A Experienced women’s pedestrians cross the Pacific Coast Trail (PCT) For about 20 days found himself in dangerous and volatile situations when climbing in the mountains along the PCT over the weekend after sneaking into one of the steep cliffs.
Whether fate, fate, or Divine intervention, the woman managed to secure herself to the cliff and contacted 911 through a special “Garmin-Type” emergency communication device, while holding a dear life for more than an hour before the rescue reached her.

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Hair and Nail Generating Videos that bite from the unforgettable mission of a pedestrian
In what can only be described as a hair generation, nail rescue that makes you breathe to be safe to breathe, a rescue specialist from the Sheriff Riverside department, rescue 9 divisions, arriving through a helicopter on marriage to find unpredictable pedestrians.
“When I first saw it in our first pass, it seemed like he was surviving his life on the side of the mountain,” Cory Allen, a rescue specialist for the Sheriff County Riverside department, told the Sheriff’s department, told Riverside County, to the Gma. “We can definitely see Silhouetted in that steep corner. He just hangs.”
With heavy packs tied to his back, both arms on his head grasped to a rough cliff surface with an emergency device on one hand, his left leg bent into a corner safety position, his right foot straightened, drying the danger on the ‘small’ rock shelf while shaking violently, the woman
Holding his breath as a rescue expert, Jason Beeman approached him to secure him and took him safe.
“Rescue experts determine the safest option is to embrace it and climb to the top,” Instagram post said. “He cannot take the risk of asking him to raise his hand, that he clearly dies to hold a cliff with.”
The amazing video recording of the overall rescue has become a virus on social media platforms. Adrenaline and intensity alone that both pedestrians, rescue teams, and rescuers feel from the beginning to the end keep one on the edge of their chair, hoping to end happily, and that.

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Lucky pedestrians to live thanks to emergency devices and rescue teams
Credit deserves to go to women’s pedestrians as they are very prepared for an emergency that can end with a tragic for her. If it wasn’t for him to have a Garmin -type emergency communication device when he sneaked into the cliff, and could send a warning to 911, the story would end very different.
Thanks to Rescue 9 and amazing rescue expert, Beeman, who was able to place a ‘bear embrace’ around the women’s pedestrian and ordered a helicopter to lower it to a safe area on the mountain before preparing to remove it for medical treatment, the woman’s pedestrian was grateful.
Despite some of the wounds and bruises in her right leg that she experienced during rescue, the woman was fortunate to live.
“This is our job, and we love to do what we do, we’re all excited,” Beeman said. “I really guarantee him that you are not one of the first seasons to get PCT. You will never be the last.”
“We practice for this all the time, you know, we do a bunch of rescue, we remain calm, cool, and gathered, we all wear our Garmin watches, monitor our heart rate as we are physically active, and we always want to go back and see where we are,” he said. “I crawl into the heart rate threshold zone, so it must be exhausting.”
The
(PCT) is a popular and heavy increase that stretches 2,650 miles between Mexico and Canada, cutting through Southern California. In some areas of the PCT, the height can reach 9,030 feet. Prepare well before your climbing ceremony on the PCT is the key to those who are quite brave to take it, just like this woman’s pedestrian.