Woman, 20, suffers horrific burns trying to save dog from 190°F thermal spring in Yellowstone National Park - Laiha Slayton suffered third-degree burns on '90 percent of her body' while trying to save her Shih Tzu after he fell into a hot spring on Tuesday

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A 20-year-old woman has suffered horrific burns to 90 percent of her body after jumping into a hot spring at Yellowstone National Park to try to rescue her dog.

Laiha Slayton and her father, Woodraw, were visiting the park on Tuesday and had parked 20-30 yards away from Maiden’s Grave Spring, next to the Firehole River, her sister Kamilla told DailyMail.com.

The family's two Shih Tzus, Rusty and Chevy, were wandering around nearby while Laiha was looking for their leashes in the car.

Rusty suddenly got his foot burned by a small leak from the geyser that flows into the river. The dog then panicked and fell in to the spring while Woodrow was trying to gain control of Chevy.

Laiha jumped in to the thermal spring - which can reach temperatures of 190-degree Fahrenheit - in a bid to rescue her one-year-old puppy, and then had to be rescued herself by her father.

Laiha, from Tacoma, Washington, suffered third-degree burns to her body from her shoulders to her feet.

Her father drove her to West Yellowstone, Montana, to seek help and she was flown by helicopter to the burn unit at Eastern Idaho Regional Medical Center in Idaho Falls, park officials said in a statement Tuesday.

Woodrow suffered a burn to his foot and also required treatment.

The puppy, Rusty, was taken to a veterinarian but it did not survive its wounds.

Laiha Slayton, 20, is in a medically-induced coma for the next two weeks as she recovers from her third-degree burns after rescuing her dog from a hot spring in Yellowstone, Wyoming on Tuesday, her family say

Laiha Slayton, 20, is in a medically-induced coma for the next two weeks as she recovers from her third-degree burns after rescuing her dog from a hot spring in Yellowstone, Wyoming on Tuesday, her family say

Laiha suffered third-degree thermal burns on about '90 percent of her body' while she was trying to save her Shih Tzu, Rusty, who jumped into a hot spring at Yellowstone National Park

Laiha suffered third-degree thermal burns on about '90 percent of her body' while she was trying to save her Shih Tzu, Rusty, who jumped into a hot spring at Yellowstone National Park

Rusty, the Shih Tzu puppy, was taken to a veterinarian but did not survive from its wounds

Rusty, the Shih Tzu puppy, was taken to a veterinarian but did not survive from its wounds

Maiden's Grave Hot Spring flowing into the Firehole River in Yellowstone National Park, where Laiha and her dog reportedly fell into and suffered burns

Maiden's Grave Hot Spring flowing into the Firehole River in Yellowstone National Park, where Laiha and her dog reportedly fell into and suffered burns

Laiha, a dental assistant and former nursing home aid, is currently in a medically-induced coma for the next two weeks, according to a GoFundMe page that was organized by her sister to pay for medical bills.

Laiha's palms are also 'completely gone,' according to Kamilla, who says that her sister will have to require further surgery, meaning that she will be in the hospital for a 'few months'.

As of Wednesday afternoon, the Slayton's GoFundMe page had raised $12,377 out of a $45,000 goal to pay for expenses including medical costs and cremation services for the puppy.

Yellowstone National Park officials posted about the incident on their Facebook page, and warned visitors to stay away from the hot springs.

Their post read: 'The ground in hydrothermal areas is fragile and thin, and there is scalding water just below the surface. Everyone must remain on boardwalks and trails and exercise extreme caution around thermal features.

'While in the park, protect your pets by physically controlling them at all times. Pets must be in a car, crate or on a leash no more than six feet long. They are not allowed on boardwalks, hiking trails, in the backcountry, or in thermal areas.'

The incident happened at Maiden's Grave Spring, north of the famous Old Faithful Geyser in Yellowstone Park, Wyoming

The incident happened at Maiden's Grave Spring, north of the famous Old Faithful Geyser in Yellowstone Park, Wyoming

Laiha (pictured) was taken to hospital in Idaho by helicopter after her father drove her to West Yellowstone, Montana, to seek help

Laiha (pictured) was taken to hospital in Idaho by helicopter after her father drove her to West Yellowstone, Montana, to seek help

Laiha seen with her two Shih Tzus that were involved in the incident: Chevy and Rusty

Laiha seen with her two Shih Tzus that were involved in the incident: Chevy and Rusty

Laiha is the second woman who burned herself in a Yellowstone thermal feature in recent weeks.

On September 16, a 19-year-old woman—a concessions employee at the park—from Rhode Island suffered second and third-degree burns to 5 percent of her body after falling into thermal water near the world famous Old Faithful geyser.

Due to medical privacy laws, it is unknown exactly how many visitors have been injured from ignoring the cautionary signs.

In October 2020, a three-year-old suffered second-degree thermal burns to their lower body after running from a designated trail and slipping and falling into a small thermal feature.

In May of the same year, a visitor who entered the park illegally while it was closed due to the Covid pandemic also ended up falling into a thermal feature while backing up to take a photo at Old Faithful.

Since the park's establishment in 1872, there have been around 20 reported deaths due to some sort of interaction with park thermal areas.

Slayton is the second person who has suffered severe burns in a Yellowstone (pictured) thermal feature in recent weeks

Slayton is the second person who has suffered severe burns in a Yellowstone (pictured) thermal feature in recent weeks

Around 20 people have died due to some sort of interaction with park thermal areas since the park's establishment in 1872, according to the USG

Around 20 people have died due to some sort of interaction with park thermal areas since the park's establishment in 1872, according to the USG

That number is significantly higher than the eight deaths over the same period due to encounters with grizzly bears, the United States Geological Survey reports.

The most recent fatality at the park came in August 2000, when one person died and two others suffered severe burns after falling from a hot spring in the Lower Geyser Basin.

Yellowstone has more than 10,000 thermal features, which can be as hot as 280 degrees Fahrenheit (138 Celsius).

The national park was briefly closed in May 2020 due to COVID reasons, but National Park Services reported that it has hosted 483,159 recreation visits in May 2021.

It's an 11 percent increase compared to May 2019 (434,385 recreation visits) and the park’s most visited May on record.

48836089-10064927-image-a-6_1633546717914.jpg


So far, there have been more visitors coming to Yellowstone in 2021 than over each of the last three years. National Park Services reported that Yellowstone has hosted 483,159 recreation visits in May 2021 — an 11 percent increase compared to May 2019 (434,385 recreation visits) and the park’s most visited May on record

So far, there have been more visitors coming to Yellowstone in 2021 than over each of the last three years. National Park Services reported that Yellowstone has hosted 483,159 recreation visits in May 2021 — an 11 percent increase compared to May 2019 (434,385 recreation visits) and the park’s most visited May on record
 
Ostatnio edytowane:
It doesn't actually look all that scary, especially next to a normal body of water like Firehole River.
Hmm, a hole feeding into Firehole River in one of the most geothermally active places in the nation. It doesn't take a genius to infer the water there is going to be hot, especially when the feature has "grave" right in the fucking name. The dog is blameless because it can't know that. A failure of its owner lead to a tragic death for it. A full grown adult should know damn well what they're getting into when their flesh hits the water. She might still have a pulse but she's dead. Treating burns like that is a losing battle.
 
From a geological perspective, there is no ‘safe’ place in Yellowstone. It’s a goddamn dormant super volcano. The mountains you pass through to get there are the caldera walls, layered with rhyolite deposits hundreds of feet thick from its last eruption. Rhyolite, for the uninitiated, is thick fudge compared to the Hershey’s syrup that pours out of Kilauea. The eruption that blew half of Mt. St. Helens to smithereens? That was a rhyolitic eruption. Even better, Yellowstone’s alarm should be going off in the (geologically) near future.

There is no point to fencing off the Boiling Mud Pots or the hot springs walks. The park could blow tomorrow, or next week, or in 3021.

Also the delightfully spergtastic idea of getting water samples from the hot springs is great but they’d never let you. As a hydrothermal system, it’s moving precious metals and they’ll never want to reveal just how rich someone could get trying to process the mud for gold/silver/PGEs.
I suppose that's the geolo-gist of it
 
I'm going to be optimistic here and say that I hope that with at least 50% of her burns being 2nd degree that she might have a chance to recover enough to lead a semi-normal life. She'll be disabled, but in theory if the worst of it was to her lower body she can get by being wheelchair bound. It was dumb to bring the dog there. It was dumb to dive in after it. I can somewhat understand the later being a thoughtless reaction to a distressed pet however. If she lives I hope she comes out of this wiser and more thankful of the life she's been given.
 
I find that no matter where I go coffee is always cold, I blame it on old Americans suing companies for their own stupidity.
That woman had her whole lap burned by coffee that was hotter than industry standards. Then McDonald's deadass waged a propaganda campaign just to smear her for trying to get back the money she had to use to repair her lower body.
 
atleast she didnt do what the 23yr old guy did in 2016 where he and his sister went to Yellowstone and he thought "hey im gonna dip a hot second in the pool and get out. record it for me, it'd be sweet on the internet"

and he died, he went in and never got out due to the high temperature and apparently he went into the highly acidic pool aswell... they werent able to recover his corpse since it literally dissolved.
I think he actually tripped and fell into a pool while trying to "test the temperature" of pools to find a place to swim in. Idk why the hell he was trying to do that, as I've never seen Yellowstone advertised as a place with hot springs you can swim in.
I'm going to be optimistic here and say that I hope that with at least 50% of her burns being 2nd degree that she might have a chance to recover enough to lead a semi-normal life. She'll be disabled, but in theory if the worst of it was to her lower body she can get by being wheelchair bound. It was dumb to bring the dog there. It was dumb to dive in after it. I can somewhat understand the later being a thoughtless reaction to a distressed pet however. If she lives I hope she comes out of this wiser and more thankful of the life she's been given.
I don't think she'll be wheelchair bound if she survives. The burns are not gonna reach her spinal cord. What will likely happen is she'll lose several or all of her fingers and toes, and have stiff, painful scarring on many areas of her body along with limited sensation/ability to sweat, and her movement will be impaired by the scarring which will likely be helped by a ton of surgeries over the years. Not sure what level of sexual function she will have left if the water boiled her crotch. Her self esteem will be ruined because of the massive scarring all over her body, and dating will be difficult for her.
 
I think he actually tripped and fell into a pool while trying to "test the temperature" of pools to find a place to swim in. Idk why the hell he was trying to do that, as I've never seen Yellowstone advertised as a place with hot springs you can swim in.

I don't think she'll be wheelchair bound if she survives. The burns are not gonna reach her spinal cord. What will likely happen is she'll lose several or all of her fingers and toes, and have stiff, painful scarring on many areas of her body along with limited sensation/ability to sweat, and her movement will be impaired by the scarring which will likely be helped by a ton of surgeries over the years. Not sure what level of sexual function she will have left if the water boiled her crotch. Her self esteem will be ruined because of the massive scarring all over her body, and dating will be difficult for her.

Source
but theres some sources that said he didnt fell in but jumped in since as its stated in the article and other articles
they plan to "hot pot"
 
Having trouble deciding who is dumber, the dumb dog who panicked from getting burned and fell entirely into the boiling water or the owner who nearly killed herself trying to rescue said dumb dog.
 
That woman had her whole lap burned by coffee that was hotter than industry standards. Then McDonald's deadass waged a propaganda campaign just to smear her for trying to get back the money she had to use to repair her lower body.
Fun fact, the coffee in that case was approximately as hot as this hot spring, being 88 degrees Celsius compared to this spring's 93.
 
Its literally a boiling cauldron of water, we shouldn't have to do a lot of things to prevent idiots from harming themselves or others, but I think putting a barrier around a giant boiling cauldron of water to prevent some random tards from burning themselves alive isn't outlandish or desecrating nature.
Point is it is supposed to be National Park, patch of WILDERNESS not changed by humans.
So yeah leťs put fence all around , but there are dangerous animals let's do something about them, dangerous terrain we will change it....
Oops it is no longer wilderness.
 
It's beyond me why anyone would even consider taking a dog to somewhere like that in the first place.
Because these type of women are the kind who think their dogs are their actual children, so they can't let their babies alone or with someone, but they need to also be part of the fun... which is also retarded because you don't take children to a place like this either.

I don't know what's worse, tbh: this (taking your dog to some stupid trip) or having a dog and living your life normally and sending it to your parents whenever you want to travel around and have fun.
 
To all "You need rails!"

Fuck you. Stay in the city. there are countless signs and the entire process of going to the nature part is "OMG ITS DANGEROUS DONT". Its called natural selection and we need more of it.

This. we need to chlorinate the genepool something fierce... so many stupid people are surviving when they never would have just a few centuries ago.
 
Because these type of women are the kind who think their dogs are their actual children, so they can't let their babies alone or with someone, but they need to also be part of the fun... which is also retarded because you don't take children to a place like this either.

I don't know what's worse, tbh: this (taking your dog to some stupid trip) or having a dog and living your life normally and sending it to your parents whenever you want to travel around and have fun.
Stupid white girls with little dogs are a problem. They never grow up.
 
I mean in a way you could kinda understand what she did
Emotions was high and she was concerned for her pet and tried to save it.

atleast she didnt do what the 23yr old guy did in 2016 where he and his sister went to Yellowstone and he thought "hey im gonna dip a hot second in the pool and get out. record it for me, it'd be sweet on the internet"

and he died, he went in and never got out due to the high temperature and apparently he went into the highly acidic pool aswell... they werent able to recover his corpse since it literally dissolved.
3 degrees of stupid.

Searching for a ‘soak’ led to hot pool death​

Y’stone rangers censor video, description of man’s boiling death at Norris Geyser Basin.​

  • By Erika Dahlby
  • Nov 16, 2016
  • 0

Incident Report - Colin Scott fatality

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A pair of photographs from Yellowstone National Park’s report on the death of Colin Scott show the thermal feature Scott fell in while walking off the boardwalk with his sister in June at the Norris Geyser Basin.
YELLOWSTONE NATIONAL PARK / COURTESY PHOTOS


The young man who walked off the boardwalk in Norris Geyser Basin and died after falling into a hot spring was looking for a place to soak, Yellowstone Chief Ranger Pete Webster said Tuesday.
During a day trip to Yellowstone National Park on June 7, Colin Nathaniel Scott trekked off-trail in search of a soaking spring. About 225 yards from the walkway, near Pork Chop Geyser, the 23-year-old, a recent college graduate, leaned down to check the temperature of a hot spring, lost his footing and fell into the pool, an incident report said.
New information on his death emerged in the park’s final incident report, obtained Tuesday by the News&Guide through a Freedom of Information Act request.


Scott’s sister, Sable, who witnessed the accident, attempted to rescue her brother but failed. She immediately ran for help and notified park officials, who began a rescue operation. It was quickly discovered that Scott was dead and the rescue operation turned into a body recovery.
At first the only visible objects in the spring were his wallet and a floating flip flop, but as the evening set in Scott’s remains floated to the surface of the pool. However, recovery operations were suspended for the night due to rangers having to walk over extremely volatile thermal areas, multiple lightning storms moving through the area and quickly falling darkness.
A team returned to the scene at 8 a.m. on June 8, but no remains were visible. They attempted to recover any remains by using long catch poles, but after at least an hour of probing nothing could be found.
Yellowstone Park Scientist Ann Rodman told searchers that the extreme heat and the pool’s acidic nature probably caused Scott’s remains to dissolve.
The report noted that the feature would be checked about once a month to see if any remains could be found when water levels fluctuate.


The hot spring Scott fell into was approximately 6 feet long by 4 feet wide, located next to a wooded area. The color of the water was gray and murky, with visibility only 1 to 2 inches down. The average depth of the pool was 10 feet. During the investigation the pool’s water levels fluctuated by at least 8 to 10 inches. Gas bubbles were present in the pool and it appeared to be boiling, the report said.
At about 10 feet deep the temperature of the pool on June 8 was 212 degrees, though that was the top temperature the thermometer could read, so the pool could have been even hotter. Rodman recorded a pH level of 5 in the pool on June 17.
Sable Scott had been taking video clips of herself and her brother off the boardwalk before the accident. During the investigation, video was found on her cellphone that shows the accident and her efforts to rescue him.
The video was so disturbing that the first person to view it, park Ranger Chris Russell, told Sable Scott that she might not want to view it. The description of the video is entirely blacked out in the report and the video will not be released.
“I asked her if when I extract a copy from her phone, would she prefer me to delete it,” Russell said in the report. “Sable Scott told me in general, ‘I may never watch it, but I want to keep it.’”
Chief Ranger Webster hopes the tragedy will remind visitors that Yellowstone is a hazardous place.
“There are regulations in place for the public safety and to protect the resources, especially in thermal areas,” Webster said Tuesday of the report’s release. “Fragile crusts and dangerously hot water are commonplace.”
 
Ostatnio edytowane:
Apparently they rangers have heard us and are now arresting the stupid (charges too lenient imo)
We were warned against interacting with black and brown bears in California as children so I don't understand how people became so retarded as to approach a grizzly mother with cubs. The fucking Revenant was a hit movie and you can see it on cable all the time and if a film where the protagonist gets mauled by a mother bear for getting too close to her cub doesn't stick in your mind maybe we should just let the momma bears take out these genetic dead ends for the good of the human race.
 
Yeah but a dog isn't going to run through a solid fence. Plus if there was a fence in place it might give people cause to pause, look around, and maybe actually read the signs they have posted, because we both know damn well that a good percentage of people don't bother to read any of them.
So a few tards die. I'm not seeing the downside.
That woman had her whole lap burned by coffee that was hotter than industry standards. Then McDonald's deadass waged a propaganda campaign just to smear her for trying to get back the money she had to use to repair her lower body.
They'd settled dozens of similar cases, because they deliberately served coffee at their drive throughs knowing it caused X number of injuries but figured it evened out over the profits from X million cups of coffee because lots of people like it that hot so that it's still hot later on down the road when they get around to drinking it.

Also their lawyers were absolute cunts and insulted the jury with their dumb arguments.

If you've ever spilled coffee on yourself that was made in a normal way, it doesn't cause third degree burns or even any kind of burns.

Jumping into a lake of boiling water does, though.
 
Apparently they rangers have heard us and are now arresting the stupid (charges too lenient imo)
We were warned against interacting with black and brown bears in California as children so I don't understand how people became so retarded as to approach a grizzly mother with cubs. The fucking Revenant was a hit movie and you can see it on cable all the time and if a film where the protagonist gets mauled by a mother bear for getting too close to her cub doesn't stick in your mind maybe we should just let the momma bears take out these genetic dead ends for the good of the human race.
Grizzly Man is also currently on YouTube for free. And it does include the audio of the mauling.

That aside, the one time I came face to face with a bear it was a young black one, and through the glass of my front door. Neither one of us had any desire to get any closer than that to each other. Survival instincts are great to have.
 
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