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Pilot Adopts Cat She Rescued After 380-Foot Fall In National Park

Pilot Adopts Cat She Rescued After 380-Foot Fall In National Park

Forbes7 hours ago

Pilot Chelsea Tugaw holds Mirage, a senior cat who survived a 380-foot fall in a soft-sided carrier ... More in Bryce Canyon National Park.
A senior cat who survived a nearly 400-foot plunge that killed her owners in Bryce Canyon National Park has a second chance at life thanks to the rescue pilot who flew her to safety.
Air Force veteran Chelsea Tugaw, a search and rescue helicopter pilot with the Utah Department of Public Safety's Aero Bureau, first met the remarkable cat on April 30 during a mission to recover the bodies of a couple found by hikers beneath Inspiration Point. She and her team responded to a call from the Garfield County Sheriff's Office.
'Due to the nature of the terrain, they needed our assistance with the recovery efforts,' she said. 'As part of that, they wanted us to go collect what they saw was a backpack on the hillside. So we hoisted my rescue specialist in and he relayed to us at that time it was actually a cat and a cat carrier.'
Back on the chopper, he told the crew that the cat in the soft-sided carrier was alive – a welcome surprise for everyone on board.
'I can't tell you how many missions we've been on, but it's definitely the first one where we've flown a cat,' Tugaw said. 'She seemed like maybe she was in shock. She was very quiet. She didn't make any noise at all. So I figured she probably had some pretty extensive injuries from a fall like that.'
A veterinary team at Best Friends Animal Sanctuary X-rays Mirage after her rescue from Bryce Canyon ... More National Park in Utah.
Once on the ground, the cat went to Utah's Best Friends Animal Sanctuary in Kanab for veterinary care, where the staff named her Mirage because surviving the fall seemed unreal. The veterinary team discovered Mirage suffered broken ribs and teeth and required special care in Las Vegas for fluid around her heart.
Tugaw followed Mirage's recovery with more than a passing interest. Soon after the rescue, she'd told Best Friends that she'd like to adopt Mirage if the family of the deceased couple approved — which they unequivocally did.
So on May 19, Tugaw drove for nearly six hours to reunite with Mirage and adopt her.
'That was the first time I'd seen her since the rescue, so it was really fun to see her personality come out,' she said. 'She was really outgoing and cuddly and wanting to purr. Just kind of acting like a typical older cat where she was wanting to take a nap.'
Pilot Chelsea Tugaw cradles Mirage, aka Mira, at home in Ogden, Utah.
Now Mirage — nicknamed 'Mira' — is adapting to her new home with Tugaw's family, which includes her husband, their two cats and a German shepherd named Xerxes. While Mira remains a tad leery of the dog, the 12-year-old cat is getting along well with her new feline siblings, Max and Milo. She seems enamored with her forever family.
'Mira loves to cuddle. She'll come and sit on our laps and purr all the time,' Tugaw said. 'She's very much a people cat. So it's been good.'
For her part, Tugaw loves that Mira purrs and cuddles so much.
'It's the cutest thing when I'll be laying in bed and she'll want to crawl under the sheets and just curl up next to me to sleep,' she said.
Mira loves cuddles and purrs often.
Tugaw hopes Mira's story inspires people to be more open to adopting older pets. She noted that senior pets at animal shelters across the country are often 'skipped over,' and wishes they'd be offered a second chance at a life outside of a shelter.
'I hope it inspires people to reconsider because they're just the most lovable pets. And a lot of times you can find an elderly animal that's already been trained,' she said. 'I'm glad Mira was able to come home with me, and I hope that she gets to spend a nice, relaxing rest of her life in our home.'

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Nina Kuscsik, pioneer in long-distance running and first woman to win the Boston Marathon, has died
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The Skull of ‘Scattered Man' Washed Up on a Beach 30 Years Ago. Students Just ID'd the Remains.
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Here's what you'll learn when you read this story: A skull washed on up on the shore of a New Jersey beach back in 1995, with further bone fragments appearing in 1999 and 2013. As a result, the set of remains earned the nickname 'Scattered Man John Doe.' Stumped for nearly three decades, local law enforcement recently turned to students at Ramapo College to employ genetic analysis and historical research to try and identify whose bones had washed ashore. The students were able to determine that the remains belonged to Henry Goodsell, the 29-year-old captain of the merchant ship Oriental, who died during a storm alongside his crew in 1844 This story is a collaboration with Imagine it's 1995. You've just had a good time seeing Batman Forever at the movies. You're cracking open an OK soda, strolling along the beach in Longport, New Jersey, rocking out to Shaggy's 'Boombastic,' when all of a sudden you stumble across a shocking sight: a skull has washed up on the shore. Did somebody drown at the beach? Did you stumble across the remnants of a mob hit? Whose skull is this, and how did it get here? You contact the proper authorities and feel certain they'll find the answer soon enough. Now imagine it's 1999. You've just had an O.K. time seeing Star Wars: Episode I - The Phantom Menace, and have likely forgotten all about that skull on the beach four years ago when, suddenly, news breaks: fragments of bone from the same corpse as the Longport skull have now been found less than two miles away in the nearby town of Margate. Authorities are no closer to identifying the dead man. Now, it's 2013. You just saw Frozen, and as you check your phone on the way out of the theater, you see the news alert: new skeletal remains, likely connected with that 1995 skull, have washed up in Ocean City. 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But all the more remarkable is how long Goodsell's body had been lost, awaiting discovery: the storm that claimed Goodsell's life occurred in the winter of 1844. Ramapo's search for answers began in the fall of 2023, when they sent a DNA sample from the remains to Intermountain Forensics 'who uploaded the sample to GEDmatch and FamilyTreeDNA in February of 2024,' per a Ramapo College press release. This allowed the Ramapo undergraduates to trace the genealogy of the deceased. The students found evidence of ancestry 'dating back to the 1600s, with genetic relatives hailing from Litchfield and Fairfield counties in Connecticut.' For a full year, students at Ramapo hit the books, volunteering their time to try and triangulate deceased or missing figures with ties to Connecticut who may have been involved in shipwrecks off of the coast of New Jersey. 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You just saw the new Mission: Impossible and can't believe it's been 29 years since that first one came out. And you finally have some closure on whose skull it was that washed ashore on the beach all the way back in 1995. Henry Goodsell, age 29, captain of the Oriental. You Might Also Like The Do's and Don'ts of Using Painter's Tape The Best Portable BBQ Grills for Cooking Anywhere Can a Smart Watch Prolong Your Life?

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