Latest news with #JackDolan


BBC News
4 days ago
- General
- BBC News
Mum of teenager who was seriously injured tombstoning warns of risks
A mother whose son nearly died during a tombstoning incident in Kent last year has warned people that it's "not worth the risk".Jack Dolan, who is now 16, was left severely disabled after jumping off Margate's Stone Pier last observing an increase in such incidents, the Coastguard and Port of Dover Police - together with Dover District Council (DDC) - are campaigning to stop people from jumping off structures into the sea, known as mum Lisa, who said his accident had taken away much of the family's ability to "lead a normal life", is backing those efforts. She said: "It looks so inviting, it looks like fun, and I just wish people would understand that it's not."It's not even about being able to swim, the impact of hitting that water, the coldness, there's so many things to take into consideration. It just isn't worth jumping."The Maritime and Coastguard Agency said that, since 2004, the Coastguard service had dealt with over 200 incidents in the UK - including 20 deaths. Jack, who is now brain damaged and uses a wheelchair, spent eight minutes under water before he was pulled out by an unknown kayaker while in cardiac to Mrs Dolan, life since has been "surreal, hell on earth". "I wouldn't say it's ruined our lives but it's taken away a lot of our ability in life to be able to lead a normal life. "Not just for Jack but for his sisters and for me - work, home, everything changed," she of a DDC summer safety event this weekend the pair met Matt Pavitt from the South of England Coastguard, who was involved in Jack's rescue Dolan described that first meeting since the accident as "very emotional"."You kind of want to squeeze them but you don't know them," she asked about the risks of tombstoning, Mr Pavitt said: "Very bluntly, it will kill you."If you want to jump from height, go to a swimming pool and do it."


Los Angeles Times
20-02-2025
- Los Angeles Times
Backcountry skiing is growing in popularity, but experts warn it's more dangerous than you think
When 19th-century California naturalist John Muir famously said, 'The mountains are calling and I must go,' he couldn't possibly have imagined slushy parking lots crowded with Teslas and short tempers, or bars selling $15 allure — some would say the siren song — of the backcountry is the absence of everything resorts backcountry skiing isn't for the faint of heart. If anything goes wrong, there's no one there to help, cell service is spotty, at best, and even if you can make a call, help might take hours to reach then there's the risk of an avalanche. In the last decade, at least 234 people in the U.S. have been killed by avalanches — the vast majority in the backcountry, according to data compiled by the Colorado Avalanche Information Center and the U.S. Forest Service. Some victims were hikers and snowmobilers, but more than half were skiers. Reporter Jack Dolan says that's a shocking number given how small the community of hardcore backcountry skiers is.