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
 
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And her actions inflicted that kind of horrid suffering on the animal she had a duty of care to.
Well we talking about her - not the dog. And most dogs I wager would be intelligent enough to approach the water but a Tzu is a retarded dog literally.

Remember, the dog did it to itself. The Dog would be a LOLCOW if it wasn't now, sadly, a "hotdog".

I give her near zero chance of survival. If there is any mercy in this world, let her pass away before she wakes up to look like something Hannibal wouldn't eat.

And to those suggesting we put a fence around every danger at YellowStone, we we might as well just seal off all of Yellowstone and call it a park and leave it alone. If we fenced off every area of danger, it would look like a 100 mile wide fencing store.
 
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.
Yellowstone.png

There were nearly 800 miles separating this woman from that pit; a fence wasn't making a difference for her or her ratdog squeezing through it and causing the same incident.
 
Really sad, but also very irresponsible and easily prevented. The dog's leash needs to be secure before leaving the vehicle. NEVER let your dog wander ANYWHERE without a leash unless it's your yard (fenced in or away from roads) or a dog park when you know it's safe (no strange or aggressive dogs around.) This is especially important for small dogs.
 
People climb over solid walls and get injured or killed nonetheless.
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.
 
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.
This is true, but now you'll have people propping up their kids on the fence because it'd either be permanently opaque with steam or not transparent from the start.
 
View attachment 2604147
I've walked on that bridge. It was winter though. That part of the park is so trippy. They warn you not to step off the bridge because the grounds only an inch thick and there's lava and boiling steam below.

There's also a place there where you can swim in a place where two rivers join, one that's heated by lava to near boiling and the other comes from a glacier and the point where they meet's like a hotspring. That shit was fucking amazing.
Well, at least you’ve given me something to add to my bucket list.

Sounds like it may be on the very end of this woman’s bucket list, though.
 
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.
FFS.

There are a million dangerous spots in Yellowstone. you'd need 20,000 miles of fencing and who the fuck wants to go visit a bunch of fences? Because that is all you'd see.

"Oh sorry about the 6 foot fences, we need them for idiot and dogs. But here you can use this ladder and take a picture if you like."

Let's not lose freedoms because of one stupid dog and one stupid bitch. The other hundreds of thousands of visitors seem to get it.
 
Also, I do crowd control/parking enforcement, the number of people I've seen hop over fences marked "DANGER', drive around ones marked "ROAD CLOSED", even if it takes three tries to line up the car for a clean pass without knocking it down, or argue there is no sign, when parked RIGHT IN FRONT OF A SIGN that says "No Parking" will make you realize how ineffective any barrier ultimately is from keeping an idiot from killing themselves.....
 
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.
 
She must have had one hell of a connection to those 1-year-old puppies.
I'm guessing the dog was making sounds that would claw at your soul. It would be very difficult to stand by and do nothing if something you loved was slowly boiling to death. Sad and stupid all around.
 
Looks can be deceiving. I think part of the reason you get dumbfucks leaping into the far lesser known (and visually 'bland/normal') thermal pools like Maiden's Grave Hot Spring is there's a part of the brain that assumes blue = cooler temperatures and even though you can see the steam visibly rising up from the pool's surface it just doesn't register in that split second of panic when your tiny Shih Tzu decides to take a dip that the hotter the water, the cooler the colors.

Here's a picture of Maiden's Grave Hot Spring on an average, sunny day:

DydrXKk6kZppiefIlJdS0KBwQM5MJHWTScCxboWf9iq_hPrdLomk3ZMe2PZRklblv_waLcNwtvVxVt9KSwqxCQ8_JHajNUgvyuKF-iCn1dx93RI0YCyZKfxPI03JR7ycKZXa1-g8NLEkvOHig64m85Z7


It doesn't actually look all that scary, especially next to a normal body of water like Firehole River. And because the lizard part of our brain generally assumes blue = cool, any idiot who sees the steam rising off the surface and hasn't read the pamphlet would probably assume it's not all that hot. Maybe, like, jacuzzi-level hot. It kind of looks like one of those natural hot springs people wade around in, right? A dog certainly wouldn't find anything wrong with it.

The issue (and 'gotcha' moment) with Yellowstone's thermophilic bacterial mats (aka the reason why those landmark hot springs like the Grand Prismatic Spring are so damn pretty) is that it flips our understanding of the color scale on its head. The warmer the color, the cooler the temperature, and vice-versa.

In the case of Maiden's Grave Hot Spring, however, the reason why it's blue isn't because its the color of the bacterial mats - the bacteria are not actually blue (the hottest pools with existing bacterial mats not downstream being green in color). The hottest springs are completely sterile, inhospitable to any and all forms of life. Hot springs like Maiden's Grave (~200 F if I remember correctly) are so blisteringly hot (above boiling temperature, superheated, even) that even the usual extremophiles cannot bear to live in them.

As for the incident itself, I do genuinely hope that the woman succumbs to her injuries and goes peacefully. Hearing that she suffered burns "from her shoulders to feet" and was still pulled out of the spring by her father makes me wish she had just went unconscious from the shock and dissolved in there.

I cannot imagine the smell (it would smell, right?)
 
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