
Originally Posted by
BobD
Once hypothermia sets in, all bets are off as to what a person might do.
Teaching a white water kayaking class once, we lost a student (not dead, just lost). He had taken a few swims, so I was keeping an eye on him. On his last swim, his boat ended up in the next eddy down river with another instructor. After checking he was ok and joking/talking for a few minutes, I let him scramble up the ten foot high bank to walk down to the other instructor in the next eddy, about 40 feet away. When he didn't appear straight away I assumed he was taking a leak and gave him a couple of minutes befor sending a trainee instructor up to see where he was. He was no where to be seen. The six hour search involving about thirty people and two helicoptors turned up nothing. He was found by some firefighters who had just finished damping down a fire about three miles away (10.30 at night).
When I talked to him days later, he still wasn't sure what happened, but said he had thought he was at the take out and was looking for his car. Now this was the fourth day of the class, so he knew the routine and wasn't even on the right side of the river. Other than looking a little cold (every one does after a swim) he displayed no sign of hypothermia, yet disappeared in a few minutes.
BobD
Possible -- sure but seems farfetched.
Here is the reason – This guy leaves Friday morning for a run in very little clothing -- shorts I heard from the one news media - this is at 7AM. Given the guy wanted a long run -- so give him 4 hrs which puts him somewhere around Noon on a Friday laying in a ravine unconscious. It is cold , raining and the ground is wet everywhere. He lies unconscious for 3days or 72 hours, among coyotes, cougars, all kinds of bugs, nettles and blackberry bushes everywhere, you name it. He wakes up Monday afternoon and scrambles to the top, out to the road and then back onto the trail and walks home during a rainfall of almost 1” in 4 hours. He gets home @ 11:30 PM or so and there is nothing wrong medically with him after he showers. Not one bug bite or scratch on him per the Sheriff as he smiles and says “I am just glad he is ok”.
Al
I’m supposed to respect my elders, but its getting harder and harder for me to find one