WATER SAFETY

6 PLACES YOU'LL LOVE HAVING A SAFETY BUOY.

Adventure doesn't come with a safety net. But it can come with a Safety Buoy.

If you love open water, you already know the feeling, the freedom of a long swim offshore, the thrill of a solid surf session, the meditative quiet of paddling a glassy lake at sunrise. It's addictive. And it's worth protecting.

A Safety Buoy isn't about fear. It's about having the confidence to push further, swim harder, and explore more. Because you
know that if something goes sideways, you've got a plan. One pull. Instant float. Back in control.

Here are six places where that peace of mind doesn't just make sense, it makes your whole experience better.

01

Open Water Swims & Triathlons

There's nothing like the feeling of open water beneath you. No lane lines, no walls to touch, just you, your stroke, and the horizon. Whether you're training for a triathlon or just chasing distance for the love of it, open water swimming is one of the purest athletic
experiences out there.

But it's also the place where fatigue, current, and distance can sneak up on you fast. A Safety Buoy rides along at your hip, invisible until you need it, and when you do, one pull deploys a bright, buoyant float that keeps you on the surface while you catch your breath, signal for help, or wait for your support kayak to reach you.

02

Snorkeling

You're floating face-down, watching a sea turtle drift below you through crystal clear water in Hawaii, the Maldives, or the Great Barrier Reef. Time disappears. You're completely absorbed in this other world just beneath the surface.

Which is exactly when you're least aware of what's happening above it. Boat traffic. Changing currents. How far you've drifted from shore. A Safety Buoy does double duty here, it can keep you visible to boat operators in busy snorkel zones, and gives you a reliable float if you get caught in a current stronger than expected.

See more reef. Stay safer doing it.

Familie mit Restube beach geht durch das Wasser am Meer
03

Beach Vacations

You've done your research. You know which direction to swim if you get caught in a rip. You know not to fight it. But knowing and doing are two very different things when adrenaline spikes and the shore starts
pulling away from you.

Rip currents are responsible for the majority of ocean rescues worldwide and they don't discriminate between strong swimmers and weak ones. What they require is the ability to stay calm and float until the current releases you or help arrives. That's exactly what a Safety Buoy gives you: instant buoyancy, preserved energy, and a brightly colored signal that tells lifeguards and bystanders exactly where you are.

Vacation mode doesn't have to mean unguarded mode.

04

Remote Lake Days

A alpine lake at 9,000 feet, surrounded by granite and silence. A reservoir tucked into a canyon with no one else around for miles. These are the swims that stay with you forever... Wild, cold, impossibly beautiful.

They're also swims where there's no lifeguard, no nearby boat launch, and no one watching. Water temperature in mountain lakes can cause cold shock and muscle cramping with very little warning, even for seasoned swimmers. The Safety Buoy means that if your body decides to stop cooperating mid-swim, you're still floating and still in control of what happens next.

The remote spots are worth it. Pack your buoy alongside your summit snacks.

05

Surf Breaks & Shore Breaks

Wipeouts are part of surfing. You know this. You accept this. You probably have a few spectacular ones on GoPro. But not every wipeout is photogenic. Some involve getting held under, losing your board, and fighting a disoriented scramble back to the surface.

A Safety Buoy worn on the wrist means one pull gets you to the surface immediately, giving you the chance to reorient before the next set arrives. For bodyboarders and bodysurfers who rely purely on their own body in heavy shore break, it's an even simpler win, immediate buoyancy, less effort spent surviving, more energy left for the next wave.

Charge harder. Recover faster. Go again.

06

Water Sports

You're upright. You're in control. You're not planning on swimming today, you're paddling. Which is exactly the mindset that makes unplanned swims the most disorienting when they happen.

Unexpected capsizes in moving water, offshore crossings on a paddleboard, or simply losing footing while getting off a dock, the Safety Buoy is the backup plan you never think about until you need it. Compact enough to clip to a life vest or tuck into a dry bag, it adds zero drag to your paddle day and everything to your comfort level. And for multi-sport days where you're switching between paddling, swimming, and shoreside hiking? It just comes along for the ride.

One buoy. Every adventure.

01

Open Water Swims & Triathlons

There's nothing like the feeling of open water beneath you. No lane lines, no walls to touch, just you, your stroke, and the horizon. Whether you're training for a triathlon or just chasing distance for the love of it, open water swimming is one of the purest athletic
experiences out there.

But it's also the place where fatigue, current, and distance can sneak up on you fast. A Safety Buoy rides along at your hip, invisible until you need it, and when you do, one pull deploys a bright, buoyant float that keeps you on the surface while you catch your breath, signal for help, or wait for your support kayak to reach you.

02

Snorkeling

You're floating face-down, watching a sea turtle drift below you through crystal clear water in Hawaii, the Maldives, or the Great Barrier Reef. Time disappears. You're completely absorbed in this other world just beneath the surface.

Which is exactly when you're least aware of what's happening above it. Boat traffic. Changing currents. How far you've drifted from shore. A Safety Buoy does double duty here, it can keep you visible to boat operators in busy snorkel zones, and gives you a reliable float if you get caught in a current stronger than expected.

See more reef. Stay safer doing it.

03

Beach Vacations

You've done your research. You know which direction to swim if you get caught in a rip. You know not to fight it. But knowing and doing are two very different things when adrenaline spikes and the shore starts
pulling away from you.

Rip currents are responsible for the majority of ocean rescues worldwide and they don't discriminate between strong swimmers and weak ones. What they require is the ability to stay calm and float until the current releases you or help arrives. That's exactly what a Safety Buoy gives you: instant buoyancy, preserved energy, and a brightly colored signal that tells lifeguards and bystanders exactly where you are.

Vacation mode doesn't have to mean unguarded mode.

04

Remote Lake Days

A alpine lake at 9,000 feet, surrounded by granite and silence. A reservoir tucked into a canyon with no one else around for miles. These are the swims that stay with you forever... Wild, cold, impossibly beautiful.

They're also swims where there's no lifeguard, no nearby boat launch, and no one watching. Water temperature in mountain lakes can cause cold shock and muscle cramping with very little warning, even for seasoned swimmers. The Safety Buoy means that if your body decides to stop cooperating mid-swim, you're still floating and still in control of what happens next.

The remote spots are worth it. Pack your buoy alongside your summit snacks.

05

Surf Breaks & Shore Breaks

Wipeouts are part of surfing. You know this. You accept this. You probably have a few spectacular ones on GoPro. But not every wipeout is photogenic. Some involve getting held under, losing your board, and fighting a disoriented scramble back to the surface.

A Safety Buoy worn on the wrist means one pull gets you to the surface immediately, giving you the chance to reorient before the next set arrives. For bodyboarders and bodysurfers who rely purely on their own body in heavy shore break, it's an even simpler win, immediate buoyancy, less effort spent surviving, more energy left for the next wave.

Charge harder. Recover faster. Go again.

06

Water Sports

You're upright. You're in control. You're not planning on swimming today, you're paddling. Which is exactly the mindset that makes unplanned swims the most disorienting when they happen.

Unexpected capsizes in moving water, offshore crossings on a paddleboard, or simply losing footing while getting off a dock, the Safety Buoy is the backup plan you never think about until you need it. Compact enough to clip to a life vest or tuck into a dry bag, it adds zero drag to your paddle day and everything to your comfort level. And for multi-sport days where you're switching between paddling, swimming, and shoreside hiking? It just comes along for the ride.

One buoy. Every adventure.

Familie mit Restube beach geht durch das Wasser am Meer