Settings

Theme

In under 24 hours, two people will die unless we get drones out to Joshua Tree

twitter.com

25 points by emblem21 9 years ago · 16 comments

Reader

emblem21OP 9 years ago

2 hours after posting this, I now have a fleet of 20+ drone operators with gear at the ready. Fixed wing, multicopters, and hopefully a few FLIR cameras in the mix.

Waiting for Justin Samenfeld to get back to me in the morning. He's burning $3k an hour on helicopters. :/

emblem21OP 9 years ago

UPDATE: The missing couple has been found alive near the Mexican border! Thank you for all of the help and thank you to the drone pilots who volunteered.

  • msbot 9 years ago

    Way to bring attention to this. Great news!

    • qohen 9 years ago

      Excellent news!

      Some details, from a Facebook post [0] by a friend of theirs:

      Hi Everyone, here's the official update from the parents to put everyone at ease.

      From the parents that spoke with both Masha and Aaron:

      They were at the sand dunes at Osborne Lookout, left their car there on Sunday (their last wifi signal) and went on a day hike to take pictures. They got lost while out on their hike and could see a red light flashing in the distance so they started walking direction. Spent 5 days walking in the desert without food and little water. In order conserve their water they also drank their own urine. They saw helicopters flying, and actually were able to light a fire to get attention but no one was able to see them.

      They walked all the way to the cell tower until they ran into some maintenance workers at the tower who then contacted the Border Patrol. The Border Patrol contacted family and the investigator with LAPD and took them back to their car at Osborne Lookout.

      The Border Patrol guided them back out of the park and they are now headed to meet up with family, friends and the rescue team to celebrate.

      Just a Note: That tip from Devin Adkins was correct!

      Devin Adkins i think i might have spoke to her on sunday giving direction to osborn over look where she could take some pics' of the dunes i also posted it up on the Glamis beach store facebook page

      [0] https://www.facebook.com/icanseeyourprivacy/posts/1015418988...

x1798DE 9 years ago

Where did 24 hours come from? This is insanely sensationalized.

  • emblem21OP 9 years ago

    They've been missing since Monday. Dehydration and exposure, combined with poor wilderness survival skills, should be taking their toll right about now. Time is, unfortunately, running out.

  • legostormtroopr 9 years ago

    People can survive for about 3-5 days without water. If they weren't travelling with water they are probably close to the upper bound of this. Its entirely credible.

    • Pinckney 9 years ago

      True. But their car seemingly has not been located; that suggests they didn't stop at a well frequented trailhead.

      One possible scenario is that they suffered a mechanical breakdown in a remote road or wash, similar to the Death Valley Germans. If they had, say, a 5 gal jug of water in their car (as one should, if headed into the desert), they could survive much longer if they remained with the car, did not eat, and did not exert themselves.

      Priority obviously needs to be locating the car, which aerial searches are pretty good for.

ChoGGi 9 years ago

At the risk of sounding callous this is why I carry a PLB with me (and you should too) when I go hiking.

Edit: just wanted to also mention you can rent PLBs (personal locator beacon).

  • qohen 9 years ago

    I was looking into PLBs earlier this evening, for obvious reasons and, since the topic was mentioned here, and since this might be helpful to people, I'll describe something notable I found.

    On a site called outdoorgearlab.com, which has reviews of a number of units, one stood out in particular for being simple, well-reviewed (there and elsewhere) and relatively inexpensive.

    The ACR ResQlink 406 Personal Locator Beacon, reviewed here [0], is around $250-$300, has a 5-year battery and doesn't require any subscription/data-plan, like some units that can send msgs do -- it just reliably sends S.O.S. messages to the relevant satellites in orbit (and it will send such messages at 5 watts, which is around 2.5 - 12x the power used by some other units -- helpful when sending data to a satellite).

    There's a ResQlink+ model now too -- it's buoyant (the ResQlink is not) so it floats (but doesn't come w/a case, from what I read and is about 20 grams heavier).

    [0] http://www.outdoorgearlab.com/Personal-Locator-Beacon-Review...

    • ChoGGi 9 years ago

      I suppose I should've checked my comments earlier:

      I didn't bother getting one with a plan (seemed like a waste), I just have it for emergencies.

      If you do buy one then make sure to check the battery expiration date, also good to check it when you buy a "new" battery. Last time I bought a new battery it was over a year old (sent it back).

      For anyone buying a PLB, make sure it broadcasts at 406 MHz and 121.5 MHz (long range / short range)

    • qohen 9 years ago

      BTW, the manufacturer is running a promotion [0] that, if you buy the ResQlink or ResQlink+ (or Aqualink), you can get a $50 rebate. (Or get a ResQlink+ for free if you buy a $700-ish GlobalFix iPro). Check the promotion [0] and rebate-form [1] for details.

      [0] https://www.acrartex.com/info/2016-usa-promotions/

      [1] https://www.acrartex.com/media/1377019/epirb-us-rebate-form-...

Keyboard Shortcuts

j
Next item
k
Previous item
o / Enter
Open selected item
?
Show this help
Esc
Close modal / clear selection