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File: 1463479624211.jpg (190.84 KB, 1280x720, cxEkp1O.jpg)

No. 92758

You know those people who climb to the top of skyscrapers with no harness/safety equipment? Or cliff jumpers, under water cave spelunking, cliff cycling, etc. Post examples, frustrations and concerns. Why do they do it? Adrenaline rush? Internet points? What are they thinking? Do they want to die?

No. 92762

>>92758
Here's the backstory to the op pic btw. It's worth the read imo. They legit wasted hours praying while the dude had limited time before he died due to being upside down. It's funny I never knew you had a limited amount of hours of being upside down until you're dead.

http://archive.sltrib.com/story.php?ref=/sltrib/home/50073473-76/john-cave-tunnel-josh.html.csp

http://archive.sltrib.com/article.php?id=98989899&itype=NGPSID

No. 92763

File: 1463480952075.gif (3.81 MB, 800x446, hoverboard.gif)

>>92762
The second link is part 2 in case anyone is confused.

No. 92764

>>92759
>24.41 MB
What the fuck are you hiding in that

No. 92765

>>92764
My bad I just linked it from imgur heh.

No. 92766

File: 1463481516366.jpg (27 KB, 340x333, cave081905.jpg)


No. 92768

I already knew this story, I'm claustrophobic and just thinking about it make me nauseous.

No. 92769

File: 1463484177799.png (893.01 KB, 4432x1856, BSA CS1 Mossdale Caverns.png)

THIS IS MY KIND OF THREAD

Speaking of caving accidents, there's a pretty famous one here in the UK. The year is 1967, and a team of young cavers had planned out an exploration of a notoriously dangerous system of caves located in the Yorksh Dales, the Mossdale Caverns.

To date the cave is so dangerous it has never been fully mapped. The issue was that it going in you had to time your entry precisely and very carefully due to the fact that the caves were prone to flooding.
Long story short, 10 cavers entered on that day, part way through 4 turned back, 6 continued on, and on the exit of the 4 they realised their worst fears - rain.
The 6 cavers would have eventually heard the sound of the water rushing in through the stone around them, but by then it was already too late. They drowned beyond help, in the dark, in a cramped space as the water slowly rose around them. One body was found away from the others wedged in a tight ledge above, trying in vain to escape the rapidly rising water.
The bodies are still down there. Today the entrance is now sealed.

http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/this-britain/what-lies-beneath-mossdale-caving-disaster-794268.html

No. 92770

>>92769

>Now hours from the entrance, they are heading for the distant end of the cave where they hope to find new passages. Next comes the infamous Far Marathon. Still, spirits are high. They are making good time., >some of them at least have been here before. They laugh, they tease each other. The omens look good for making a discovery. Then one perhaps mutters – is it a joke? – "Eh, what's that rumbling? Not the stream going up?" It is every caver's nightmare – lying flat-out in water, not a joke that cavers like. But now everyone hears it. Unmistakably, sickeningly, the water is surging; the draught whistles like a gale. As far as anyone knows – no one has tried it – Mossdale Caverns floods completely. Still they do not panic.

>they are the country's best cavers. Surely it cannot happen to them? The roof is a few inches above their prostrate bodies. They instinctively crawl faster, yet each of them knows there is nowhere to go. The oldest is just 26; others are still in their teens. The world of sunshine and fresh air has suddenly become an eternity away. United now by terror, inch by rising inch every caver's nightmare for them is coming true. >it will happen very quickly. The cave will be their tomb.

Fucking nightmare fuel.
Somebody should post about the Everest bodies.

No. 92774

Makes me feel sick and anxious.
Please post more!

No. 92812

Why do they do it guys.
Why would you willingly go into something like this knowing full well that the risk of death is dangerously high.

No. 92813

File: 1463502553088.jpg (42.14 KB, 695x463, nnhI7cg.jpg)

Cavers and potholers are fucking nuts.

No. 92815

File: 1463504178902.png (225.29 KB, 800x1243, amigara_0.png)

>this thread

Not sure if they were making shit up but someone once posted that people who are obsessed with mountain climbing/cave diving have some type of brain dysfunction that makes them act that way.

No. 92875

Looking at the OP they should have just broken his legs in the attempt to get him out. Even if it failed, he was going to die anyway if left alone.

In cases like this is, it entirely impossible for somebody to administer a shot of morphine or some heavy opiate that will keep the guy lucid but will reduce the pain of having his legs broken? I mean, if the guy is going to face certain death otherwise, where does to restriction stem from?

No. 92904

>>92815
HAHAHAHAHAAHA! My first adventure into Junji. <3

No. 92908

File: 1463519495159.jpg (Spoiler Image,30.74 KB, 460x345, everest-1.jpg)

>>92770
As soon as I saw this thread I thought of Everest. The most well-known body is "Green Boots" since I'm pretty sure it's close to a commonly taken path (even though it's not the only body you pass on the way up).

>Paljor was part of a three-man group attempting to be the first Indian team to ascend Mt. Everest from the Northeastern route. Unfortunately for the Indian team, their timing couldn’t have been worse: The weather during the 1996 season was extremely volatile; that year would ultimately become one of the deadliest on record for Mount Everest climbers.


>When the storm rolled in, visibility dropped to zero and the temperature dropped. Separated from the climbers in his group and suffering from the cold, Paljor found a small cave and huddled inside for protection from the elements.


>It would become his final resting place.


>Paljor’s body appeared where it is today on May 10th, 1996.


It's been 20 years. I wonder how relatives of the dead feel about their loved one's bodies being left on the mountain. There's more tragic stories here if anyone wants to read them, though there are pictures of dead bodies.

http://sometimes-interesting.com/2011/06/29/over-200-dead-bodies-on-mount-everest/

No. 92910

File: 1463520262907.png (88.15 KB, 524x283, screen-shot-2012-05-22-at-8-01…)

>>92908

There's another famous one, David Sharp who died in May of 2006.
He went up Everest one day, ill prepared with no provisions, radio nor oxygen. During his ascent, he ran into difficulties and decided to take shelter in the cave nearby to where Green Boots body rests. Nobody knows for sure how long he rested there but it was enough that when he attempted to move, he found himself unable to.

Over 40 hikers past David Sharp that day, but nobody attempted to render assistance having believed him already dead. One group did decide to investigate, and as they neared heard his feeble croaks of "help" and realised he was still alive. After over an hour of trying however they were unable to get David to stand on his own, and were forced to abandon him to his fate and move on.

Picture related is his corpse sitting upright in the cave.

No. 92917

>>92908
Green boots is no longer there. His body disappeared from the path…Last year, I think? No one is sure what happened. Sharp's body has been removed from the cave.

No. 92918


No. 92920

>>92875
They said they thought of that but he would have died from shock also I don't think they could properly administer medication on him. I would have just asked for some nitrogen gas and gone out the easy way kek

No. 92929

>>92813
JESUS FUCKIN CHRIST NO

No. 92958

>>92920

>"mmmmm, if we break his legs in his retrieval he could potentially die from shock"

>"but, if we do nothing he'll definitely die"


I… I don't understand. He was facing certain doom anyway so for what reason wouldn't you attempt this? I'm positive the victim would have consented if pressed. I know I would, what other option is there?

No. 92960

>>92958
They're Mormons so they don't use the best logic in these situations. No offense to Mormons. But they wasted valuable time praying and giving him pizza. Which I get could have helped relax/nourish him. But still

No. 92961

>>92813
This is from that really long creepypasta story about digging out that hole in a cave isn't it? Gave me the heebie jeebies.

No. 92964

File: 1463540556691.jpg (156.76 KB, 720x960, VkLG0.jpg)

What madness possesses these people.

No. 92966

>>92960
The brother prayed several times, and then called 911 to inform them of the situation.

I was a big unclear about the timeline…it seemed that they had got him out, and given him food and water and let him talk to his wife on the phone. Then the anchor broke and he fell back in. Was the leg breaking situation the second time around? Why did they not just take him out properly the first time?

Also, what kind of maniacs crawl through caves like that with no idea what's on the other side? If you get stuck are you supposed to back yourself out feet first?

No. 92967

>>92960

How do you eat pizza upside down? The mystery continues…

No. 92968

>>92966

Spelunkers are morons because they go into these caves relying on the chance that everytime they squeeze through one of these death-trap gaps that there's going to be a space on the other side for which they can straighten up and then around.
I suspect this is what happened in John Jones case. He was exploring in an uncharted area of the cave, we know this much, but he must have continued shuffling and squeezing all the time confident that he was about to emerge into a cavern, only to suddenly fall head-first into a choke-point.
I don't mean to disrespect the dead, but the guy was an idiot.

No. 92971

>>92966
Yeah they pulled him up enough to a point where he could get pizza and water. At that point they were feeling relieved and like the hardest part was over because they were almost going to get him out. But he needed a break to rest and then during the rest the cord snapped. That's when the leg breaking idea came about bc they were panicking, correct. I really do wish the article was more clear about the timeline/hours.

I think this dude climbed into a hole and then went further, saw a fork, figured it might lead to an exit but instead just went more downward/narrower? He's an idiot. He had a kid at home and a pregnant wife and does this shit. Not to mention the rescue workers were seriously put in danger trying to follow his dumbass.

No. 92972

>>92971
Also he was doing medical school. Might have been too much pressure that led him on a spelunking suicide mish. Idk.

No. 92976

My favorite part of the nutty putty story:

>Dave reluctantly crawled in.


>"John, are you OK?" Dave asked.


>"I'm going to die right here.


>I'm not going to come out of here, am I?"


>"We're going to get you out."


Pure "This is my life now" moment

No. 92977

>>92964

>going into a hole head first

>wearing gym shoes with zero traction in a wet cave
>GOING INTO A TINY FUCKING HOLE IN THE GROUND HEAD FIRST

You can only spit in the face of death so many times.

No. 92978

>>92972
Medical school with a wife and two kids? Yeah, I guess I can see how that might drive someone off the bend. But he did call for help, and hung in there (sorry) for over a day in total. The article says breathing was difficult because there wasn't enough room for his lungs to expand properly, so that probably precipitated death. The whole thing is utterly nightmare inducing. He was an idiot, I agree. Mountaineers are also idiots but at least the view is good.

No. 92982

File: 1463542548633.jpg (81.02 KB, 475x575, CrBmg.jpg)

This one is pretty awful tbh.

In 2005 a group of Ukrainian teens went down to the catacombs situated below the city of Odessa.
The party involved drugs, but mostly alcohol, and come the morning after the group had had their fill they packed up and left in a still semi-intoxicated state. Because of their intoxication however they failed to realise that they'd left one of their members behind. She was never seen again.

2 years later in 2007 a couple of urban explorers decided to head down into the catacombs to do some mapping and get some interesting photos, and that's where they found her.

The combined length of the catacombs is 2,500 km - 1553.5 miles. The girl had wandered for miles upon miles in complete darkness and silence, probably screaming and begging for help, until eventually her flashlight ran out. From there she wandered blind searching desperately for an exit, until she eventually collapsed and died.

No. 92983

>go into these caves relying on the chance that everytime they squeeze through one of these death-trap gaps that there's going to be a space on the other side for which they can straighten up and then around.

I assume they usually find an opening or else nobody would do this as a hobby but damn

No. 92984

>>92983

Usually. Usually.

No. 92985

>>92982
Wow reading that makes me so depressed. How fucking deep/far did they go there if she couldn't find her way back? Fuck that's sad

No. 92986

More details on the cave and how he got stuck:http://archive.sltrib.com/story.php?ref=/sltrib/home/50073473-76/john-cave-tunnel-josh.html.csp

Also, spoiler catacomb photo please. I regret reading this thread before bed

No. 92987

File: 1463543009548.png (86.32 KB, 456x445, 1456969170963.png)

>>92982
Fuck me, that is some goddamn nightmare-level shit. Poor girl.

No. 92989

>>92985

I don't know. It was probably one of those things where she was so drunk she thought it'd be funny to wander off on her own around a few bends, or maybe she walked off to go take a wee in private and then couldn't find her way back. It's very sad.

>>92986

Shit sorry, I forgot. Submitted a report so a mod can fix it.

No. 92990

File: 1463543658950.png (526.1 KB, 741x352, AQdfb.png)

>>92985

Here's a partial map of one level of the catacombs, problem is is that it is actually multilevel so you can easily wander down a slope without really realising you're going further underground.
Looking at this mess knowing it's only a section of the full length, it's easy to understand how she got lost.

No. 92991

>>92982

I really am gonna have nightmares about this!! Cannot unsee/read.

No. 92992


No. 92995

>>92763
Oh my god fuck this gif. I'm getting vertigo just looking at it. People are so nuts.

No. 92996

>>92992

>using Vice as a source


I'm not surprised that can't find a "credible source" in law enforcement to back up the story. Supposedly when the group originally found the body they did report it to the police who proceeded to do absolutely nothing about it and only eventually mobilised to retrieve the girl's corpse after they brought the story to a Ukrainian journalist who began excerting pressure.

Besides that, the original photo was actually posted to an extreme spelunking/urban exploration forum alongside all the other photos that took of the inside of the catacombs. If it's fake that does provoke the question of where the group got an unsourced photo a corpse in a catacomb-like environment and why would they post it alongside actual photos of them exploring the Odessa catacombs.

Original forum post (btw I got the dates wrong):

http://www.uer.ca/forum_showthread_archive.asp?threadid=68818

https://picasaweb.google.com/m/viewer#albumlist/ODSKLostWorld

No. 92997

>>92992

>"we believe it is just a practical joke and the corpse is fake." It would be a strange, unfunnny practical joke"


Regardless of the credibility of the story, the corpse in that photo is obviously the real deal.

No. 93005


No. 93008

Also, fuck deep sea diving.

No. 93010

>>93008
http://www.outsideonline.com/1922711/raising-dead Here's the full story of the last dive of David Shaw. Basically his friend died diving one of the deepest waters in the world and David died trying to recover his body. It was either of nitrogen narcosis or CO2 poisoning from hyperventilating. Both their bodies floated to the top. I don't really understand why even bother.

No. 93013

What's the point of going to catacombs anyway? It seems like the best way to get lost and die.

No. 93041

>>93010
Damn that was heartbreaking,can't help but feel bad for Deon still having his head and body in separate places.

No. 93049

File: 1463574328762.jpg (Spoiler Image,78.87 KB, 650x869, 6a4f5f5cc28d.jpg)

>>92982

For anybody doubting the veracity of this, here's the full picture.

No. 93050

>>92961
Link? Although that would probably be more ontopic in the chills thread.

No. 93057


No. 93059

>>93057
Man early 2000s websites sure weren't easy on the eyes, but thanks anon.

No. 93061

>>92989
Damn, I once wondered off for a wee while drunk in a town and got a little lost, can't imagine being drunk in a catacomb

No. 93064

>>92812
Because that's what it means to be truly human. Not some animal guided by sheer instinct.

No. 93066

>>93064

Then by your logic the "true humans" die whilst the ignorant propagate.
I'd rather be on the foolish side than the purported 'intelligent' side dying alone in the dark in a hole so small it's impossible to fully expand my lungs to maximise my screams for reprieve.

No. 93067

>>92758
I'm claustrophobic as fuck. I literally think people that do this type of shit willingly are deranged.

No. 93086

>>93057
That's creepy as fuck. I wonder how much of it is real. Someone obviously went into the cave at least and the dog being uncharacteristically nervous is very plausible. The breezes and rumbling could have rational explanations. Even the scream could be something else.

But why the fuck would they not only stay there but uncover it and try to make it bigger again? And then go back again? If anything like that happened they are beyond stupid and have no survival instincts whatsoever.

No. 93094

>>93005
It sounds horrible but I was hoping that cunt fell. If we slipped he might not of just killed himself but could of fell on someone else or a car killing a family the stupid prick.

No. 93095

>>93057
That was pretty good. If it wasn't written by a real spelunker the person clearly did a ton of research into what it's like which would be impressive, but fun story either way.

No. 93096

>>93094
Meaning I hope he fell but didn't land on someone. Sorry I worded it wrong ahhh

No. 93101

>>93086
I googled the story last night- there is some basis in fact but it seems the noises were thought to be highway traffic (semis screeching across the road). The tunnels apparently ran under the highway at some point. I can't find the original story atm, but it's out there.

No. 93141


No. 93142

>>93141
That's pretty much what I figured. Really well done though. I'd say it's easily one of if not the best internet horror stories.

No. 93757


No. 93760

Bodies left on Everest. (In case someone's interested)

https://m.imgur.com/gallery/4UJj0

No. 93808

>>93757
don't understand why this is a story, many people who are not omnivores have climbed it before and will in the future, and she already reached the summit on 4 or 7 (depending on source) other mountains. they just need something to talk about I guess. the end of the article literally says 30 other people got sick or died the past two weeks, the other guy died of altitude sickness as well.

No. 93866

File: 1464071249500.webm (2.86 MB, 1280x720, Climbing without rope 2.webm)


No. 93868

>>93866
Oh fuck no not this dude. What does he do if a heavy wind blows his direction? Fuckwad.

No. 93900

>>93866
He deserves to die if he's going to be this stupid. Pretty glad all these people are removing themselves from the gene pool.

No. 93903

File: 1464102049842.jpg (239.85 KB, 550x418, 174d083.jpg)

>>93760
googling further info on this, found this collage

they mistook Jack for some dead climber kek

No. 93907

>>93064
stinks of robot

So being "evolved" for you is throwing your life away 4dahlulz instead of doing something big and actually worth of remembering with it right? God these guys sure predictable.

No. 93929

>>93760
I read a bit more about this and what was really offputting is that some of those climbers that died had pregnant wifes or children. Is it really such an important achievement to pay a bunch of experienced climbers to drag you up there?

One climber barely got away with his life and cried about how he lost his hands and nose due to the cold. How do you do something so dangerous and expect to get away healthy?

It's just so selfish, because if anybody tries to rescue you, you are endangering their life up there.

No. 93930

>>93929
Men are just retarded.

No. 93933

File: 1464120835601.png (676.25 KB, 640x630, Dead_body_Mount_Everest.png)

>>93929

There's a really prolific Everest death involving a British man named David Sharp. He made the ascent in 2006, successfully reached the summit, and on his ascent ran into difficulties and stopped to rest at the cave which played grave to Green Boots - a fatal mistake. Without noticing, his limbs quickly froze into position and his metabolic rate/enzymatic function slowed to a crawl. He ended up surviving the entire night exposed to the full extent of the elements, but by then it was too late.

The next day it's estimated that a total of around 40 other climbers passed by Sharp on their ascent, however they received mass criticism for having not stopped to 'rescue' him. People don't seem to get however that the guy had spent the entire night exposed , his body was frozen into a hunched, sitting position, his limbs effectively frozen logs of beef at this point.
In a place like Everest the concept of a 'rescue' is something a person is even permitted to enter your mind. You simply can't risk it. It's not just the thin air or the exhaustion, the cold will fuck your mind up. One minute you might be trying to roll this guy down a path to safety, then you'll start thinking about hot you are, remove your hat, your gloves, but suddenly you're feeling sleepy so you sit down to take a break, and before you know you're David Sharp 2.0 and there's 40 more climbers walking past you.

What people expect others to do? Carry these people down?

No. 93935

>>93933
I don't know. But I guess it's easy to judge others from your warm living room.

No. 93936

>>93933
It's a deeply masculine thing - also a deeply white thing, they're trying to recreate the idea of heroism and individual triumph in an age that seems absent of them.

Few hundred years ago these people would have proven themselves on the battlefield.

No. 93943

>>93935
Seems kinda pointless to exhaust yourself by dragging a half-corpse with you. With air that thin you're already stressing the shit out of your body to walk and climb. A 130lbs+ body? Fuck no. Just - fuck no.

No. 93951

>>93933
As far as I recall, there even were people who tried to rescue him. But since his frame and limbs became frozen so quickly, there wasn't really anything one could do to help. His body was pretty much frozen and half destroyed, he could not even get up or cry for help. Who knows if he even would have survived after several hours out in the cold, harsh climate.

There are a few links in this thread which are pretty insightful on why rescue most of the times is not evennot an option, but downright impossible.

No. 93952

>>93933
there's a common saying among climbers "dead or alive, you belong to the mountain" or something along these lines (sorry, ESL). After making it so far I don't think they would like to get removed from the mountain and be buried like any other person anyways. It is indeed a selfish hobby.

No. 93985

>>93952
Yeah but if they're left on the mountain (many times near climbing routes) then their skeletal/mummified remains get to traumatize all those who follow after them. Imagine knowing this skeletal dude as a climbing colleague in the past and then coming across that on your next climb. Yesterday I was reading an nytimes article from 1999 by mountaineer David Brashears. He said nothing could have prepared him for the open air graveyard that was Everest's death zone. He had known Scott Fisher and Rob Hall, two of the guides that had died in the 1996 blizzard. He saw their bodies still there. Luckily the faces were covered so he could mentally separate himself a bit.

No. 93995

>>92766
I think I heard about this. If I remember right they died on the return because they spent too long and breathed up most of the available oxygen in the inner chamber until they were breathing in so much carbon dioxide that they couldn't hold their breath for long enough to return through the underwater tunnel.

No. 93999

The shit people do to take the "ultimate selfie", especially teenagers.

http://www.mirror.co.uk/news/world-news/teen-plunges-30ft-death-after-3442466

No. 94007

File: 1464145382038.jpg (93.31 KB, 307x313, IMG_7762.JPG)

>>93999
>Teenager Xenia Ignatyeva was a month short of her 18th birthday when she fell, and was hit by 1,500 volts as she was electrocuted when she tried to grab live wires.

No. 94050

File: 1464154601467.jpg (243.62 KB, 960x591, lead_960.jpg)


No. 94051

File: 1464154622801.jpg (662.98 KB, 1920x940, Alex Honnold.jpg)


No. 94052

File: 1464154656839.jpg (56.32 KB, 306x325, ledge_Man_DM2208_306x325.jpg)


No. 94054

File: 1464154708646.jpg (282.54 KB, 1185x790, YTfhw.jpg)


No. 94062

>>93999

>moron falls from bridge

>falls at a height that she could still reasonably survive
>grabs a high-voltage cable on the way down in an effort to save herself

O lawd.

No. 94063

>>94054
>>94052
>>94051
>>94050

ANON STOP YOU ARE GIVING ME THE FRIGHTEN

No. 94070

Everest is so boring, almost every rich tourist can climb it today.

No. 94072

>>94070
How much is it exactly? Something like $50,000.00 ?

No. 94074

>>93999

extreme sefie morons deserve everything bad they could get

No. 94131

>>94072
$30,000 to $80,000, you get what you pay for

No. 94153

>>93985
If you're going to climb a mountain humans were not meant to climb as a hobby, you should see it coming tbh. I think it's a good idea to leave the remains there, show people how fucking stupid they are for doing this and let them learn from the mistakes of others.

No. 94171

>>94074
It looks like the train conductor is kicking him so a piece of protruding metal doesn't hit the retard directly.

No. 94177

>>93933
Good. Leave the idiots who want to climb Everest and die up there as some kind of warning to other idiots. I don't even know why it's news anymore when someone climbs that mountain and croaks.

No. 94178

>>93999
It's like Darwin's law really does exist. Good.

No. 94179

>>92762
Why…Why would you ever go into such a narrow path anyway? I will never get it.

No. 94181

>>92910
Man, stories like this are interesting. Glad I'm not this stupid.

No. 94182

>>93903
>the shining

My sides. That's hilarious.

No. 94193

anyone know of any cave/catacomb horror movies or stories?

I loved As Above, So Below . it gave me so many chills. I liked the concept of "hell" being like in an "upside down" world.

No. 94194

>>92982
>>92996

I have doubts that the story is fake. The original poster of the image went into the catacombs 2-3 days a week and had countless other photos of the area over a span of many years. He also explained how multiple people die every year getting lost in the catacombs, so it would be strange to devise a story for this one girl when it's not a very rare occurrence for people to die down there.

Some relevant, interesting information lifted from the original forum thread:

>During the time she was inside her "friends" didn't try to take her bоdy out. Probably they were frightened. А few explorers were comming inside to make photos of her. I made this photo in Аpril 2005. Аfter thаt I called police, but they did not want to go inside. Her body was far from the exit. In the end my friend, а famous journalist, wrote аn article with а lot of photos of this poor girl аnd showed it to the government. After this during 24 hours her body has been taken out.


>Her body was 5 km away from the entrance, so only a few explorers knew where did she die. That is why she was lying there being a photo sight.

We know nothing about this poor girl. Only her name and age. We knew nothing about her parents. Most probably that she didn,t tell her parents where is she going to be, so they could not even suppose, that she could be in catacombs.

>Her name was Mariya

No. 94199

I do mountaineering/climbing/abseiling and it's just not as dangerous as you guys make out at all. You're statistically far more likely to die in your car on the way there. A lot of these freak accidents are exactly that, freak accidents. You'll notice that in a large number of instances, experienced, veteran climbers are the ones dying, meaning it isn't down to stupidity or failing to predict something obvious. Barring extreme climbs like Everest, (an idiotic people doing idiotic things of course) it's a pretty safe hobby.

Also to the people calling them selfish, it's not as if their wives married them not knowing this could happen, they're capable of making their own decisions about who they marry. You could someone with a military career just as selfish.

I don't fucking get caving at all though.

No. 94200

>>94199
>statistically
That means nothing. Of course you're more likely to die in a car accident when people drive way more than they go mountaineering. It still doesn't make it safe.

No. 94202

>>94200
We usually compare death rates per-capita, so frequency of the activity doesn't really come into play here. The point is that every day people will drive around two tonnes of metal quite happily without thinking about it, when in reality it is an extremely dangerous activity. Same goes for smoking, overeating, not exercising etc etc. What people perceive as dangerous or most likely to kill them is just wildly incorrect most of the time. You could die of anything at any time, why let that fear paralyse you and prevent you from doing something you love?

>It still doesn't make it safe.

If you follow all of the safety rules and don't act like an idiot, it's a very safe hobby man.

>>94201

Man I love Honold he's an adorable dork. I honestly don't think he'll die climbing - he'll quit before he gets bad enough.

No. 94210

>>94199
>Barring extreme climbs like Everest, (an idiotic people doing idiotic things of course) it's a pretty safe hobby.
That's exactly what we were discussing though.

No. 94215


No. 94218

>>94215
Suspension base jumping. Fucking idiots

No. 94219


No. 94220

>>94210
My bad then. I got the impression people just thought regular mountaineering was that dangerous and that everyone who does it is an idiot.

No. 94222

>>94219
>muh lifetime achievement

No. 94236

So the family of the vegan Australian professor who died on Everest was looking for "answers". http://www.cnn.com/2016/05/25/world/everest-deaths-climb-maria-strydom/index.html?sr=fbCNN052516everest-deaths-climb-maria-strydom1110PMVODtopLink&linkId=24879807
I feel for them that they learned about her death from the paper but instead of going to the media and public Facebook why not sort it out in private?
And then, they wanted the body back, so 13 Sherpas had to go up and haul it down at risk to their lives. The weather conditions were too dangerous for the helicopters to pick up the body so there was that delay/danger too. For a corpse.

I'm incredibly irritated now.

No. 94240

>>94236
Yeah that's my huge issue with people who do these things. It's incredibly selfish because it puts a huge burden and risk on the people trying to retrieve your remains. They should all take this into consideration but their egos won't allow it

No. 94242

>>94240
Agreed. But isn't this a discussion you have with your family before you go? Why is repatriation insurance (paid) even an option? If someone wants to volunteer to bring your loved ones body back that's on them, but once you pay the poor Sherpas they won't turn it down, and they may take unadvised risks because they're being paid to do it. It's selfish on the family's part too. The story upthread about the diver who died bringing up a body had the same thing: the family didn't stop him from risking his life to do it, and were happy(?) to see the headless corpse in the mortuary because his body still looked like him. Grief does weird and horrible things to people, or are people actually that selfish?

The mum had commented her questions on Alan Arnette's (mountaineer who chronicles each season) blog. These included not enough time spent at a particular camp, what happened when, who was there etc. He wrote a blog post afterward that basically says that climbers should research and take responsibility for their own choices on the mountain, and things may still go wrong, because it's an 8000m mountain and people die in the Death Zone and everywhere else.

No. 94244

File: 1464235056580.gif (9.69 MB, 640x360, stop.gif)

>>94218
N-No!!

No. 94245

>>94171

indeed
I saw a video of some stupid teenagers doing stupid shit near a passing train and a protuding part instakills one of them. No visible blood but his neck seemed to be badly broken

No. 94252

File: 1464239774788.jpg (127.42 KB, 600x942, extreme-selfies-2-e14416005991…)


No. 94253

File: 1464240074087.jpg (163.85 KB, 1272x660, James-Kingston-London-Ultimate…)


No. 94260

>>92964
Is this a person or a corpse


Fuuuuuuuuuck

No. 94262

>>94252
THIS ONE IS THE WORST BECAUSE HIS GRIP DOESN'T LOOK VERY SOLID

AAAHHHH THIS THREAD TRIGGERS ME

No. 94312

File: 1464271053860.jpg (192.03 KB, 1378x900, lYUBdDQ.jpg)


No. 94313

File: 1464271083644.jpg (120.63 KB, 939x960, JcwK6S0.jpg)


No. 94314

File: 1464271156844.jpg (189.89 KB, 950x712, NFUz1Ld.jpg)


No. 94316

File: 1464271423190.webm (1.4 MB, 640x640, TTuCttX.webm)


No. 94317

File: 1464271453600.jpg (242.33 KB, 1200x797, fr42b.jpg)


No. 94318

>>94312
Why do white people do this shit??

No. 94319

File: 1464272013873.jpg (224.83 KB, 640x947, dbxCkJx.jpg)


No. 94320

File: 1464272058673.jpg (585.47 KB, 1000x667, 5.jpg)

I think this girl is dead. I'll have to dig up the source later.

No. 94321

File: 1464272175685.jpg (675.46 KB, 2048x1435, aNerDHq.jpg)


No. 94322

File: 1464272343737.jpg (385.13 KB, 1080x1436, mrO9gkO.jpg)

These Russian dudes must lack an amygdala. I'll never understand

No. 94323

This is a short, nicely done documentary with subtitles about base jumping deaths. Kinda satisfying imo watching these fuckers die. I don't really feel bad for them

No. 94324

>>94320
Is this girl: >>93999

No. 94325

File: 1464272780375.jpg (125.65 KB, 800x533, Yo2wjPF.jpg)

>>94324
Oh that's right. Thanks haha don't know how I missed that

No. 94327

File: 1464273006013.jpg (501.77 KB, 1964x1200, TvknEdZ.jpg)

This upsets me. I feel so bad for that dog. Does anyone have a good reason why this wouldn't be animal abuse? Like..educate me..

No. 94330

>>94327
C'mon, dog probably enjoyed it but now you can see in his eyes he's done so many jumps he's bored of them already.

No. 94332

>>94330
What if he's traumatized. Idk. Seems fucked up to me

No. 94333

>>94332
It's like saying drug or bomb sniffer dogs are traumatized. Or like teaching kids math is traumatizing.

No. 94336

File: 1464278741247.jpg (2.36 MB, 1861x1536, xdLu3nD-1.jpg)


No. 94367

File: 1464296199386.jpeg (31.41 KB, 279x407, 1462129319641.jpeg)

>>94323

>mfw there is a close-up shot of a dead person's bloody face


I probably should have known better. Who needs sleep, anyway?

I feel bad regardless because no one goes into this hoping to smear their face across a cliffside, but on the other hand, they have to know the risk involved. It's sucks that someone died because their friend didn't pack their parachute right, though.

How can people continue to do this after witnessing death multiple times? Wouldn't it become so draining? Just one of those things you can't understand.

No. 94369

>>94312
At least people seem to be harnessed to the rope here

No. 94378

>>94367
nuh they died "doing what they love". If you don't "die doing what you love" then you're just a guy who's wasted his life, also you miss out on a kool kids klub membership and cant get into the big kool party for kool people in heaven.

No. 94381

>>94323
I read something in a book once that men are more likely to die younger than women because they do more reckless shit like this because of testosterone and adrenaline. It mellows out in their late 30s, but apparently a lot act like idiots well into adulthood.

No. 94385

>>94323
can we get a ruski-anon to translate what these retards are saying?

No. 94386

>>94385

>these retards


Anon there's closed captions…

No. 94391

>>94321
I-I actually would do this if I weren't fearful of deep seas

>mfw petting sharks without a cage is actually a thing

No. 94408

>>94386
haha fuck, back to special-ed for me

No. 94410

>>94319
>>94320

I want these dumbasses to fall.

No. 94413

daily reminder that people don't always die the instant they hit the ground in falling-related deaths. A lot of the time they "bounce" and are still alive in a mangled state beyond the point of saving when paramedics arrive on the scene

https://www.reddit.com/r/todayilearned/comments/3ganoc/til_women_are_twice_as_likely_to_initiate_a/ctwe5nf

so I guess if youre going to scale buildings for thrills, at least go high enough to where you WILL die instantly if you fall

No. 94415

>>94413
That's pretty insane. What kind of regret would you feel at that point? Regret from jumping off a building or regret for not calculating a high enough distance? Guess your not so rational at the time anyway

No. 94419

God can you fucking imagine what must go through these people's heads when they fall and know in that moment that they're already dead?

People who've had near-death experiences always report the sensation of time having slowed down, which makes it worse. Just watching the ground hurtling toward you and thinking "why did I do it, please let me go back and fix it, please save me".

No. 94420

>>94415
>>94419

probably something like "fuck, I left the oven on"

No. 94424

>>94415
I don't think you'd be able to feel anything besides pain. Your bones and organs would be smashed to pieces. Unimaginable pain.

No. 94425

>>94413
thanks for posting this thread by the way. I was kind of curious about this stuff and thinking about this lately because I'm in a shitty place right now.

No. 94427

>>94419
I mean they chose it. Even if they weren't mentally well I do not feel 100% sympathy for them when compared to like, the 9/11 jumpers. They literally only jumped because it was that or burning to death

No. 94428

>>94419
When I nearly died via drowning, it was weirdly peaceful. I was just thinking "Huh. I guess this is it then." Everything was slow and quiet and I had no idea which way was up or how to get out of the water. Just before I blacked out, my hand bumped the handle of my tube and I pulled myself up. The people I was tubing with were a lot more scared than I was because I was under the water for a couple minutes. (I was an idiot and went over a drainage fall while tubing down a river, fell off, and got sucked under the water in a very deep spot with super strong current)
9/10 would do again.

No. 94430

>>94428
Probably would've stopped being as peaceful if you'd inhaled some water.

No. 94434

>>94312
Holy fucking shit, I thought that top blue one was a baby at first

No. 94436

>>94428
When you drown, your lungs and organs are convulsing painfully. It is not a peaceful way to go.

No. 94439

File: 1464336642796.gif (14.13 MB, 642x361, 54432cba5a91cd40a29ad55f5f202e…)


No. 94440

World's highest rock climbing wall. Tf. Not even if you paid me a million dollars and I had all the parachutes in the world. Fuck no!

No. 94447

File: 1464342667488.webm (1.18 MB, 642x361, 1464336642796.webm)

>>94439
>14mb gif
You're triggering me

No. 94460

>>94440
Well, he has a parachute. It's not that unsafe like >>94439

No. 94505

>>94447
just… why

No. 94528

>>94153
I would be okay with this if Everest wasn't a sacred place to the Nepalese. Kinda shitty to have bodies of the careless and foolish littering a place considered holy.

No. 94549

>>94252

I really wonder if he had some friends there that grabbed both his arms after and yanked him back up lol.

No. 190696

>>92964
I might be mistaken, but those legs and the walls look a LOT like the fake legs they have dangling down from an interactive crawlspace they have at the Florida Museum of Natural History's year round cave exhibit. It looks like someone just turned their camera upside down. The walls are even the same glossed fake rock.

No. 190697

>>92758
fucking christ this made me feel sick. I'm already claustrophobic so this freaked me out a ton

No. 190699

File: 1494966003806.jpeg (136.03 KB, 494x666, 1F368F90-F990-4BE3-98E5-87C98E…)

This bread is awesome and I want to share one of my favorite cool/creepy nature spots.

This is right outside my old college town. Wicked cool place, but pretty terrifying. It's called Jacob's Well. There are only 8 confirmed deaths IIRC but it's said to be one of the most dangerous diving spots in the world.

Safe for jumping into, but stupid to dive in to the lower chambers.

No. 190707

File: 1494968028923.jpg (130.11 KB, 1920x1080, LeP8MoP.jpg)

Although it's not on the same level of scary as caving or diving, have any of you seen these retards on motorcycles riding around with no helmets, especially on busy freeways?
It's getting warm here in the US again so a lot of men do this shit.
There was an accident here where 2 people were riding on a motorcycle and hit a bus, neither of them were wearing helmets, and one ended up with a crushed skull dying instantly while the other ended up in a coma.

No. 190715

>>190707
Saw a case like that. Man vs. deer, no helmet. Brain-dead after a few hours. In fact, the doctor walked into the ED, the first words out of his mouth being "His brain is fucked up."

Biking drunk on narrow causeways freaks me out, how people do that stuff past 20MPH is beyond me.

No. 190719

>>190696
Thanks for the email. :^)

No. 190742

>>93094
I know this post is 11 months old but
>If we slipped he might not of just killed himself but could of fell
Damn anon, how high were you when typed that?

No. 190775

>>190707
Riding a bike without a helmet is just as bad as caving solely for the fact that many bikers are on their bike every day or almost every day.
My uncle died riding his bike a couple years ago. As a kid when I first rode with him I asked, "do you wear a helmet?" He said "never". I asked him why not, he said "it doesn't feel right and dying on my bike would be the best way to go". I can understand the logic but also what the fuck dude you have a wife and 3 kids, one with autism that has to stay home. That's what pisses me off, why put yourself in a risky situation every single day if you have a family who's depending on you? Helmets are one ugly "stupid" thing you put on your head for a little while that could spare you another few decades of your life and spare your family a lot of grief and struggle. Pretty simple and easy. Riding motorcycles without helmets is especially stupid, even more stupid than riding in a car with no seat belt.

This is the most bloggy blogpost I've ever blogposted, sorry.

No. 190806

>>190707
Squids are a cancer and they are the reason why insurance prices for these things are high. They almost always buy a bike with way too much power for their abilities and then inevitably wreck it.

No. 190807

>>190707
All the time, I usually give them a lot of room in front of me because they're unpredictable. Worst is when you have 2 of them, one in each lane, matching speed so no one can pass…

Or when the scantily clad gf is on the back wearing even less while the boyfriend drives poorly.

No. 190811

>>92968
Not all spelunkers are morons. I do it from time to time because it's fun and my rule is that if it hasn't been explored yet, I only move forward when I'm sure I can move backwards. I only go into super tight passageways if they've already been explored and I know they open up in a bit.

No. 190837

>>94314
>>94312
Must get real awkward when one of these fuckers suddenly has to poop.

No. 190839

>>190742
That anon said it was a typo fwiw

>>93096

No. 190842

Yay I'm glad this thread is being revived from the dead. I still remember posting it a year ago because I just NEEDED someone else to see this craziness. The replies have been great, I love lolcow. Anyway I don't think this has been mentioned, but the death of Jan Davis is kind of frustrating. It happened here in Yosemite,CA

http://articles.latimes.com/1999/oct/23/news/mn-25364

Here's the article but I can summarize. Basically Jan and her husband were notorious for basejumping from Yosemite and had their equipment taken away from them by authorities as a result. They decided to protest this by doing a jump off of El Capitan. Because Jan didn't have her normal gear she was using a rental gear for this jump. Little did she realized the string to deploy the parachute was not where it normally was on this rental gear. Mid air, Jan was frantically trying to figure out where the string was. The rental gear had the string near her legs, an important detail Jan and her husband seemed to not go over beforehand. She died on impact never finding the string and she created this huge crater in the ground. Oh and her husband filmed this entire thing.

No. 190881

>>190842
This is horrifying, I can't believe how common this stuff is and people still keep doing it. In the other doc in this thread a bunch of guys died one after the other due to careless mistakes or uncontrollable things happening, it's ridiculous.

No. 190900

>>190881
Yeah I'll honestly never understand why they feel compelled to base jump. Flying in a plane is enough of a thrill right ? That's what I think anyway lol

No. 190911

I don't know how many of you watch amateur urban explorers, but I find this type of content pretty interesting. And also eerie.

This one Youtuber thinks it's a good idea to explore abandoned crack houses in fucking Baltimore of all places.
Well, in this one video he crawls into what he believes is a shitty abandoned building, but it's actually a dealer den.
He finds a tote with some food and crack cocaine.
Things get pretty heated as he suddenly has to hide when he hears voices approaching.

If these dealers found him touching their drugs, he'd be dead.
I know it's not like base jumping fails, but it's pretty intense.

No. 190933

>>94381
they are literally removing themselves from the gene pool and yet after millenia we still have men doing shit like this

No. 190935

Thanks everyone who posted in this thread so far, it's been freaking me the fuck out. I've no idea what possesses people to do things like this, I suppose it's for the adrenaline or approval of others but is it really worth risking your life? Just ride a rollercoaster or something.

>>190911
I've always wanted to do urban exploration but idk how people get the guts to do things like this. Knowing my country, these kinds of places would be full of homeless drug adicts shooting up. It'd absolutely terrify me to come across someone else.

That Exploring with Josh guy comes across other people during his explorations regularly but they're always just other explorers. I can't believe his luck.

No. 190969

>>190911
Whoa this was wild! also were those gun shots at 5:07 or?? I can't believe those dudes didn't hear him, his footsteps are pretty loud.

No. 190986

>>92812
i would but im an adrenaline junkie. I assume the same goes for most of these other people.

No. 190989

>>190911
Omg don't hate on Dan Bell anon, also he doesn't explore at night anymore and doesn't go alone after this incident. The hotel room series he has right now is amazing.

He has another video where he goes to an abandoned childrens asylum (twice) and during the day you can tell someone's inside bc there's an eye in one of the door peepholes.

No. 190991

>>190989
Oh I don't hate him or anything, I just thought his night exploring of downtown places like these were stupid risky.

I like the hotel and abandoned mall series. Rick is hilarious.

>during the day you can tell someone's inside bc there's an eye in one of the door peepholes

Yeah I saw that too. Someone is peering from the hole and suddenly there's a click sound and the figure leaves.

No. 190992

>>190969
Either someone banging on something closeby, or maybe a gunshot? For some reason I'm not convinced it was gunfire.

No. 191019

>>190911
I'm glad Dan doesn't make these videos much anymore. Besides stuff like this happening him being overweight made me worry he'd fall through one of those dilapidated floors. I like his new motel series.

No. 191488

>>94317
>>94321
Tbh these aren't really as bad as the skyscraper ones

No. 193237

>>92958
I know this is a year late but here's what happened:
They did try. They had managed to screw a bunch of hooks into the walls and set up a rope to pull him through (the leg breaking part). They managed to get him moving, but one of the hooks pulled out of the wall, nailed a rescuer in the face, broke his jaw, and dropped the guy back into the hole.
I'd just ask them to kill me if I were him.

No. 193239

File: 1496381007252.jpg (84.44 KB, 317x432, genieass.jpg)

If you want stupid, read about BASE jumpers who do radio masts.
Almost all of them either break in or jump the fence, which pisses the owners off to no end. Radio masts are also full of FUN things like RF hazards, where your eyes can get slow cooked if you're not careful, shock hazards, and of course fall hazards. There's numerous stories of people cratering because they thought they could jump off of a 400 foot mast just fine, hitting guy wires (thick steel cables) on the way down, landing in power lines, shocking themselves and falling off, and general stuff which would be more at home in an episode of jackass than up a giant metal stick.

No. 193240

>>193239
My dad used to climb towers (not for sport) and almost fell one day because a portion of it had fallen into poor shape. One of the riggers who worked for him broke his arm under the force of pulleys and cables, and had to wait three hours for someone to come and rescue him. Getting up them is dangerous enough with all the proper equipment and training, so I legit do not understand BASE jumping off of one of them.

This one guy jumped off a 2,000 foot tall tower and still died because he was hit by something on his way down. And he was being accompanied by someone who's jumped over 400 times and still died because of lack of forethought.
>http://www.grindtv.com/random/base-jumping-icon-arrested-following-fatal-jump-in-georgia/#2bzyZUxgZiWaxJbT.97

But I can't say much, because I'm a pussy who is scared of even driving. I'd love to someday learn to mountain climb, though.

No. 193243

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HrFgvoL0MLk

Nice I've been wanting a thread like this

No. 193244


No. 193251

>>193243
>>193244
these videos need to be titled "white men weeding themselves out of the gene pool." rip to the kid who literally got murdered by his friend from being pushed off a roof, what the fuck.

at the very least, more of the assholes climbing could've worn helmets

No. 193258

>>190911
Nooo he deleted it!

No. 193279

>>193244
it's intensely satisfying to see these guys fall

No. 193288


No. 193290


No. 193295

File: 1496439557318.jpg (189.69 KB, 610x367, kansaswaterslide.jpg)

>>193290
Lol the dude in the second is such a pussy. You're fine, idiot! The rescuers are bad ass though. I wonder how stupid they must think all these people are as they're dropping in from a helicopter to save their asses lol

>>193288
And this is why I don't fuck with amusement park rides besides Disneyland and Six Flags. And even then I'm kinda hesitant. These are kinda sad though because they're not adrenaline junkies they're families who are taking their kids out for a good time, mostly. Also, I guess the family of that kid who died on that huge water slide in Kansas just got a settlement for 20 million.

No. 193298

File: 1496439856099.jpg (198.96 KB, 750x500, composite-waterslide-graphic2.…)

>>193295
Here's a better pic of the slide

No. 193299

File: 1496440043242.png (154.39 KB, 918x517, 83689337.png)

lol sorry I don't mean to spam I just still don't understand why people thought this was a good. For a ride ?? Like the whole weight distribution thing is sketchy af. A little kid gets on with 2 heavy ladies of course he's gonna fly off once the speed bump hits. Still, i feel bad for the kid and his family

No. 193300

>>193299
I feel bad for the two innocent strangers who had to finish the ride with a decapitated child.

No. 193301

>>92758
stories like these are the reason im claustrophobic
>>92769
how can you be so fucking stupid to go into a cave, know it can flood and not fucking inform yourself about the weather?
>>92813
ooh god whyyy
>>92908
there was a 13 year old dying on mount everest just a few weeks ago. seriously though im asking myself who lets their 13 year old climb up there when even the death rate amongst adults is 1 out of 10.

No. 193303

>>193300
Yeah, that too. My bad, didn't mean to leave them out. And any people who had to witness that shit in general

I like this video. They're doing donuts and then BOOM. Trainwreck.

No. 193306

>>94324
nah, this: >>94320 is Angela Nikolau
this: >>93999 was called Xenia Ignatyeva

No. 193307

>>94436
it's usually some chemicals that make you feel at ease and peaceful and adrenaline - even when you dont feel panicy - that makes you go numb.

Just like that monk that light himself to fire. After a short span of shock and pain the body shuts down. But it takes a tremendously big amount of willpower to not stand up and run.

No. 193308

>>190842
>>190881
>>190900
actually i think people like this do it and become addicted to it because they feel empty and dead inside and the adrenaline kick makes them feel alive.

No. 193309

this makes me think about metro suiciders. not for fun - okay, but actually when I was suicidal in my teenage years i always thought this was a way to go.

I stumbled upon this through a show from the 80s or 90s that I dont remember the name of (something like "nighttime taxi talk" or something), where people would get into the taxi and just tell stories. It actually was really cool not like that bullcrap there is nowadays with shows in taxis.

In one episode there was a paramedic or police men in and he said it happened quite often that people jumping in front of a subway would just get caught up squeezed betweed the subway itself and the rail resulting in them getting swirled or twisted - literally - around their body midst. the swirling keeps them from actually dying because they dont bleed and the pressure keeps the blood in the upper body moving, but there is no way to save a person that is like that. so even if they cry and scream and regret there is nothing you can do about it at that point besides calling their family and getting them down there to say good bye, because as soon as you lift the subway and get them out there they bleed to death.

graphic video related: http://horriblevideos.com/video/dive-suicide-man-paraguay-1098.html

No. 193332

>>193288
>>193295
>>193298
>>193299
thanks im never going on any amusement park rides again

>>193309
i think out of all the dangerous activities in this thread, this one is the most nauseating. that video is so gross fuck

No. 193355

>>193309
U Z U M A K I

No. 193359

>>193355
OMG anon! Perfect analogy for a twisted circumstance, I haven't heard of anything Junji Ito in forever haha

No. 193362

File: 1496493453141.jpg (Spoiler Image,100.53 KB, 400x645, rsz_myloveforyouwillstopthisca…)

>>193355
>>193359
Glad I wasn't the only one thinking that!
Reminds me of this idiot who gets twisted up in the tires of a car

No. 193366

>>193309
Fuck, that's an awful way to want to go out. Do people just assume that death would be instant and they wouldn't feel anything?

No. 193368

File: 1496503668322.jpg (148.73 KB, 780x438, 161025093415-02-dreamworld-acc…)

>>193309

>resulting in them getting swirled or twisted - literally - around their body…say good bye, because as soon as you lift the subway and get them out there they bleed to death.


This is also known as the 'smiling death' or 'Crush Syndrome'. There's no going back from these type of injuries; they're also quite common in industrial accidents/machinery. Those who end up being held together by mechanical moving-parts are considered to have 'Injuries incompatible with living' meaning, no CPR, they've had it.

Speaking of the term 'Incompatible with living', and while we're on the subject of theme parks and/or industrial equipment- remember that horrific tragedy at Australia's Dreamworld last October?

It was on a (rather tame)river-rapid type ride, but when the tube capsized and flipped, 4 people were killed. 2 people were drowned/crushed under the raft, and the other two managed to get mangled up in the machinery. The machinery happened to look like a medieval torture device, or a giant industrial meat-grinder…
here's a clip of the ride, before the tragedy happened;
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kva1jEyppe4

So very flawed because anyone could quite feasibly end up being thrown into it! The only safety these rides tend to have is a Velcro strap.

For some merciful reason, the two other raft occupants were kids, and they were thrown clear of danger. Or perhaps cruel irony that they saw their parents getting mangled.

I was so morbidly curious about the whole thing, that I wanted to know what exactly happened. There IS cctv footage of the accident, but I doubt it will ever be leaked. I want to see what it looks like. They were once human beings with feelings, thoughts and dreams.
And now they are/were just a bunch of organic matter which barley looks like the humans they once were.

Anyway the first paramedic on the scene said (rather coldly imo) that the four people had 'sustained injuries incompatible with living'. The only press pictures released was shot from a helicopter; park staff/emergency scenes frantically covering parts of the drained ride with blankets to cover up various blood/scattered body parts.

Imagine witnessing something like that.

No. 193384

>>193303
Motorsports has always dangerous business, even if for the last 50 years they've been working to make it safer.

Though, I'd say it's a successful effort of reducing deaths from once a month affair to once a decade affair.

No. 193434

>>193384
I like how they all know they're going to die eventually on the track. Some of these people especially deep cave divers think they're fucking invincible lol

No. 193480

>>94428
>>94436
I got trapped underwater once and blacked out. Nearly drowning was an awful experience and I'm still surprised that so many people had calmer experiences. There was never a point where I felt like I wanted to drift off peacefully, it was honestly just fear and pain for me. I wonder if your personality and whether it's salt or freshwater makes a difference. Maybe I'm just a wimp though.

sage for blogpost

No. 193481

>>193434
I kind of have more respect for the people that accept death is a possibility when they're doing wild shit. Somehow it makes more sense than the ones who think nothing bad will happen. The ones that think they're risking nothing are just stupid, not brave. The true adrenaline junkies tend to be the ones that know they might die and fully accept it's their fault and their choice.

No. 193511

>>94428
I almost drowned once too. They were pulling the covers at night and I had a brainfart, so by the time I realized what was going on the covers were already over me.

I managed to swim all the way to the end though, and to this day have told no one else about it.

No. 193569

File: 1496598489456.jpg (162.59 KB, 500x735, 08aee6276db142f4b8ac98fb8ee0ed…)

>>193303
>>193384
A lot of people think the efforts to make F1 safer ended up making the sport less exciting.

Awesome movie sort-of-related.

No. 193664

>>193569
It's not the same without people getting catapulted out of their cars every weekend, or without the ear shattering engines.



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