Submitted by ybdiel t3_zvnuvz in UpliftingNews
Comments
thejordanhall t1_j1q3cj0 wrote
Avalanches are scary AF from the outside; can't imagine what it's like to live through one. Hope these people bought a lottery ticket soon after.
[deleted] t1_j1q3h93 wrote
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Alexdykes828 t1_j1q3j20 wrote
Preferably a winning lottery ticket
EmpressElisa t1_j1q5547 wrote
This would be called a holiday miracle if you were inclined to believe in miracles.
Glad everyone were found safe and alive.
Happy Holidays to one and all
xox
Available_Username_2 t1_j1q5dt9 wrote
If you are only feared missing, are you really missing? No.
How can you be found if you aren't really missing?
baphometromance t1_j1q8gdh wrote
This is such a dumb title. I really hope it was just an error in translation.
deepthought-64 t1_j1qbjhz wrote
Glad you explained why!
Major_t0Ad t1_j1qbprd wrote
Four injured, one seriously. So four people "really" were there. The other six were only visible on a video taken shortly before the incident. Rescue workers assumed 10 missing because of the video. They continued searching until all persons could be identified and asked to call in.
Hopes were already high since no person were called missing by relatives or hotels.
baphometromance t1_j1qfinp wrote
I assumed it would be extremely obvious to the average person, but i was wrong, sorry. What i meant was they were missing and were feared dead, not whatever the official title was supposed to mean
89141 t1_j1qh2ai wrote
It seems pretty straight forward to me.
BluudLust t1_j1qhldk wrote
That's a miracle.
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JHoney1 t1_j1qi3ms wrote
Feared missing? They were missing. They were feared dead lol
ChaoticGiratina t1_j1qioo6 wrote
That is great news! Suffocating under the snow would be so scary. Rescuers did amazing work man.
[deleted] t1_j1qlsvq wrote
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BluudLust t1_j1qlwc2 wrote
Feared missing from their mortal coils*
HeeenYO t1_j1qm8vn wrote
I thought it was summer down there
Edit: Guys it's simple. Didgeridoo. Common avalanche prevention. Best practice, really.
Tiruvalye t1_j1qmxqo wrote
A burden was lifted from me today after I read it earlier this morning. Thank you so much for reposting this very uplifting news!
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Tcat61 t1_j1qnhjh wrote
Great news!
[deleted] t1_j1qnxhv wrote
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afr33sl4ve t1_j1qny5d wrote
You're thinking of Australia, my dude. This is Austria, which borders Germany.
notconvinced3 t1_j1qo9yy wrote
AUSTRIA bud. Not Australia.
gyarnar t1_j1qoa2q wrote
I fear missing myself.
I'm glad they were found.
3riversfantasy t1_j1qpbw8 wrote
It said 10 people were on video shortly before the avalanche, the worry was all 10 had been in the avalanche, 6 of the 10 were identified and located but were not in the avalanche, so feared missing makes sense...
[deleted] t1_j1qqai9 wrote
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[deleted] t1_j1qs7tt wrote
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[deleted] t1_j1qsxe0 wrote
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svernon t1_j1qt1ef wrote
It sounds like they just won the lottery!
iCryKarma t1_j1qt37m wrote
What you're saying makes complete sense to me and i still don't like the usage lol
kennymakaha t1_j1qt9nz wrote
Lovely accent you have there. New Jersey?
NIRPL t1_j1qu9sq wrote
No point in the lottery ticket. All their collective luck has been spent! Happy to read everyone survived
[deleted] t1_j1qvm04 wrote
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HuntStuffs t1_j1qw4xu wrote
G’day mate! Let’s put another shrimp on the barbe!
SokoJojo t1_j1qwsv8 wrote
No they were feared missing because they hadn't been identified
JHoney1 t1_j1qwzd0 wrote
They were missing, until they were found. At which point they were not missing. There was never a fear of missing. You can be missing, without being in an avalanche.
JHoney1 t1_j1qx1fs wrote
They were still missing until they were found lol.
atlas_eater t1_j1qzv37 wrote
As a backcountry skier one of the scariest things about avalanches is that they are almost completely silent. They can break trees and if you are skiing below, you would have no idea that it was coming for you unless you saw it.
Last year my group saw an avalanche and knew that there was a group in that area as we had left the parking lot at the same time and chatted with them.
They made it to the ridge and had lunch and dropped in, they were on the ski out, back to the parking lot when we ran into them. We had seen the slide, called search and rescue and started up towards the bottom of the slide expecting to be digging them out, but found them on the skin track.They were completely unaware that the slope they just skied had slide right behind them.
Apparently just as they were about to drop in a solo skier showed up at the top and skied the same line and triggered the Avi on top of them.
We all went back to the debris pile to try and find the solo skier and he was there, he was uninjured and looking for the skiers we were with. He definitely shit his pants though.
The avi had snapped trees that were probably 10 years old making this a particularly large one that had overlapped its historical path.
I would estimate it at a class three based on the volumn of snow in the debris pile.
The Avalanche was triggered in the alpine and this dude was lucky that he triggered it below himself, or he would have been dead, the scary part is all the skiers that went before skied the same line.
Back country skiing is a lot like playing mine sweeper, but if you hit a trigger the slope slides.
djsedna t1_j1r0pze wrote
Reminds me of that mountain hiking party who all just randomly went missing and were never found. There's just one last incredibly surreal video of them silently trekking a sheer mountainside. That's all anyone really knows.
lostharbor t1_j1r2xfn wrote
Why are you going out of your way to being rude for no reason? I hope your day gets better.
[deleted] t1_j1r2xzc wrote
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MySayWTFIWantAccount t1_j1r3pds wrote
How the hell do you wake up dead?
Ripcord t1_j1r4r3a wrote
Some weren't actually missing.
Available_Username_2 t1_j1r752b wrote
Cause you're alive when you go to sleep.
bronxbombers5 t1_j1r7p3j wrote
More info?
djsedna t1_j1r8gqt wrote
It was the Martin Moran party in 2019. They did end up recovering some of the bodies and a GoPro, which shows that last bit of footage. It's assumed that the narrow path they were crossing in the video gave out shortly after the filming ended and caused an avalanche.
Googling Martin Moran video will probably find it. It's totally SFW, just some climbers trekking. But the implication is surreal.
saysthingsbackwards t1_j1r9mej wrote
https://youtu.be/VJseM2HjPvk I'll just leave this here
SoundlessScream t1_j1rbiq7 wrote
I thought this said australlia and I was like "When did australlia get snowy mountains wtf"
trailer8k t1_j1rbsup wrote
;o
sleepykittypur t1_j1rbsza wrote
They weren't really missing, they just didn't know who the people in the video actually were so that they could be accounted for.
sleepykittypur t1_j1rbyqa wrote
Austria eh? Put another shrimp on the barbie!
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Anjunabeast t1_j1rcqnk wrote
Thank you Black Jesus!
1ce9ine t1_j1rdm1x wrote
If they were found, wouldn't they be missing? I think feared lost might have made more sense. Like when you are missing your glasses, looking all around, and they were on your head the whole time... they were missing, but not lost?
SargentSnorkel t1_j1regbm wrote
They weren’t FEARED missing. That’s the second one doing this on the same story. Fucking karma posting bots.
blue-mooner t1_j1relvw wrote
Feared missing from their metabolic processes.
amazingphrasing t1_j1remp9 wrote
we actually have a snowy mountains. it’s not anything compared to the Austrian / Italian / Suisse/ French alps. But, you can ski and it does actually snow. Perisher and Thredbo are the main places to ski in Australia. They’re great fun, nothing spectacular, but skiing through eucalyptus trees is pretty cool.
my_people t1_j1rfm4r wrote
Feared missing from their debts*
-Mr. Bank (sigh of relief)
DanSchulman t1_j1rfueg wrote
Oh, I was thinking of the Dyatlov Pass incident
Elarbolrojo t1_j1rfuhv wrote
wow that's great!
Cerebral-Parsley t1_j1rgnvt wrote
I read an article about one that killed a group of skiers. One of the survivors dug out his friend, who was crushed into a ball shape with every limb disjointed and most bones broken.
Found it: https://www.nytimes.com/projects/2012/snow-fall/index.html#/?part=tunnel-creek
Spikole t1_j1rgqpq wrote
Do they still use Saint Bernards to help there? Monks trained them to go out in groups of three males in the alps many years ago. If you could walk they would lead you back to the monks, if trapped and unable to walk two would sit and keep you warm and one would go back to get monks for help. Long haired saints are a result of rough winter they mixed with Newfoundlands for thicker coat. These coats froze and weighed them down killing them not helping them and they quickly went back to short hair only. The long hairs we see now like in Beethoven are actually just a mistake that didn’t work out. They’re able to sniff someone below ten feet of snow… mine was great at hide and seek when he used his nose.
furiouscowbell t1_j1ri1si wrote
They didn't know if they were missing or they were still out
furiouscowbell t1_j1ridxf wrote
Feared missing would be you were out and you get a phone call saying that your house has been broken into. You fear that your dog is missing so you race hope but the dog is still lying on his back on the couch.
The dog was never missing. You were afraid he just duffed off.
foggy-sunrise t1_j1riqzu wrote
They were missing according to everyone but them and the people who know and care about them.
furiouscowbell t1_j1rivm6 wrote
Yeah, you can be.
- You and your friends are known to be walking on a trail
- You do not have a radio
- Authorities are informed that a bear, an apex predator, is high on cocaine in your area.
- Authorities do not know if you are missing or if you are still on your hike.
Snakend t1_j1rjb0t wrote
A miracle implies the intervention of God. This was achieved by trained humans.
Snakend t1_j1rje5p wrote
The problem isnt suffocating, but low body temperatures and being crushed by the snow.
X3ll3n t1_j1rjsa0 wrote
Finally some good fucking news
ybdiel OP t1_j1rljsx wrote
Did you just call me a bot bro?
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SlyguyguyslY t1_j1rnl9o wrote
Epic! Some actual uplifting non-political content, for once!
Mybluesky t1_j1rog6s wrote
Wow that was a amazing read. What a sobering story. Thank you for sharing.
kfh227 t1_j1roxo3 wrote
Feared missing?
Like... They didn't know they were missing?
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SuperRockGaming t1_j1rpavt wrote
Oh my god.. I've always wondered what the aftermath of being in one would look like, that's awful.
lineasmg t1_j1rqcuf wrote
Not quite. You have 9 minutes without oxygen before you get irreparable brain damage. Hypoxia will kill you you way faster than the cold will. Getting crushed is a mild concern because the snow is much lighter than you think.
lineasmg t1_j1rqsb1 wrote
They don't. In the is case there were around 200 rescue volunteers and several helicopters that helped search for the missing people
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SummitCO83 t1_j1rt0ox wrote
This is a true Christmas miracle
n33daus3rnamenow t1_j1rt1f3 wrote
There was a video that showed up to 10 people being swallowed by the avalanche. Turns out that a few managed to escape off camera and make it down the mountain unscathed.
Emergency services didn't know that at first and kept looking for all 10 people in the video.
Snakend t1_j1rt65o wrote
you can breathe in snow.
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pidgey77 t1_j1ruw25 wrote
So many avalanche experts in this thread
Looking_4_Bae t1_j1ruy6r wrote
Sad
YoudontknowSMIT t1_j1rvbln wrote
Perhaps, but it’s significantly more difficult to breathe after avalanche snow has packed into your entire respiratory tract and filled your lungs 😳
southpaw05 t1_j1rw1sd wrote
Feared dead*
Extrovert108 t1_j1rwbyt wrote
Yay!!!
ColinKennethMills t1_j1rwjhi wrote
Maybe this type of last image is common. The first time I started being aware of avalanches was when the climbers Jonny Copp, Micah Dash, and Wade Johnson were all killed in an avalanche in the Himalayas. I remember seeing the last photo on their camera and it was eerily lit, predawn, with a faint figure walking through the snow into the dark.
jawshoeaw t1_j1rwthc wrote
They were feared missing?
pessimistic_platypus t1_j1rwu7q wrote
Avalanche snow isn't a fluid; I'm pretty sure it isn't typically going to get forced down your throat, and definitely not into your lungs.
But if the snow is dense enough, you still will run out of air eventually.
According to this study, most people buried in avalanches do die because they run out of air, but it sounds like it's a lot slower than drowning, so there is a better chance for rescue if people get to you soon enough.
pessimistic_platypus t1_j1rxkn4 wrote
Only up to a point; air doesn't move as freely in snow as in, well, air, so you do eventually run out of oxygen if you can't create a sufficiently-large vent to the surface.
This article says that 70% of fully-buried avalanche victims die of oxygen loss within 35 minutes without an air pocket, and after 90 minutes, even air pockets aren't enough (unless they connect to the outside atmosphere).
LongjumpingMonitor32 t1_j1rz9xj wrote
Good! Now stay TF off of it and you won’t die!
patxy01 t1_j1rzq8a wrote
Great!
Do you people know if kangaroos were involved also?
[deleted] t1_j1rzua1 wrote
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patxy01 t1_j1s01xk wrote
After the heavy fire they had... Something is really against this country!
I really hope that kangaroos are fine!
Like to send prayers!
jihadi_adruk t1_j1s0bc9 wrote
Going skiing near Lech in a couple days! Glad they’re all ok
[deleted] t1_j1s0bs5 wrote
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pjshaw1995 t1_j1s0etm wrote
yeah but the snow can be so densely packed that your chest cavity literally cannot expand to get air in. source: am a ski patroller.
CrocoPontifex t1_j1s0ynb wrote
They are too big and heavy, break through the snow cover all the time which makes them slow. Its mostly german shepards these days.
kelp_forests t1_j1s4319 wrote
I think everyone is talking past each other and the real answer is if you survive without a life threatening injury, your main issue is oxygen for, then “shortly” afterwards, cold.
Source: ER doctkr with no ski experience, open to corrections.
1_small_step t1_j1s4azf wrote
In avalanche hardened snow, you run out of oxygen in around half an hour.
About half of all avalanche deaths are by suffocation, the other half is due to trauma. No one dies in an avalanche due to freezing.
x15vroom t1_j1s50s9 wrote
Ok I love this sub, that’s so rad!
ArtificialSugar t1_j1s5781 wrote
That’s all anyone really knows.
FlyingWhales t1_j1s6fjz wrote
Damn, what a read. Thanks for sharing.
ZeldasDad t1_j1s7f3f wrote
And reposted from the Apollo app! Yay!
RizzMustbolt t1_j1s84s2 wrote
Only a few teeth marks.
theDarkDescent t1_j1sbqk4 wrote
Actual uplifting news, thank you!
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Cerebral-Parsley t1_j1scec5 wrote
Welcome. I have another great article I love to recommend and people always love it. It's long but absolutely worth pushing through: https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/lifestyle/magazine/2006/01/22/the-peekaboo-paradox-span-classbankheadthe-strange-secrets-of-humor-fear-and-a-guy-who-makes-big-money-making-little-people-laughspan/6b97ebc5-1c67-4c61-8509-5baf0157cc40/
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1nsider1nfo t1_j1seoso wrote
Like when people say "near miss"....that's a hit...you mean a near hit
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g_r_a_e t1_j1sgypc wrote
We got a mountain range called the Snowy Mountains so this is probably one of the few times I could say 'we literally have snowy mountains' and be literally correct.
edit: porbably haha!
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Inversecat t1_j1sl8ve wrote
So they all completed the games.
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chacmool1697 t1_j1srlpx wrote
But god gave them dope-ass skiing abilities just this once so they could do it. Did you just become a Christian yesterday??
CoolioAsh t1_j1suwxi wrote
Thank goodness!
parsifal t1_j1sz4my wrote
Avalanches sound scary. How would you feel if you saw a Bruce Vilanch up on the mountain?
chompychompchomp t1_j1szw0w wrote
Oh my, that was beautiful. Thank you.
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HungerSTGF t1_j1t4f04 wrote
amitym t1_j1t6sw3 wrote
They were not "feared missing." They were missing.
They were feared dead.
PresentationJumpy101 t1_j1tceeb wrote
Huzzah seriously!
weecious t1_j1tfbue wrote
They're really lucky. There was a landslide that happened in my country almost 2 weeks back and it happened at a campsite. 31 people lost their lives, many of them children. Some even lost an entire family.
thatsapeachhun t1_j1tig6s wrote
And Labs, due to their resistant nature to cold conditions, ability to smell through water, and unrelenting worth ethic.
DivinationByCheese t1_j1tk1qd wrote
Would be great if people stopped putting themselves in areas prone to avalanche for an “hobby”
saltesc t1_j1tolga wrote
DuelOstrich t1_j1trla5 wrote
I don’t think people understand actually how impressive of a rescue this is. Even if they were wearing avalanche transceivers, a 10 victim scenario would be chaos. I’ll be very interested to learn more about the actual rescue and how they were able to pull this off!
TwoFigsAndATwig t1_j1tshm4 wrote
If they had the new GoPro 18++, 18 people would have been on video. In stunning 8k HDR video.
atlas_eater t1_j1tt5qt wrote
I don’t disagree with you, the problem is that people don’t get adequate avalanche training, and have very little idea how to navigate in avalanche terrain, much less disseminate an avalanche hazard report.
For me, I take at least one avi or ski mountaineering course a year and only travel with experienced backcountry skiers or split boarders. And once the season starts, it’s full on, skiing, planning missions, watching the weather, and having the patience to wait for the snowpack to consolidate after a storm , then checking/ recording snowpack observations as we move through the terrain.
People think that skiing in the back country is laid back, but it’s anything but. It’s about planning checking gear and waking up at ungodly hours in order to summit before the sun comes up and starts warming the snowpack. It’s about knowing when to back off and having a back up plan. It’s about respecting the slopes and getting home safe.
the fact is if you ski enough you will get caught in a slide at some point, or have to deal with an injury way out in the middle of no where, it’s about mitigating the hazard and knowing when to huck and when to take a granny line.
There is a steep couloir line that I have wanted to ski for about three years now and I have been up to it about 10 times and still have never skied it, because it’s exposed, and has no where to exit or stop.
Usually on these slopes we leap frog between islands of safety, but this line it has to be shredded top to bottom,it’s a no stopping steel legger, it’s so sexy, fast and dangerous it will be extremely rewarding when it hits.
Ski touring/ mountaineering is fucking awesome, it’s not a hobby and that’s the problem, people think it is something they can jump into every once in a while, it’s not. It’s a way of life during the winter.
UndeadBBQ t1_j1tvk2x wrote
Everytime I read something like this, I can't overstate how much I love that we have these largely volunteer troop of mountaineers who won't hesitate for a second to basically sprint up a mountain to go looking for everyone and anyone whos missing.
Absolute madlads.
If anyone feels inclined, here is a donation page for them:
Higira t1_j1twr0r wrote
Yeah sounds about right.
Source: some dude on the internet.
[deleted] t1_j1u2ff1 wrote
chongunate t1_j1u6gym wrote
This is great news!
Ehwaz196 t1_j1u74dl wrote
Just admit you were wrong
JHoney1 t1_j1u7xvo wrote
I’ll die on that hill. Being in the actual avalanche is not a requirement to be missing.
duntellu t1_j1uahvz wrote
JackRusselTerrorist t1_j1ufs97 wrote
Snow is a great insulator, actually.
In the small space you’ve got to yourself, your body heat can make a pretty comfortable cocoon. It’s actually recommended that if you find yourself stranded in the wilderness in winter, that you make yourself a little snow cave for shelter.
The crush isn’t as much of a concern, because that happens right at the beginning. Once you’re crushed by an avalanche, you’re not doing much more worrying.
The main concern is CO2 levels in your little cavity. Each breath you take makes the aid you’re breathing a bit more toxic.
JackRusselTerrorist t1_j1ugbzf wrote
Generally speaking in any collapse/land slide/ avalanche/ etc. your best bet is to be on your hands and knees, to ensure you’ve got a void beneath you that your chest can expand into, and have a little air pocket.
In an avalanche, having your back to a ledge is your best bet.
MoreMagic t1_j1ugeuq wrote
The actual answer to that question is: about 100 million years ago. :)
BubbaUGA t1_j1uonj7 wrote
That was fantastic. Thank you for sharing!
SoundlessScream t1_j1uqltj wrote
I was hoping I would get an answer like this, thank you.
> skiing through eucalyptus trees is pretty cool.
😂😂 The koalas scream as you fly by and yell "I'm a giraffe"
SoundlessScream t1_j1urtug wrote
hahaha!!!!
ripper that is
SoundlessScream t1_j1utnzy wrote
Thanks dog, you were there when I needed you the most 😂
PristineBiscuit t1_j1v05sa wrote
...If I had to guess, this was likely a translation issue. "Missing" translated from what was meant to mean "lost", "lost" as in "deceased".
So, in German: "Vermisst" instead of "Verloren"
Muntjac t1_j1vhyab wrote
Iirc, they haven't used St Bernards for their original purpose since the late 1800s or early 1900s. After the darn Victorians got to them and did their usual kennel clubbin' pure breedin' shenanigans, the modern dogs are nothing like the original rescue dogs, which were smaller and more varied (and tbh the modern dogs would be pretty crap at the job). Back when the dogs were originally used, and before the newfies were brought in to help save the breed after avalanches killed a bunch of them, the monks didn't use a proper stud book or anything like that. They kinda just let the best workers breed, no matter how they looked.
Bearcat2010 t1_j1xuata wrote
Thanks for sharing. We were just at Steven’s Pass earlier this year. I had no idea.
ybdiel OP t1_j1zogfd wrote
Irony is that the day I was posting this one of my friends died in the snow while climbing up Olympus mountain in Greece. Although the story is in Greek, google translate will work, so i am leaving this here as a memory
Wish you all attempting such feats to be safe and extra careful.
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