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Hiker suspended 150 feet from a helicopter after plummeting into a waterfall in Northern California

Hiker suspended 150 feet from a helicopter after plummeting into a waterfall in Northern California

Yahoo31-05-2025
A hiker who fell 30 feet down a waterfall and into a pool in Butte County had to be harnessed to the end of a 150-foot rope and pulled out by a helicopter over the Memorial Day weekend, according to authorities.
The hiker, who was not identified by authorities, suffered serious injuries and could not be reach by ambulance in time, rescuers said.
The man was hiking with friends near Feather River Canyon and Camp Creek Falls — near the site of the 2018 Camp fire — when he tried to take a photo of the waterfall and slipped, according to authorities.
The hiker fell onto the granite rocks and over the edge of the waterfall, down a 30-foot drop into the pool below, according to Kevin Soukup, a spokesperson for Butte County Sheriff's Search and Rescue.
The rescue team responded to the incident in Pulga and when they saw he had sustained serious injuries, decided to rely on a helicopter for the rescue.
The injured man, who was conscious at the time, was put into a harness and flown while attached to the helicopter with the 150-foot rope, Soukup said. The man was flown to a landing zone near Cresta Power House and transferred to Enloe FlightCare for further medical care. The entire helicopter trip took between 30 seconds and a minute.
Read more: This cliffhanger video from Riverside County has a happy ending
"This is the riskiest type of rescue that you do," Soukup said. "Just by nature, helicopters are dangerous. Anytime someone suffers a traumatic injury, you look at the risk and reward and getting them out as quickly as possible via the helicopter was the right decision to make."
The road getting out of the area is about three miles and an ambulance wouldn't have made it in time, Soukup said. Anytime there is a traumatic injury, if the journey is more than a 30-minute drive, you have to fly them there, he said.
The rescue was a joint operation with Cal Fire and Butte County Fire.
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This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.
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‘No Colon, Still Rollin'': Cass Bargell, US scrum-half and ostomy advocate, sets sights on World Cup
‘No Colon, Still Rollin'': Cass Bargell, US scrum-half and ostomy advocate, sets sights on World Cup

Yahoo

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  • Yahoo

‘No Colon, Still Rollin'': Cass Bargell, US scrum-half and ostomy advocate, sets sights on World Cup

A few years ago, Cass Bargell gave a Ted Talk at Harvard, the same university where she studied integrative biology and played scrum-half, helping the Crimson to a national 15s title and earning nominations for US player of the year. Onstage, visibly nervous, she clutched a rugby ball as if for emotional support. 'I dropped the ball,' she says, laughing. 'They edited it out.' Bargell didn't drop the ball with her talk, which offered a compelling account of her traumatic experience with ulcerative colitis and her extraordinary recovery. It all began in late 2020, with alarming symptoms. Bargell kept playing through quickening pain but eventually, in November 2021, underwent ileostomy surgery to remove her colon and create a stoma, an opening in her abdomen to allow waste to pass. Just a few months later Bargell was back playing rugby, the sport she found as a middle-schooler in Summit, Colorado, as aggressive as ever but now wearing an ostomy bag. 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$2.8 Million Homes in Connecticut, Florida and South Carolina
$2.8 Million Homes in Connecticut, Florida and South Carolina

New York Times

time26 minutes ago

  • New York Times

$2.8 Million Homes in Connecticut, Florida and South Carolina

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These 8 Gen Z habits are baffling. Let us Zoomers explain.
These 8 Gen Z habits are baffling. Let us Zoomers explain.

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time26 minutes ago

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It's impossible to pin down the essence of an entire generation. Still, as members of Gen Z, we spend a lot of time thinking about what makes us different from those born before and after us. Boomers can't navigate technology. Millennials walk their 'doggos' and despise 'adulting.' Gen Alpha is doomed. As for Gen X? No one really knows. Now it's us sitting in the hot seat, facing bafflement from both sides. Our generation was born between 1997 and 2012, so our oldest might remember the presidency of George W. Bush, while our youngest could've grown up reaching for an iPad while at a restaurant. You might know some of us for our unsettling stare or our preference for subtitles. What's universal is that people outside our generation can't seem to figure us out. We're here to help. The Washington Post managed to scrounge together its Gen Zers for important commentary: a non-exhaustive list of our most defining quirks. As technology has made it easier to talk to anyone, communication has become increasingly blunt. For better or worse, the phone call is a thing of the past, mostly helpful for talking to family members who struggle with texting. Otherwise, a random call signals a problem. Those surprise calls are necessary for when something so important arrives that a text can't be sent. When your pocket starts buzzing, there's one burning question: What's the issue? The answer is often nothing. But that moment of panic brings up many possibilities: Is someone in the hospital? Did I forget about plans? Am I getting fired/hired? The natural response is to cut to the chase. The 'hellos' are replaced with a direct, occasionally curt tone and a no-nonsense response. Those fraying social cues are replaced, even in text messages, with something more immediate. It might seem rude, but today, it's just the pace of information. Keys? Check. Wallet? Check. Phone? Check. Headphones? They're already in. 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Nettingham Middle School in Scotch Plains, New Jersey. 'I started typing in lowercase in middle school because everyone else around me was doing it, so I thought I might as well join,' Hausle said. 'I also saw a lot of people on social media turning off their [auto-cap].' But why? Hausle believes her peers shunned uppercase letters because texting is known to be an informal act of communication, and auto-caps is the furthest thing from that. Using lowercase letters 'gives it a more laid-back tone,' she noted. 'I feel like there is something very approachable about it.' Still, for many, the shift is probably temporary. 'I've actually recently thought about switching back once I graduate college and progress into adulthood. … I'll have to adapt to that texting style to make sure I'm not seen as childish,' Hausle said. Carissa Newick, 22, was never a big fan of phone calls. When she began receiving voice notes on iMessage about a year ago, it was perfect. 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Out with the new and in with the … old? Our generation went through a phase where everyone owned a pastel-colored Polaroid that instantly printed out photos. We've moved on to a less bulky obsession: digital cameras, the ones you can find stuffed in drawers, forgotten about by parents and offered up for use. 'Two years ago, my family took me to the Bahamas, and I was planning to buy a camera just for that trip,' said Kife Akinsola, 19. 'Then my dad was like, 'Wait, I have one I haven't used in over a decade.'' A 2007 Casio Exilim with 8.1 megapixels now sits firmly in her hand — designating her as 'that one person with the camera' among her college friends. Every friend group seemingly has one. It's an ongoing responsibility: Your phone is blown up with texts from your friends, asking you to transfer and upload photos for their scheduled Instagram dumps. 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One emoji can mean one thing, but then a few months later it can have a complete different meaning,' Molly Bloomfield, 18, wrote in a text to The Post. 'Like for example, in 2021, they used chair emojis to represent laughing. Where did that come from, it's just a chair?' Although there's no strict or universal emoji etiquette, we try not to overdo it. This rings true for Rhea Nirkondar, 22, who admits that an emoji explosion is a sure way to spot an outsider. 'My grandparents, who are new to emojis, will overuse them in a way that my peers tend to not do for fear of being 'cringey,'' she wrote in a message to The Post. Our generation is not only drinking less than those who came before us, but we're also notorious for being those annoying people who close a tab after a one-drink order knowing there's a chance we could reopen it later. And, yes, probably for just one more drink. 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