About the Club
Venus Bay Surf
Life Saving Club was formed in 1961 and is a member of Surf Life Saving Victoria.

The club was formed
as a result of two meetings, with the first being an interest meeting
held at Tarwin Lower Memorial Hall. On the 24th September 1961 the
inaugural meeting was held at Tarwin Lower Hotel and Venus Bay SLSC was
officially formed.
To date Venus
Bay SLSC has had three club houses. The original clubhouse was built
100 meters from beach-head at Surf Drive, Venus Bay, in 1962, with the
assistance of a donation from the Van Cleef Foundation. In 1970
a new clubhouse overlooking the beach at Surf Drive was opened.
This clubhouse remained until 1997 when a new clubhouse was erected as
a result of funds raised by the club members and support from the Victorian
Government 21st Century Lifesaving Fund.
The new club house
was built further back due to new regulations from Parks Victoria and
predictions of sand dune erosion in future years. The clubhouse
is now situated at the top of Surf Drive and provides equipment storage
and maintenance, first aid facilities, bunk house facilities, training
area/function room (200 people seated), change rooms and showers, radio
room, kitchen, kiosk, administration office and a radio room with communication
links to Surf Life Saving Victoria and Police Marine Rescue.
Location
Venus Bay is located
on Australia's coast approximately 160km South East of Melbourne, between
Phillip Island and Wilson's Promontory. The beach is nearly 24km
long and has public access only toward the northern end at the Venus Bay
settlement, where the surf club is located. Public access and parking
are provided at the surf lifesaving club and four other points adjacent
to the 5km long Venus Bay settlement. The beach receives high south-west
waves averaging 1.8m which, with the fine sand, produce a wide, low gradient
beach, fronted by a 400m wide surf zone. This consists of an inner
bar cut by strong rips every 350m, then a deep trough, with an outer bar
cut by rips every few hundred metres. Due to its orientation, the
beach is very prone to westerly winds that blow out the surf and intensify
the currents.

Rescues
Successful rescues
by reel and line were recorded in 1964/65, and 23 rescues took place in
1967/68. The largest number of rescues were recorded in 2001/2002
where a single patrol rescued 29 individuals in one day.
First Bronze
Medallion Squad
On the 1st of
April 1962, Ian Sutherland, Brian Bridgewater, Ian Inglis, Louis Kirby
and Basil DeBondt became the first bronze medallion holders for the club.
It wasn't until 19 years later that women were introduced to the club
as patrolling members. Wendy Duell (7/3/81) and Simonetta Danielis
(21/3/81) were the first two female bronze medallion holders for Venus
Bay.
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