Wednesday, 1 September 2010

Danger on the Beach

Beach is likely to be the most popular and common place for people who want to go some place to relax or relief stress from their work. However, we sometimes have no idea about the sunshine day hidden danger in clam ocean.


In “A Hot Day at the Beach, but Dangerous to Swim”, most people prefer to go to the beach for their vacation, but it might be a bad choice in a shiny day (Patrick McGeehan, 2010). On the beach of New Jersey, Seaside Heights, many beachgoers came to this place, even if it was 94 degrees, a highest record of temperature in history of city. This hottest temperature is caused the storms move out clouds. However, a meteorologist still warn that risk of Hurricane Earl might return in this week and high risk of rip currents. Lifeguards have to work carefully with stricted rule that no one is allowed to go further offshore, and it make some tourists irritated.


I think that it is right for the safeguard doing his duty, even sometimes it is annoying for tourists who came to the beach for relaxation rather than following the rules. However, we should think about safety first. Even though, it is not comfortable for them, at least, it is helpful when natural disaster came. Unfortunately, Thailand did not concern about this before and we can see and learn from the damage of Tsunami.


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References

McGeehan, P. (2010, August 29). A hot day at the beach, but dangerous to swim. The new York Times. Retrieved September 01, 2010 from http://www.nytimes.com/2010/08/30/nyregion/30beach.html?ref=nyregion

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