Austin Appelbeeâs family had prioritised swimming lessons in years before his life-saving effort
The 13-year-old has made global headlines for his epic four-hour journey to reach land and sound the alarm.
A young boy hailed a hero for a âsuperhumanâ swim to save his family as they drifted out to sea had only recently failed a state-run swimming program.
Austin Appelbee, 13, has made global headlines for his epic four-hour journey through rough surf to sound the alarm that his family was stranded, clinging to paddleboards, off the coast of Western Australiaâs South West on Friday.
WATCH THE VIDEO ABOVE: Teen swims 4km to rescue stranded family.
âI was very puffed out but I couldnât feel how tired I was,â he said of the swim, as he was battered by âmassiveâ waves.
âI just keep swimming. I did breaststroke, I did freestyle, I did survival backstroke.
âThen finally I made it to shore and I hit the bottom … and I just collapsed.â
After reaching the beach, he sprinted two kilometres to a phone to call Triple-0, triggering a major search.
âI said, âI need helicopters, I need planes, I need boats. My familyâs out at seaâ,â he said.
âI was very calm about it. I think it was just a lot of shock.â
His bravery meant his mother Joanne and younger siblings Beau, 12, and Grace, 8, were found by a rescue helicopter 14km out to sea tired but alive more than eight hours after they were pushed offshore by strong winds.
âIâll be the first to hand him the bronze medallionâ
Naturaliste Marine Rescue commander Paul Bresland described Austinâs effort as âsuperhumanâ and was confident he âmust be a strong swimmerâ.
But Bresland was told by the teenâs dad that he had just wrapped up VacSwim and had failed, reported the ABC.
Royal Life Saving WA chief executive Peter Leaversuch said Austinâs heroic act had outstripped any performance test.
âI had a chuckle [about the VacSwim stuff]. As instructors and educators we hope what was communicated to him was that he didnât fail, it was more that he hadnât performed all the elements just yet and he needed to continue practicing,â Leaversuch told 7NEWS.com.au.
âFor us, itâs a journey.
âI accept the irony of it. Clearly he can do it and Iâll be the first to hand him the bronze medallion.
âHis heroic act outstrips any performance test.â
VacSwim, which made headlines in 2025 due to plummeting enrolments, teaches kids about âskills to stay safe and build their confidence in the waterâ.
Leaversuch said it is a vitally important program.
âThe community understands the bronze medallion â that you can swim a couple hundred metres on your front, back and side, tread water and perform a rescue,â he said.
âWe want everyone in the community to get to that level. Too many are dropping out when they can swim one or two laps.
âBut these are foundation skill that set them up for life. Austinâs story highlights that importance.â


Austin said on Tuesday that âluckilyâ his parents had put him through lessons since he was four-years-of-age and he is a âgood swimmerâ.
âIâve always learnt to swim,â he said.
âIf I fall into the water, the likelihood of me swimming back up to the surface and start treading water, I can always do that.
âSo I have a lot of skills. Iâve been taught how to take off my life jacket in water, so that was really helpful.
âI didnât have to, but Iâve learned how to take my clothes off in the water and a bunch of other things.â
âThey have to learn how to swimâ
His proud mum Joanne said she had prioritised swimming lessons for all her children.
âIâm Irish. We donât get into the water over there so this land is surrounded by water and if [the kids are] going to be on the beach they have to learn how to swim,â she said.
âWeâve always insisted that they do.
âVacSwim has been amazing. When they were younger we had beginner private lessons but as youâre older we try and get them doing VacSwim at least twice a year with them and the school helps as well which is amazing.â
Drownings in Australia surged to unprecedented levels and the countryâs swimming skills are at âcrisisâ point, experts said in August when it was revealed 357 people had been killed in 2024-25.
Since December 1, 2025, 64 people have drowned in Australia, below the five-year average of 76 for this time of year, and down on the 89 deaths at the same point 12 months ago.
Chinese international student Fangqi Peng is among the countryâs latest tragic stories, having died while trying out new diving equipment in Sydney on Sunday.



Austinâs family, who were on holiday, had taken to the water with two paddleboards and a kayak off the coast of Quindalup, about 250kms south of Perth.
Conditions quickly deteriorated and they lost two oars and their kayak took on water as they tried to get back to shore.
Joanne said asking Austin to try to make it shore was âone of the hardest decisions I ever had to makeâ.
âAs the sun went down, I thought somethingâs gone terribly wrong here and my fear was that Austin didnât make it and everything goes through your head as a mum,â she said.
âDid I make the wrong decision by sending him, because I knew he was the strongest and he could do it?
âI would have never went because I wouldnât have left the kids at sea, so I had to send somebody.
âThere were no boats. There was nothing that we can get hold of.
âAnd then as it got darker, I thought, thereâs no one coming to save us. This is us.â
Austin remains on crutches but is expected to make a full recovery.
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