Family Safety
Rip currents at the Jersey Shore: the 60-second safety plan for parents
A parent-friendly, Jersey-Shore-tested checklist for rip current and beach safety: the flags to look for, the quick script for kids, and what to do if someone gets pulled out.
What Monmouth families should know
Rip currents are one of the biggest “looks fine, isn’t fine” risks at the Jersey Shore. Even on a sunny, calm-looking day, rip currents can form and quickly pull a strong swimmer away from shore, which is why the safest default is always: swim where there’s a lifeguard and actually ask them what today looks like.
If you only read one thing: your job as a parent is not to be the hero in the water. Your job is to keep kids close, stay in front of a lifeguard, and know the 10-second plan if something goes sideways.
The 60-second “before we step on the sand” checklist
- Pick a guarded beach. NOAA notes the chance of drowning at a beach with lifeguards is extremely low (they cite a U.S. Lifesaving Association statistic)—so make “lifeguards on duty” your non-negotiable.
- Check conditions before you go. NOAA’s guidance is simple: look at the local beach forecast and talk to the lifeguard before you enter the water (NOAA/NWS rip current safety page).
- Make a family boundary. For little kids: “We only go in the water to the knees unless we’re holding hands.” For bigger kids: “You stay between these two points, in front of the stand.”
- Know the “two adults” rule. If you’re with another adult, decide out loud who is watching the water right now. (It’s way too easy to assume the other person is watching.)
The kid script (say it once, then repeat it)
If you have school-age kids, give them a short script they can remember under stress. Here’s one that’s Shore-appropriate:
- If you feel like the water is pulling you out: “Stop, float, wave.”
- Don’t fight it. ReadyNJ says to stay calm and conserve energy, because fighting the current can exhaust you fast (ReadyNJ rip current swim safety post).
- Swim sideways, not straight in. If they can swim, the simplest instruction is “swim parallel to the beach,” then angle back in when the pull eases (ReadyNJ rip current swim safety post).
- Wave and yell early. The earlier a lifeguard spots the problem, the easier the rescue.
If someone gets pulled out: what parents should do (and not do)
This is the hard part to say out loud, but it saves lives: most drowning deaths are “would-be rescuers.” A rip current can turn one victim into two in seconds.
- Get the lifeguard first. Run to the stand or blow-whistle area and point. If there isn’t one, call 911.
- Throw, don’t go. If you can safely toss something that floats (a boogie board, life jacket, even a cooler lid), do that from shore or shallow water. Don’t swim out after them unless you’re trained and have flotation.
- Keep eyes on the person. Point continuously so the responder doesn’t lose them in the chop.
Quick “rip current risk” clues parents can spot
Lifeguards and forecasts matter most. But here are quick clues that should make you extra cautious (or keep everyone in the shallows):
- It looks like a river cutting through the waves. A darker, calmer-looking channel with fewer breaking waves can be the “outgoing conveyor belt.”
- Groins, jetties, piers. Rip currents often form near these structures; keep kids well away.
- “Perfect beach day” weather. NOAA explicitly warns that great weather doesn’t always mean it’s safe—rip currents can form on calm, sunny days (NOAA/NWS rip current safety page).
Local resources (save these now)
- 2-1-1 NJ: Dial 211 for community services and referrals (food, housing, utilities, family supports).
- Monmouth County Office of Emergency Management (OEM): 732-431-7400.
- ReadyNJ (NJ Office of Emergency Management): Shareable rip current guidance for families (ReadyNJ rip current swim safety post).
- NJ Sea Grant rip current awareness: NJ-specific campaign + resources (and yes, the signs you see on beach entrances come from this effort) (NJ Sea Grant rip current awareness program).
How Love of Humanity helps
Love of Humanity is building a family-first “community education” effort in Monmouth County: simple, shareable guides that help households make safer choices and avoid expensive mistakes. We’re small on purpose, local on purpose, and focused on the stuff that actually comes up in real life—storms, scams, utilities, and everyday safety. When you share these posts (or book a quick call), you’re helping us reach more families with practical help.
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