boat it could look like someone is in danger.”

The lifeboat crews have encouraged safety measures of ‘float to live’ following tragic drownings in Loch Lomond and across the central belt.

Troon Lifeboat community safety officer, Vince McWhirter, said: “After so many tragic incidents throughout the UK over the past week, we would urge the public to think about their own safety while visiting the coast and to follow some simple steps to stay safe:

“If you find yourself in difficulty in the water remember ‘float to live.’

“If you see someone in difficulty at sea or along the coast dial 999 and ask for the Coastguard.”

 ??  ?? Recovery Inflatable at sea
Recovery Inflatable at sea

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