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I believe the TBI was ten years ago when she was still a teen. Her reference to a condition leading to her stepping away from corporate work seems to be something else entirely, IMO.. According to her IG posts, she had a traumatic brain injury. That is not a psychological condition; it's a physical injury, and tends to be disabling and long-term. We don't know anything about hers specifically, and we do know that she was in school to be some kind of couneslor or therapist, so hers hasn't prevented her from doing college work. But there could be symptoms that crop up uneder stress, or in triggering environments or situations.
I don't believe so.Regarding acclimatizing to heat, wasn't it also established that they lived at a location about 1000 ft higher than the hites cove area and with old ponderosa growth?
An earlier poster thought they lived along Carleton Road which is roughly 2900-3000 ft elevation I believe.
The spot where they parked appears to be around 3800 ft elevation and where they were found looks like roughly 2800 ft although we don't know exactly where they were, somewhere mid-switchbacks. The river, assuming they went that far, is around 1900 ft. MOO
The recent sfgate article refers to a closure of a length of the mainstem Merced River, lower down than Forest land. The closure is for Bureau of Land Management-managed land.AFAIK All National Forests in CA are closed.
Also, the statewide forest closure is for a specific reason relating to firefighting resources and avoidance of fire starts. If a forest has a reason to close an area unrelated to that, IMO they will still issue that closure separately so that it will be in place even if the fire closure is rescinded.
My theory about the new reports of a potential and unknown hazard is that they are being precautionary because the tox reports aren't in yet and in theory could identify something hazardous. I suspect that particular closure will be cancelled once the tox report is in, as long as it doesn't ID an environmental tox-related cause of death.I was completely sold on heatstroke, or poisonous water combined with the heat. However, reading about the lightning, seeing the sources on multiple deaths with one strike, I think it is a very possible explanation, but what about the new news reports about a hazard found just off the trail where they were found?
Also I wanted to mention that today I was reading an article about one of the forest fires in the coastal mountains of CA, and there was a photo of the front of a general store in one of the small towns near the fire. The store's bulletin board displayed a flyer about toxic algae in the river (Trinity River in this case). I am taking that as an indication that the algae issues are fairly ubiquitous in California this year, certainly not limited to just the South Fork of the Merced...
MOO
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