• celeste
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    536 months ago

    It’s amazing she lived and amazing she was found!

    • @[email protected]
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      36 months ago

      It’s chilling to think how much of a needle in a haystack you’d be if you were lost at sea or in an ocean. I’m guessing there is technically to help but it’s still scary as fuck.

      • @[email protected]
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        426 months ago

        37 hours in among the waves and half of that under the sun while the other half is in darkness, probably awake all that time?

        She must be both physically and mentally scarred for life.

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          66 months ago

          I was thinking about how many hours it might take me to cry. And then I thought I’d prolly cry a few times. Also I have pretty severe thalassophobia so maybe I’d have a panic attack. Depends on if I could see shore or not.

          But also this would never happen to me.

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        216 months ago

        Article said she was still exhausted. 37 hours in the water dealing with 6.5ft tall waves… with only a swimming ring.

      • @robdor
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        36 months ago

        She was swimming the whole time in circles!? She must be ripped

  • @[email protected]
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    356 months ago

    I leave the ocean alone, and the ocean leaves me alone. So far, it’s been a fruitful arrangement.

    • @[email protected]
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      126 months ago

      Fool, the ocean is encroaching on the land as we speak. We must strike before it takes too much!

    • @[email protected]
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      56 months ago

      I have this exact same pact, but in Australia, so it is between me and the snake population.

  • @[email protected]
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    316 months ago

    Good god what an amazing rescue. Kudos to the teams that helped save her. I can’t imagine being out at sea for that long. I’d have lost hope. That woman probably has a new lease on life.

      • qaz
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        66 months ago

        According to Alvarenga, Córdoba lost all hope around four months into the voyage after becoming sick from the raw food, and eventually died from starvation by refusing to eat. Alvarenga has said that he contemplated suicide for four days after Córdoba died, but his Christian faith prevented him from doing so. He related that Córdoba made him promise not to eat his corpse after he died, so he kept it on the boat. He sometimes spoke to the corpse and after six days, fearing he was going insane, he threw it overboard.

        I’m pretty sure I would’ve gone insane

  • @[email protected]
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    6 months ago

    I was never allowed any floating device at the beach as a child. Because of the high risk of floating away. I’m so happy she surrived though.

      • @[email protected]
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        56 months ago

        If float away you likely will drown. Your floater will slowly loose air, or you’ll loose it, or the waves will be too high and engulf you in the wrong moments, or you loose consciousness and breathe water. My contention is you’re less likely to drown without floating devices as you’ll consciously try to stay in the shallow parts of the beach. Especially if you’re someone who couldn’t swim. I believe this is why we only ever took the floaties to the pool.

      • @[email protected]
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        16 months ago

        Yes and no. If you’re found absolutely. If you’re not it’s a slow death of dehydration.

    • rowdy
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      5 months ago

      I cannot speak for all parts of the world, but from the beaches I know, Florida, this is never the advice they give - I’d bet this is dead wrong. A riptide current does not care if you are in the shallow or not. Having a floatation device not only helps you stay afloat, it helps you get noticed. Always bring a floaty.

      “It may deflate” - I can’t swim for an hour, but I’d bet any shitty floaty will stay afloat for an hour.

  • I'm back on my BS 🤪
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    26 months ago

    How did it take that long for the rescue crew to get out to look for her? What was her friend doing for all that time before reporting her? I’m so confused. 😵‍💫