logo
Two hikers call 911 and say their friend had died on trek... the truth was more bizarre

Two hikers call 911 and say their friend had died on trek... the truth was more bizarre

Daily Mail​2 days ago

Hikers trekking through a New York mountain frantically called 911 to report that their friend had died during their adventure, only to be met with an unexpected twist upon rescue crews' arrival.
While celebrating Memorial Day Weekend with a hike through the Cascade Mountain in North Elba, two friends found themselves in a nightmare scenario - they were lost, and their buddy was believed to be deceased, according to a press release.
But when officers arrived, something truly bizarre occurred - against all odds, their friend, presumed dead, seemingly rose from the grave.
As it turned out, the two pals weren't just high up on the mountains. They were also high on hallucinogenic mushrooms.
On May 24, around 9am, Forest Ranger Praczkajlo received an emergency call from distressed hikers on Cascade Mountain, located near Lake Placid, according to the state's Department of Environmental Conservation (DEC).
The mountain, part of the Adirondack High Peaks, ranks as the 36th tallest in the range.
During the call, the two hikers reported that their friend had died while on the trail.
They also informed authorities that they had encountered a Cascade Summit Steward earlier and admitted they were lost.
'The steward determined the hikers were in an altered mental state,' the agency said in the press release.
Ranger Praczkajlo eventually reached the trailhead, where an ambulance was already waiting, and escorted the two panicked hikers back to the vehicle.
However, as they made their way back, a single phone call changed the entire situation - turning a straightforward rescue into something far more confusing.
On the other line was the 'dead' friend - alive, unharmed and seemingly unaware of the chaos unfolding around him.
According to the release, the group had allegedly eaten hallucinogenic mushrooms during their hike.
The effects of the drug are highly unpredictable and heavily influenced by the user's mindset and the environment in which it's taken, as reported by Desert Hope Treatment Center.
Given the unforeseeable nature of the drug, users may endure 'bad trips' - intense, distressing reactions that can be both frightening and disorienting.
Intense hallucinations, anxiety, panic and fear are just a few of the possible effects during a 'bad trip', often triggered by unfamiliar or chaotic surroundings.
Thankfully reunited, all three friends were escorted back to their campsite, where they could finally find safety and calm after their odd ordeal.
Bad trips leading people to behave in wild or erratic ways are not an uncommon experience with mushrooms, though the intensity can vary greatly from person to person.
For some, a 'bad trip' might mean intense anxiety and a pounding heart - unpleasant but bearable - while others unfortunately end up in dangerous or painful situations.
Last year, a man on vacation in Austria who took these 'magic mushrooms' entered psychosis that led him to amputate his penis and store it in a snow-filled jar.
Doctors labeled the heart-stopping incident as the first case of its kind - and a harrowing reminder of the dangers of psychedelic drugs.
The 37-year-old man ate four or five mushrooms before blacking out and taking an axe to his penile shaft - ultimately chopping it into several pieces.
As he came to, he staggered out of the home and dragged himself down a nearby street, bleeding profusely, searching for help.
In the middle of the night, around 2am, a passerby picked him up and brought him to the nearest village, and then to the closest hospital.
He was immediately carted to the operating room, where doctors got the bleeding under control and disinfected the myriad pieces of the man's penis in the snow and soil-filled jar.
Some damaged parts had to be removed, but the head of the penis and shaft were intact.
After cleaning the wound, doctors successfully reattached the penis, despite it having been without blood flow for about 9 hours total (5 hours warm and 4 hours cold).
After inserting a catheter, the surgeon reconnected the tissues of the penis using dissolvable stitches. The scrotal skin was then sewn back to the cleaned skin of the amputated part.
Some of the skin on the tip of the man's newly reconstructed penis started to die about a week later - a condition called necrosis due to lack of oxygenated blood flow there - but doctors were able to treat it and reverse the damage.
Despite all this, the man was still experiencing hallucinations, even trying to break out of the hospital at one point.
Doctors found that he had smuggled mushrooms into his hospital room, finding a handful of them in his nightstand in the urology ward.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Salman Rushdie says he is 'over' knife attack as author reveals 'important moment' he returned to New York lecture stage where he was repeatedly stabbed
Salman Rushdie says he is 'over' knife attack as author reveals 'important moment' he returned to New York lecture stage where he was repeatedly stabbed

Daily Mail​

timean hour ago

  • Daily Mail​

Salman Rushdie says he is 'over' knife attack as author reveals 'important moment' he returned to New York lecture stage where he was repeatedly stabbed

Sir Salman Rushdie says 'I'm over it' following the horrific knife attack which has now seen the crook jailed. Hadi Matar, 27, was sentenced last month to 25 years for attempted murder after he repeatedly stabbed the author on stage during a lecture in New York in 2022. Sir Salman recently told Radio 4's Today programme that he was 'pleased' the man who set out to kill him had received the maximum possible prison sentence. But he wishes to move on from the terrifying ordeal and focus on his new book coming out later this year. Speaking at the Hay Festival in Wales he said: 'It will be nice to talk about fiction again because ever since the attack, really the only thing anybody's wanted to talk about is the attack, but I'm over it.' He added that an 'important moment' came for him when he and his wife Eliza 'went back to the scene of the crime to show myself I could stand up where I fell down'. The award-winning Midnight's Children and Satanic Verses writer was left blind in one eye after the attack as well as damage to his liver and a paralysed hand caused by nerve damage to his arm. The event had tight security, with sniffer dogs and bag searches. Hadi Matar, 27, was sentenced last month to 25 years for attempted murder after he repeatedly stabbed the author on stage during a lecture in New York in 2022 Once Sir Rushdie entered the stage to an audience of applause, he joked: 'I can't see everyone - but I can hear them.' Although he said he felt 'excellent' he added there 'were bits of me that I'm annoyed about, like not having a right eye. But on the whole, I've been very fortunate and I'm in better shape than maybe I would have expected.' Last year, the 77-year-old published a memoir called Knife about the ordeal, which he said was his way of 'fighting back'. It comes decades after the publication of his novel The Satanic Verses which made him the target of death threats as some Muslims consider blasphemous for its portrayal of the Prophet Muhammad. A short story collection called The Eleventh Hour is set to be released by the author in November.

Bizarre erection medicine ad-read sparks hilarious exchange between Mets announcers
Bizarre erection medicine ad-read sparks hilarious exchange between Mets announcers

Daily Mail​

time5 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

Bizarre erection medicine ad-read sparks hilarious exchange between Mets announcers

New York Mets announcer Gary Cohen is known for his flawless delivery, whether he's calling game action or reading an advertisement for chewable erectile disfunction medicine. The trick, as he revealed to broadcast partner Keith Hernandez on Saturday, is not thinking too hard. Case in point: Cohen was reading a few spots during the Mets' 8-2 win over the visiting Colorado Rockies on Saturday when he came across one for BlueChew. '… By BlueChew,' Cohen said, adding the company tag line: 'Chew it and do it.' Hernandez, the color commentator and beloved former Mets first baseman, couldn't help but ask: 'What did you mean by that?' Cohen didn't struggle for an answer. Gary Cohen: "By BlueChew. Chew it and do it." Keith Hernandez: "What did you mean by that?" Gary Cohen: "I just read the copy here. I try to give it a good read. Try and give the advertiser everything that they paid for, Keith. And then it's somebody else's problem." #MLB — Awful Announcing (@awfulannouncing) May 31, 2025 'I just read the copy here,' Cohen calmly told Hernandez. 'I try to give it a good read. Try and give the advertiser everything that they paid for, Keith. And then it's somebody else's problem.' The exchange provided fans with a few laughs, given that BlueChew is an ED medication. So while 'chew it and do it' is a rather straightforward tag line, Cohen somehow managed to keep his dignity in the face of Hernandez's prodding with the help of some willful ignorance. 'I did read it well, didn't I?' Cohen asked. 'Oh, you're a champ,' Hernandez responded without giving away anything. 'You're a pro.' In addition to their collective laughter, Mets fans responded to the exchange by reasserting their opinion that Cohen, Hernandez and Ron Darling remain the best announcers in baseball. 'The Mets have the best booth and it's not even close,' one fan wrote on X. Another added: 'I don't know how I will ever survive without these guys at the booth. They have truly left the most largest of shoes to ever fill. It doesn't get better than these guys. They defined my childhood they have been with me my whole life.'

Three stars go yard as Mets deal Rockies another defeat
Three stars go yard as Mets deal Rockies another defeat

Reuters

time5 hours ago

  • Reuters

Three stars go yard as Mets deal Rockies another defeat

June 1 - Pete Alonso, Juan Soto and Francisco Lindor homered while Clay Holmes fired seven solid innings as the New York Mets earned a 5-3 victory over the visiting Colorado Rockies on Sunday to complete a three-game sweep. Lindor rifled his 13th homer of the year and third of the series with one out in the fifth to snap a 3-3 tie. New York finished its nine-game homestand at 7-2 -- winning seven of the last eight games - to carry momentum into a big three-game series that starts Monday night at the Los Angeles Dodgers. Soto added insurance in the eighth, lining a 388-foot shot just over the wall in right-center for his 10th of the year and third of the series. The Mets finished the series with nine homers, jacking three in each game. Holmes (6-3) enjoyed the longest start of his MLB career, which was mostly as a reliever until this year. The former New York Yankee allowed just three hits and three runs, walking none and fanning three in an 85-pitch outing. Reid Garrett worked the eighth and Edwin Diaz pitched the ninth for his 13th save in as many chances, working around a leadoff single by Sam Hilliard. Rookie left-hander Carson Palmquist (0-4) permitted four hits and four runs in 4 2/3 innings for Colorado, walking two and whiffing a career-high eight. Orlando Arcia and Tyler Freeman homered, but it wasn't enough to prevent the Rockies from dropping their eighth straight and falling to 9-50. Arcia, picked up earlier in the week after being released by Atlanta, gave Colorado a 1-0 lead in the third with his first homer. It represented the Rockies' first lead in a game since the previous Sunday, when they lost 5-4 to the New York Yankees. Palmquist struck out six of the first 10 batters he faced, but ran into command problems in the fourth. He walked Starling Marte and plunked Soto before Alonso belted a three-run homer to right, his 12th of the year. Freeman tied it 3-3 in the fifth with his first homer of the season, a two-run shot to right-center. --Field Level Media

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store