In an old brick building, home to the Brighton Life Saving club, a line of women in colourful hijabs wearing thick jumpers and coats sit clutching their handbags and looking very out of place.
They are part of a group of Afghani, Sudanese and Ethiopian migrants learning just how dangerous a day at the beach in Melbourne can be.
Speaking slowly, so the story can be interpreted, a surf lifeguard tells the story of the drowning of two children at Gunnamatta beach.
The women glance at each other uncertainly. A few gasp. They cannot swim and this is their first visit to a beach.
For three years, volunteers from Brighton’s Life Saving club have been teaching water safety to newly arrived refugees and asylum seekers.
“It’s actually quite staggering how little they do know,” club spokesman Tim Bolton said.
“They don’t have any knowledge of how to swim and they don’t have that reflex action to just stand up and realise they are in knee-deep water.
“They certainly have no knowledge of any of the dangers at the beach, rips or anything.”
Within an hour the women are on the sand. They have put their bags down and are playing a game of tug of war with a group of South Sudanese boys.
They lose and burst into laughter.
Then the soccer ball comes out and in amongst the local families the group is eased closer and closer to the water.