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Since the title is about the fall and survival, I think more pertinent details would be in order.
I figured it wasn't a straight drop, but more likely a few bounces on the way down.Jim_H wrote:So 50 feet is pretty high, but it could be a slight exaggeration, and did she fall into brush or on soft ground, or what?

big_load wrote:I figured it wasn't a straight drop, but more likely a few bounces on the way down.Jim_H wrote:So 50 feet is pretty high, but it could be a slight exaggeration, and did she fall into brush or on soft ground, or what?

It would be interesting to have a job reporting on outdoor incidents, so you could ask all the questions that really matter. Some kids got pawed by a bear yesterday near home. Did they have food in the tent? That possibility wasn't even mentioned in the first few stories that came out. Later ones said that food was kept in a locker a good distance away, but I still wonder if they held onto a little snack.Jim_H wrote:Details!! We need the details!!



big_load wrote: Journalists who write these stories treat the mishap itself as expected; something that we should think would happen to anybody who dares venture off the pavement.




Maybe she's on the far side of a grassy median. It could be hiding some of those non-rattling rattlesnakes.joe bartels wrote: Perhaps local reporters just haven't been able to glean any real info too. Perhaps it's tougher to get through barriers than it was twenty years ago to?






joe bartels wrote:ouch

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