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beach and the area just offshore creates larger waves, he said. If someone is swept out, that also means they are immediately in deep water, which can make an escape less probable. The coarse sand of the beach also collapses and erodes quickly, which can easily sweep someone off their feet, Nicolini said. The National Weather Service had sent out a warning for sneaker waves for Friday and Saturday on the North Coast. But Nicolini said Sunday wasn't a strong sneaker wave day typically marked by lulls, followed by larger than average waves. There were, however, big waves along the coast, which could have caught the couple by surprise, he said. Parris said, after speaking with Archer's boyfriend, that there was wave action, when the incident occurred. Whatever the conditions, Garrigan said, beachgoers need to always keep an eye on the ocean. further from the water than you think you need to be, he said. Sunday's incident is the region's third in the past several months, and the second on the North Coast. In late November, a Eureka couple drowned and their son disappeared at Big Lagoon Beach near Orick. Gregory Kuljian, 16, went into shallow with his father after the family dog, but were swept away. Howard Kuljian and his son became separated, and Mary Elena Scott died after being swept into the ocean when she tried to pull her son out. The dog survived; the boy has not been found. On New Year's Day, a man and his wife were walking on the beach near Point Reyes when a wave pulled their dog out. The couple went in to rescue the dog, and the man was swept away, while his wife and dog made it safely to shore.