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人命救助にかけるライフセーバー
マリンスポーツが盛んなオーストラリアでは、人命救助を行なうライフセーバーたちは、英雄扱いされています。今年3月、ライフセーバーのチャンピオンを決める大会が開かれましたが、6,000人もの参加者が技を競い合い、たいへんな盛り上がりとなりました。
Lifesavers Live Up To Icon Status On Beach
By DARREN McLEAN
Just like the Aussie swagman, the surf lifesaver is one of Australia's
most renowned icons. Australians' two favorite pastimes are sport and the
beach, so when our country's best surf lifesavers compete there is a lot of
interest and excitement.
The 1999 Australian Surf Lifesaving Championships were held in March this year
at Kurrawa Beach, a 10-minute drive from where I live on the Gold Coast. Over
6,000 competitors from Australia and abroad and 500 officials participate in
the carnival each year. In fact the Olympic Games is the only sporting event
with more competitors.
At this year's championships, competitors took a bruising from rough surf
conditions. Several competitors were taken to the hospital with concussions
or broken bones. But the lifesavers know that for all the sport's thrills
there will also be spills, inevitable when competing in the unpredictable
ocean.
It is the diverse array of events at the surf lifesaving championships that
make the carnival so exciting. The traditional individual events are surf
swimming, ski, board paddling, and the ironman and ironwoman races, which
are a grueling combination of the three. The beach sprints are the only
"dry" event. Competitors lie face down in the sand to start and then race to
be the first to jump on a beach flag buried in the sand.
Team events include rescue and resuscitation, march past, first aid, beach
patrol and inflatable powerboat rescue. The most spectacular event of all is
the five-man surf boat race, where teams of five row wood and fiberglass
boats out to sea through crashing waves and then back into the shore. Several
of these 8-meter boats overturned and sank this year in the rough
conditions.
At this year's championships Clint Robinson became Australia's most successful
surf lifesaver, winning his 14th gold medal and the crown of most outstanding
competitor of the 1999 championships. Robinson won a kayaking gold medal at
the Barcelona Olympics in 1992, but has since taken to the ocean with enormous
success, eclipsing the record set by ironman legend Trevor Hendy.
Eighteen year-old surf sensation Ky Hurst won the popular ironman competition
while world ironwoman champion Kerri Thomas retained her ironwoman title for
the second year running.
The surf carnival action continued on into the night as Surfers Paradise
hosted the "World's Biggest Beach Party."
When they are not competing, Australian surf lifesavers carry out the
important role of patrolling our beaches, protecting the coastal environment
and rescuing people in distress. Most surf lifesavers perform their duties
as an unpaid community service.
Children from the age of 7 join their local surf club as "Nippers" to learn
basic surf lifesaving skills. Also, most schools near the coast have surf
survival programs that involve learning surf theory, resuscitation and
fitness testing.
As a result, most Australian children are well-educated on beach safety and
survival. However, many tourists to Australia's beaches are blind to the many
dangers that exist in the surf. Several people tragically drown each year,
most of whom are inexperienced swimmers who venture into dangerous waters
off unpatrolled beaches.
Dudley Williams started surf lifesaving at the famous Bondi Beach in Sydney
in 1931. He has watched surf lifesaving grow from its start in 1920, when
young men would gather regularly to bathe, surf the waves and keep an eye on
other swimmers. Over Williams' 80 years, surf culture has developed to a point
where the bronzed lifesaver is the king of the beach.
Williams made front-page news in 1933 after helping to save three people who
were drowning at Bondi Beach. "In those days we would jump into the surf with
a belt and line attached to us and be reeled back in by someone on the
shore," he said. The reel and line rescue remains an event at the surf
lifesaving championships.
Surf lifesaving is as much a passion as a vital community service. The sport
of surf lifesaving is best summed up by motto of the Australian Surf
Lifesaving Association — "vigilance and service."
Just like the Aussie swagman, the surf lifesaver is one of Australia's
most renowned icons. Australians' two favorite pastimes are sport and the
beach, so when our country's best surf lifesavers compete there is a lot of
interest and excitement.
The 1999 Australian Surf Lifesaving Championships were held in March this year
at Kurrawa Beach, a 10-minute drive from where I live on the Gold Coast. Over
6,000 competitors from Australia and abroad and 500 officials participate in
the carnival each year. In fact the Olympic Games is the only sporting event
with more competitors.
At this year's championships, competitors took a bruising from rough surf
conditions. Several competitors were taken to the hospital with concussions
or broken bones. But the lifesavers know that for all the sport's thrills
there will also be spills, inevitable when competing in the unpredictable
ocean.
It is the diverse array of events at the surf lifesaving championships that
make the carnival so exciting. The traditional individual events are surf
swimming, ski, board paddling, and the ironman and ironwoman races, which
are a grueling combination of the three. The beach sprints are the only
"dry" event. Competitors lie face down in the sand to start and then race to
be the first to jump on a beach flag buried in the sand.
Team events include rescue and resuscitation, march past, first aid, beach
patrol and inflatable powerboat rescue. The most spectacular event of all is
the five-man surf boat race, where teams of five row wood and fiberglass
boats out to sea through crashing waves and then back into the shore. Several
of these 8-meter boats overturned and sank this year in the rough
conditions.
At this year's championships Clint Robinson became Australia's most successful
surf lifesaver, winning his 14th gold medal and the crown of most outstanding
competitor of the 1999 championships. Robinson won a kayaking gold medal at
the Barcelona Olympics in 1992, but has since taken to the ocean with enormous
success, eclipsing the record set by ironman legend Trevor Hendy.
Eighteen year-old surf sensation Ky Hurst won the popular ironman competition
while world ironwoman champion Kerri Thomas retained her ironwoman title for
the second year running.
The surf carnival action continued on into the night as Surfers Paradise
hosted the "World's Biggest Beach Party."
When they are not competing, Australian surf lifesavers carry out the
important role of patrolling our beaches, protecting the coastal environment
and rescuing people in distress. Most surf lifesavers perform their duties
as an unpaid community service.
Children from the age of 7 join their local surf club as "Nippers" to learn
basic surf lifesaving skills. Also, most schools near the coast have surf
survival programs that involve learning surf theory, resuscitation and
fitness testing.
As a result, most Australian children are well-educated on beach safety and
survival. However, many tourists to Australia's beaches are blind to the many
dangers that exist in the surf. Several people tragically drown each year,
most of whom are inexperienced swimmers who venture into dangerous waters
off unpatrolled beaches.
Dudley Williams started surf lifesaving at the famous Bondi Beach in Sydney
in 1931. He has watched surf lifesaving grow from its start in 1920, when
young men would gather regularly to bathe, surf the waves and keep an eye on
other swimmers. Over Williams' 80 years, surf culture has developed to a point
where the bronzed lifesaver is the king of the beach.
Williams made front-page news in 1933 after helping to save three people who
were drowning at Bondi Beach. "In those days we would jump into the surf with
a belt and line attached to us and be reeled back in by someone on the
shore," he said. The reel and line rescue remains an event at the surf
lifesaving championships.
Surf lifesaving is as much a passion as a vital community service. The sport
of surf lifesaving is best summed up by motto of the Australian Surf
Lifesaving Association — "vigilance and service."
Shukan ST: May 14, 1999
(C) All rights reserved
- Aussie
- オーストラリア人の
- swagman
- 丸めた毛布に持ち物を包み、職を求めて牧場を渡り歩く放浪者
- surf
- 海辺の
- pastimes
- 娯楽
- took a bruising
- つらい目にあった
- concussions
- 脳震盪
- thrills
- スリル
- spills
- 危険な目
- inevitable
- 避けられない
- unpredictable
- 予測のつかない
- diverse
- 多様な
- array of 〜
- 一連の 〜
- ski
- 水上スキー
- board paddling
- サーフボード漕ぎ
- ironman and ironwoman races
- トライアスロン競技
- grueling
- へとへとに疲れさせる
- resuscitation
- 蘇生術
- march past
- チーム別のライフセーバーの行進
- first aid
- 応急処置
- inflatable powerboat
- エンジン付きゴムボート
- row
- こぐ
- fiberglass
- ガラス繊維製の
- outstanding
- 優秀な
- kayaking
- カヤック(手漕ぎボート)競技
- eclipsing 〜
- 〜 をかげらせて
- 〜 legend
- 〜 で伝説的な存在
- retained
- 保持した
- Surfers Paradise
- ゴールドコースト市の一角にある保養観光地
- carry out
- 実行する
- people in distress
- 遭難した人々
- unpaid
- 無給の
- community service
- 地域奉仕
- fitness testing
- 体調チェック
- tragically
- 悲惨に
- venture into 〜
- 〜 に入り込む
- dangerous waters
- 危険水域
- bathe
- 泳ぐ
- bronzed
- 日に焼けた
- line attached to 〜
- 〜 に付けられた命綱
- be reeled back in
- 巻き上げられる
- vital
- 人の生死に関わる
- (is)summed up by 〜
- 〜 に要約される
- vigilance
- 警戒