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Re: Road family went down was closed by gate.
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Re: Road family went down was closed by gate.
[quote=h2co-pilot]Gawd! Dicks/dog dicks/flea dicks/parasitic dicks= all of you- DICKS!!:twak:
I take it she likes teh DICK!:dancingbanana: |
Re: Road family went down was closed by gate.
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I will. |
Re: Road family went down was closed by gate.
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Re: Road family went down was closed by gate.
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Re: Road family went down was closed by gate.
They announced today on CNN that Mr. Kim had actually hiked 16.5 miles, not the 10 originally first thought. :crying: No matter what anyone thinks, or who would have done it another way .. this man went out looking for aid for his family and died in the process. We don't need to dissect it .. what happened happened. I'm sure it's not what he was hoping for, for himself. :crying:
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They've announced he was less than a mile from the car when he wasn't, they announced that he was alive just hours before he was found, he wasn't. THEY have announced all sorts of stupid crap about this that has been factless. For all we really know, he walked 2 miles and fell down a crevasse. |
Re: Road family went down was closed by gate.
http://www.cnn.com/2006/US/12/11/gri...gon/index.html
MERLIN, Oregon (CNN) -- We came to Oregon to retrace the path James Kim and his family took the day they got stranded in the Rogue River wilderness. When we finally reached the spot where the Kim's car stopped after a long, winding journey, our traveling companions -- Sgt. Joel Heller, Josephine County Sheriff's office, and John James, owner of the Black Bar Lodge -- both had the same exact thought: Why did the Kims continue down such a desolate path when they so clearly did not know where they were going? Though it is heart wrenching to question the decisions made by a man who died trying to save his family, it is hard not to wonder. Three times, we passed large yellow signs warning that snow may completely block the roadway. Eventually, we came to a fork in the road where a tiny sign -- almost invisible unless you actually stop the car and focus on it -- pointed the way to the Oregon Coast. The sign pointed left. The Kims drove right. This was obviously the wrong direction. It was one lane, no guardrail, no markings, no "winding road ahead" signs, no speed limit signs, no nothing. During our daylight journey, the road was so hazardous, so covered with snow and ice that a CNN satellite truck operator refused to continue, fearing the truck could go over the side. The pavement began to break up, then turn to gravel, and finally to dirt. This was an old logging road used only in summer by lodge owners hauling supplies. In winter, it was not generally in use. In fact, beginning November 1 a gate usually blocked the road. Somebody must have broken the lock and left the gate open. Had it been shut and locked, the Kims could not have gone down the road at all. But they did. Twenty miles down that desolate road, James and Kati Kim and their two young daughters found themselves stranded in the snowy wilderness. By the time we came to the spot they stopped, our four-wheel-drive vehicle was being battered on both sides by overhanging branches and bushes. This is where the Kims stayed for nine days, and the spot from which James Kim set off on foot on a journey into the Oregon wilderness that resulted in his death. |
Re: Road family went down was closed by gate.
Quoting the CNN story from above .. "
When we finally reached the spot where the Kim's car stopped after a long, winding journey, our traveling companions -- Sgt. Joel Heller, Josephine County Sheriff's office, and John James, owner of the Black Bar Lodge -- both had the same exact thought: Why did the Kims continue down such a desolate path when they so clearly did not know where they were going? Though it is heart wrenching to question the decisions made by a man who died trying to save his family, it is hard not to wonder. Three times, we passed large yellow signs warning that snow may completely block the roadway. " Yes, you have to wonder .. and dissect, WHY they chose to take a desolate path, especially with a very young child and a baby? You DO have to wonder, WHAT were they thinking? They HAD to know it couldn't have been a direct path to anywheres but a disaster. You're right, Paragon and Mrs.ssippi, these are the ways we learn .. ESPECIALLY of things NOT to do. I feel sorry for the family, but, you would think that between two grown adults, one of them would have had the sense to say, "WAIT!!!! What are we doing?!" Too late now. But, the rest of us know (or have known) what NOT to do. |
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If he walked 16 miles, why was he only a few miles from the car? |
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WTF, there is wikipedia stuff for this?
Apparently they didn't know where the car was because some dude couldn't read a map. He walked 10 miles down the road and then went into the canyon and backtracked 5 miles:confused: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/James_K...te_controversy |
Re: Road family went down was closed by gate.
This could have been averted if they'd owned a Hummer.
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I guess the moral of this story is "Sometimes it is better to stay the fvck off the road less traveled" or "Man to stubborn to ask for directions becomes popsicle in the snow" or "Man with limp walks in circles" or "Don't wait 9 damn days before looking for help". Is it to early for jokes??
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I have a question. This isn't a knock, legit question.
A car like a Saab would average about 2 gallons a day at idle, idling constantly. It would have at least a 12 gallon tank or so. I would assume they idled the car much more than we would be led to believe if they ran the car out of fuel, completely. Why drain the fuel completely? Granted they would have burned some fuel driving to the point where they stopped, but undoubtedly they had a full tank to start with since they were trekking out into the unknown and had just came from an Interstate exit. |
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Bad assumption. If they were stupid enought to turn off on that road, they were certainly stupid enough to leave without a full tank. Don't ya think? |
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I certainly hope there's a very good reason for that, or else my sympathy will be gone.:confused: |
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