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In Australia, New Zealand,
Philippines and the United Kingdom a pair of
red/yellow flags is used to mark the limits of the
bathing area on a beach, usually guarded by
lifesavers. If the beach is closed, the poles of the
flags are crossed. The flags are coloured with a red
triangle and a yellow triangle making a rectangular
flag, or a red rectangle over a yellow rectangle. On
many Australian beaches there is a slight variation
with beach condition signalling. A red flag
signifies a closed beach (or, in the UK, some other
danger), yellow signifies strong current or
difficult swimming conditions and green represents a
beach safe for general swimming. Blue flags may also
be used away from the yellow-red lifesaver area to
designate a zone for surfboarding and other small,
non-motorised watercraft.
Reasons for closing the beach include:
>> no lifeguards in attendance.
>> waves too strong.
>> dangerous rip.
>> sharks.
>> tsunami.
A surf flag exists, divided into four quadrants. The
top left and bottom right quadrants are black, and
the remaining area is white.
Signal flag "India" (a black circle on a yellow
square) is frequently used to denote a "blackball"
zone where surfboards cannot be used but other water
activities are permitted.
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