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  1. #1
    Join Date
    Aug 2005
    Location
    Perth, Western Australia
    Posts
    5,316

    Odd yet funny articles in the news..

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  2. #2
    Join Date
    Jun 2008
    Location
    Michigan
    Posts
    865
    I would have gone batty.

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Jul 2008
    Location
    California
    Posts
    18
    "I put my hand down my bra and pulled out a cuddly little bat"

    Its like a magic trick!!

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Dec 2005
    Location
    WA State
    Posts
    4,364
    I'm having trouble picturing a 34FF, and questioning the need to pad it...
    (though that something might get lost down there sounds plausible)
    "Sharing the road means getting along, not getting ahead" - 1994 Washington State Driver's Guide

    visit my flickr stream http://flic.kr/ps/MMu5N

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Aug 2008
    Location
    Bay Area, CA
    Posts
    550
    34FF? No wonder the poor little bat thought they were caves!
    Christine
    Life is not measured by the number of breaths we take, but by the moments that take our breath away.

    Cycle! It's Good for the Wattle; it's good for the can!

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Aug 2005
    Location
    Perth, Western Australia
    Posts
    5,316

  7. #7
    Join Date
    Apr 2006
    Posts
    3,867
    It's very sad. It's 200 years old!

    Karen
    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
    insidious ungovernable cardboard

  8. #8
    Join Date
    Sep 2008
    Location
    Beautiful NW or Left Coast
    Posts
    5,619
    maybe we should be looking for it on Ebay
    I like Bikes - Mimi
    Watercolor Blog

    Davidson Custom Bike - Cavaletta
    Dahon 2009 Sport - Luna
    Old Raleigh Mixte - Mitzi

  9. #9
    Join Date
    Dec 2005
    Location
    around Seattle, WA
    Posts
    3,238
    not the first time buildings have been recycled. Make new bricks, or use the ones from the abandoned building? If "they" intended to rennovate the church, did anyone in the village know it? Or do the villagers have a better weather resistant home because of the recycling?

    My aunt has done missionary work in Russia, and has described the despirate poverty. To a certain extent the lord/peasant feudal system never changed.
    Beth

  10. #10
    Join Date
    Sep 2008
    Location
    Beautiful NW or Left Coast
    Posts
    5,619
    how about an amazing newsarticle about an 11 year old girl?


    TILLAMOOK -- Stephanie McRae didn't know how much time had passed between the moment Fawcett Creek swept her SUV downstream and the point she found herself on top of the vehicle with her daughter, Madison, and two toddler foster children.

    What she did know was that there was a good chance they wouldn't make it out of the river, a good chance the Class 5 rapids would sweep them away into the night.

    Then Madison, 11, yelled. "She said, 'I'm going to go get help,'" McRae, 39, recalled. "I didn't want to let her go, but I didn't have any other way. I just had to. I had to let her go."


    McRae told her daughter she loved her. Madison climbed onto a tree and disappeared into the night.
    BENJAMIN BRINK/THE OREGONIAN Madison McRae, 11, took charge and helped get her mom, Stephanie McRae, and the family's two foster children to safety.
    The rain had been coming down for three straight days. Sheriff's deputies and firefighters had been attending to minor problems all evening: landslides, flooded roads -- the nuisances people in Tillamook County come to expect in the rainy winter months.

    Then Chuck Spittles, Tillamook Fire District captain, heard this call at 8:40 p.m. Wednesday: Motor vehicle accident, vehicle in the water.

    Twenty minutes later, crews arrived to find not one, but two vehicles in the water, and seven people hanging on.

    On the roof of the Ford sport utility vehicle, McRae clung to the toddlers; on the opposite bank, Tillamook County District Attorney Bill Porter's wife, Jody; daughters, Alison, 13, and Lydia, 9; and his father-in-law, retired Oregon State Police Lt. Glenn Cyphers held fast to a cluster of alders. All were wet, cold and frightened, and the McRaes were in imminent peril.

    "They were semi-safe where they were sitting," said Spittles. "But if they fell in, most likely we just perished three people."

    Road gone
    The night had begun routinely enough for McRae. Wednesday is activity night at church, and the foursome were on their way home.

    Less than a quarter-mile from their driveway, McRae rounded the corner and, as her headlights cut through the rain and dark, she saw disaster: The road was gone, a wide gap where it used to be, and at the bottom, about 15 feet below, the rushing Fawcett Creek.

    McRae hit the brakes. The vehicle went into a skid. It came to a stop right on the edge of the opening, but that wasn't soon enough. The wheels slipped over, and the SUV dove nose first into the water. The vehicle landed precariously, then righted itself and began floating downstream, bouncing off debris.

    "All the air bags and the back windows and side windows popped out, and the water started rushing in," said McRae.

    When the SUV became lodged between two trees, McRae and Madison unbuckled the 3-year-old boy and 2-year old girl. Madison, who is recovering from recent foot surgery, climbed onto the roof, and McRae handed the children to her until all were safely on the roof.

    Madison makes a plan
    That's when Madison knew it was up to her. Earlier, she had been too frightened to even think, Madison said Thursday from her Tillamook home. "Then it hit me, it was actually happening. I got ahold of myself."

    She shimmied over a tree branch and onto land, then ran for a nearby ranch only to find herself stopped by an electric fence. Two, three, four times, the sixth-grader felt the shock meant to discourage animals 10 times her size.

    "It hurt really bad," she said. "But I didn't really notice it. I had more important things to do. I was thinking that I could do it, and I just had to."

    She made it to the house, banged on the door and was brought inside to call 9-1-1, giving dispatchers crucial information about the vehicle's location.

    At the river, the U.S. Coast Guard and Tillamook volunteers worked to rescue the Porter family: hypothermic, weak and in the middle of the river. If rescuers did not get them to the bank, they could be carried to higher water, bigger currents and, possibly, death.

    On the opposite side, Spittles and his crew rigged a ladder and ropes to reach McRae and the toddlers, about 25 feet below.

    "You could see her Ford Expedition," said Spittles. "The current was boiling up on the back side, washing up over her. The two little ones were in her arms."
    THE OREGONIAN
    Rescuers positioned a 35-foot ladder, then lowered ropes to latch around the children. While several of the men steadied the ladder, another lifted the first child to safety, into the arms of waiting rescuers.

    They repeated it a second time, and now only McRae was on the rooftop.

    "I didn't know if I was going to get off the car, but I knew it was going to be OK," she said, her voice cracking with emotion. "It was enough that the kids were OK. I didn't think I was going to make it."

    McRae was too cold to pull herself up onto the ladder, 8 to 10 feet above. Spittles considered calling for the Coast Guard helicopter, but the tree cover overhead would have made such a rescue dangerous for all.

    The ladder would not have supported the weight of McRae and a rescuer. They were going to have to find another way.

    Spittles and his crew picked the ladder off the ground, leveraging it in a see-saw manner until it dipped down to McRae's waist. She managed to crawl on, and rescuers guided her to the ground.

    By then, the Coast Guard swift boat team had also brought the Porter family to safety. And on this night, it was a happy ending for all. Thursday morning, the McRaes returned to the scene to take a look at the tree Maddie had shimmied up to safety.

    "It was pretty minimal," said Stephanie McRae. "I'm not sure how she did it. As far as we are concerned, this is divine. This couldn't have happened if we hadn't been being watched over."
    I like Bikes - Mimi
    Watercolor Blog

    Davidson Custom Bike - Cavaletta
    Dahon 2009 Sport - Luna
    Old Raleigh Mixte - Mitzi

  11. #11
    Join Date
    Jul 2005
    Location
    WA, Australia
    Posts
    3,292
    WOW!!
    Mimi that is really one amazing story.
    The most effective way to do it, is to do it.
    Amelia Earhart

    2005 Trek 5000 road/Avocet 02 40W
    2006 Colnago C50 road/SSM Atola
    2005 SC Juliana SL mtb/WTB Laser V

  12. #12
    Join Date
    Apr 2006
    Posts
    3,867
    What a girl!

    Karen
    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
    insidious ungovernable cardboard

 

 

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