Spellbound
falsus in uno, falsus in omnibus
- Joined
- Apr 4, 2013
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I see ya, Ana! Have a wonderful day>
I see ya, Ana! Have a wonderful day>
Hello! Hello! Hello! Hello! Hello! Echo Echo Echo Echo Echo Echo...
You and Verdigris are prolly right- last ones out prolly can't have
close photographers in with them yet. I'll still feel a lot better
when I've seen them and coach.
Just want to give a personal observation here about the sedation.
Many, many years back when I got SCUBA CERTIFIED- all adults
in class- we got to choose our dive partners early on. There were
so many I would not be partners with because they all went
schizo at times during diving because of normal claustophobic
reactions and fear of being underwater and fear of maybe not
being able to breathe, panic, panic, panic.
So when this rescue first started, in my mind, with young inexperienced boys with limited swimming skills and no real
diving training- I was positively sure they would sedate all
the boys out of necessity. To insure their safety as well as
the accompanying divers. Fighting with someone underwater
with all your gear on can kill you and the other one. Experienced
lifeguards will also tell you stories of drowning victims fighting
the lifeguard out of sheer panic.
I'm just glad they're finally being up front and transparent
about this.
Hi all, does anyone know if the boys could hear any of all the drilling and pumping, etc. being done by the crew, before John and Rick so wonderously popped up to find them? I hope they could hear things, and knew people were trying...
I only recall reading that they heard roosters crowing, dogs barking, and kids playing...
I need to ration my 4G data, and limit searching in articles or videos; so if anyone knows, please?
TY!
Now there are calls for the brave British potholers – nine in total - to be honoured at Buckingham Palace.
It’s not like that – if you could do the same for someone else’s child, you would,’ said John Volanthen, 47, an IT consultant from Bristol.
‘The result is the important thing. The kids came out, the coach is good, the [Thai navy] Seals are good – job done.
'So we’re pleased with that.’
Retired Coventry firefighter Rick Stanton, 56, said: ‘It seems to have lifted the whole country. It all went according to plan. The boys did well.’
Video from GMA this morning. Divers and families get to meet; divers speaking about the experience. Can't find a youtube video yet.
Video: Families of Thai soccer team meet their rescuers
'Nobody has ever heard of such a big operation that ended so good"
ETA ... the video is at youtube now
Think you're right. He had to have been sedated. Divers couldn'tDid they carry out the coach as well? Was he sedated? I think as an adult rescuing him would be so much more difficult. Both for the rescuers and the coach.
This almost seems biblical!Videos and photos at link: With all odds against them, here's how rescuers pulled off 'miracle' Thai cave feat
We train for rescue diving and, at times, we've trained for cave rescue," U.S. Air Force Maj. Charles Hodges, commander for the 353rd Special Operations unit, said Wednesday on ABC's "Good Morning America."
"But we don't ever train for cave-rescue diving," he continued. "I'm incredibly impressed with the way that it worked out, but at the time, candidly, I was thinking that it would be much worse results."
Three days after the group was located, a volunteer diver, retired Thai Navy SEAL Saman Gunan, lost consciousness during an overnight operation delivering extra air tanks inside the cave. He could not be revived and was confirmed dead early Friday morning.
"We were very sad, and we felt like the whole world crashed," Ostanakorn said in an interview with ABC News on Wednesday.
He said other challenges were being thrown at the rescuers. Pumps were not working sufficiently and not enough floodwater was being siphoned from the cave.
Ostanakorn said water was actually rising in the middle part of the cave, threatening to seal off more passageways leading to where the boys and coach were with three Thai Navy SEALs and a medic who was treating their minor injuries and keeping them calm and positive.
Declaring "we are still at the state of war against the water," Ostanakorn and the rescue leaders made the decision late Saturday to execute the plan to bring the group out one by one with divers. It was the only viable option they had.
Attempts failed to put a communication line into the cavern, also known as the "ninth chamber," where the survivors were located. There was no way for rescue crews venturing beyond the third chamber, where a staging area was established, to be in touch with those organizing outside.
Rescue begins at 10 am Sunday [good info here]
[One by one, the boys were fitted with wetsuits. One boy was so small that a special wetsuit had to be custom-made for him..... Each boy was placed on a flexible stretcher and secured tightly with ropes, an air tank positioned at his side, and a breathing regulator fixed to his mouth, then carefully lowered to the water. Were submerged for up to a half-hour. 30 rescuers formed a brigade to relay thej to the medics ]
"It ended up being normally one diver per boy just because we had a minimal amount of divers," Hodges said.
Day 2 of rescue
Final Push
Just two hours after the last rescue was made and all the crews were pulled from the underground, the skies opened up and a rainstorm hit. The pumps that had been used to remove water from the cave also broke down and the subterranean maze was flooded again.
....
the success had everything to do with an international team effort that included the "great divers from the world" and showed what people from different countries and cultures can accomplish when they work together for a single purpose.
"It is not my mission," he said. "It is for the whole team mission. We had 2,000 people here every day that reached for them to come out great and healthy."
Is The independent considered reliable or senastionalist reporting? I'm not sure whether to consider this a good source..?
Classmates of trapped Thai boys 'still plan to explore caves themselves'
--For adolescent boys in this mountainous region of far northern Thailand, venturing deep into the dark and mysterious Tham Luang cave network is seen as a rite of passage.
--Journeys venturing inside the cave were a regular part of training for the "Wild Boars" youth football team, building camaraderie
--“They will be stronger when they come out,” said Nanthawat Prangsangwilia, a gangly 16-year-old who goes by the nickname Gan.
“When they come home, those kids will be able to teach us something – about how to survive, about how to stay safe in the caves.”
--Gan declared that, armed with the wisdom of the survivors, he would still be willing now to head into the caves that have threatened to claim the lives of his fellow students.
--Locals say that the ill-fated trip inside Tham Luang was one in a series of excursions, where the boys would push further and further inside the underground labyrinth, hardening them for the rigours of both the pitch and regular life.
'We're no heroes': British divers who rescued trapped Thai boys from cave reject suggestions of knighthood, saying anyone would do the same
British divers who rescued trapped Thai boys from cave reject suggestions of knighthood | Daily Mail Online
Do you think there's any way all the lovely people could somehow convince them to accept? (I think it should/would be issued.)
Sign a petition or something? I'd reallly, really like to see them receive that!
(Especially considering some of the confusingly questionable ones who have already been given one.)
imo
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