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.

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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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I find that no matter where I go coffee is always cold, I blame it on old Americans suing companies for their own stupidity.
McDonald's still serves it hot. They've just made the containers a lot more foolproof since getting a lot of bad PR over it.
 
Every time I hear about someone or something dying because of this thermal spring, all I can think is "Darwin award".
Jumping in after the dog was probably an instinctual reaction, but if you can't keep the little bastard from running off, you shouldn't of brought it along to begin with.
 
If you've ever spilled coffee on yourself that was made in a normal way, it doesn't cause third degree burns or even any kind of burns.
What kind of "normal way" do you use to make coffee? Cold brew? I use boiling water... turns out that does cause third degree burns. Stay safe people.
 
What kind of "normal way" do you use to make coffee? Cold brew? I use boiling water... turns out that does cause third degree burns. Stay safe people.
I use an electric percolator and while I have been sleepy enough to accidentally pour some coffee onto my hand if I run my hand under cold water immediately afterward I'm fine. If I don't it hurts for a few hours but that's it.

It does not cause third degree burns. The skin doesn't blister and peel off. It does not require a trip to an ER or doctor's office. Corning and Presto would have had lawsuits up the ass since the 1950s if it had.
 
Where did you learn science? boiling point on Everest is 72.22C. Try harder.
At the peak of Mount Everest, being ~29,032 ft, and the atmospheric pressure being ~9.3 in Hg, I calculate the boiling point of pure water at ~68 °C.

Even at that, she = fucked.
Well, much, much less fucked than 90% 3rd degree. The very rough calculation in medicine for survival from burns is 100 - Age - %3rd Degree Burns - (%2nd Degree Burns ÷ 10) = % Chance of Survival. In her case, that is 25% or 1/4. Before her chances were -10%, so her survival was mere random chance or about 1/1,000,000. The wild card that can't be accounted for is how quickly care is rendered and how good it is.
 
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Grizzly Man is also currently on YouTube for free. And it does include the audio of the mauling.
That audio isn't real unfortunately, in the real audio his girlfriend is almost instantly silenced by the bear crushing here windpipe(at least thats what they think happened). The real audio will most likely never be released, but still that fake is pretty convincing, and does a great job at conveying the horror and agony of being eaten alive.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g9lCkFygaaQ

Seriously don't fuck with bears they will eat you if given the chance.
 
What kind of "normal way" do you use to make coffee? Cold brew? I use boiling water... turns out that does cause third degree burns. Stay safe people.
A coffee maker. Or a press, where I use near-boiling water. Obviously, I'm careful not to spill that on myself, and even that isn't going to cause much problem because I'm going to stop doing it immediately. Stella Liebeck, though, spilled it on her lap while in a vehicle and so it was her clothing that soaked up the boiling water and maintained contact with the skin long enough to cause severe burns.

The coffee maker produces coffee at around 150-160 degrees, whereas boiling water is, obviously, boiling.

Most coffee served at a drive through is about 150 degrees which does not cause much more than redness if you contact it. McD's chooses to serve it near-boiling, and at the time, in flimsy cups with lids that often came off and spilled the contents. By the time they got to this case, there had been 700 injuries already, including children.

Note that coffee at around 150-160 degrees, which is more normal, would take about 20 seconds to cause third degree burns in ordinary circumstances, and 20 seconds is plenty long enough that most people will nearly immediately react and do something to stop whatever is burning them.

To get it back to the Yellowstone thing a bit, the daredevil jackasses who try taking a dip in it probably assume it's in the 150 degree or so range where you could probably jump in and get back out before suffering too much harm, whereas it's actually in the "start screaming and dying nearly immediately" range.
 
I like dogs but kind of can't stand dog people because most don't see the need to control or discipline their animals.

I love dogs, have had them practically my whole life, and own three dogs currently, and I totally agree that many dog people are insufferable. It seems like the worst offenders are owners of little fluffy lap/purse dogs (mostly young women), owners of Pit Bulls and related breeds (especially Pibble Mommies and Thug Life types), and owners of Huskies and other sled dog breeds. Those are the types that in my experience tend to be the most obnoxious, ignorant, and most likely to let their untrained animals wander off-leash or take them to inappropriate locations like grocery stores, restaurants, or National Parks. As a dog owner who has always tried to be responsible with my animals, it fucking drives me bug-shit to see. Even though my dogs are friendly and socialized, I never let them off their leads outside my house or backyard. For one thing, I love my dogs too much to risk them getting hit by a car or bit by another dog. For another, I understand and respect that not everyone is comfortable around dogs, especially very large dogs like my Great Dane/Weimaraner mix (even though he's a big softy and absolute sweetheart), and I don't want my dogs running up to strangers uninvited and unwanted, potentially making someone extremely uncomfortable or possibly even triggering a panic attack. I wish more dog owners were at least half that responsible and considerate of others around them.

So it's perfectly safe for non-Americans than. That's good, I'd love to visit one day.

Eh, not so fast. When Mrs. Dude and I went there in 2007 we witnessed a bus-load of Asian tourists all crowding close to an adult Bison, gawking at it and trying to get their photos taken with it, mere feet away from it and separated from it by a five foot tall wood fence. There happened to be a ranger near by and I went to warn him about the potential tragedy in the making. The ranger went over to shoo the Asians away from the 2000lb animal, and no sooner had the last person in the group passed by the Bison, that's when the animal decided to hop right over the fence, landing right where that last person was standing mere seconds earlier.

Unfortunately people are getting stupider as time goes by, especially people who have spent their whole lives in urbanized areas and rarely if ever spend time out in the wild. They go on vacation with the kiddies to Disney World and are used to everything they see being safely controlled and strictly regulated, to the point where they take it for granted and subconsciously come to expect a safe and controlled environment everywhere they go. Case in point: my nephew had a girlfriend who accompanied my nephew, my sister-in-law, and the rest of their family on vacation to their cabin in Montana. The girlfriend had spent her whole life in American Mid-West cities like St. Louis and had never been in the woods or seen mountains in person. When she saw the Rockies for the first time she honestly and without irony ask my in-laws if the mountains had been man-made. And she wasn't a stupid girl, she was an A and B student. She had just spent her whole life in safe, controlled urban areas and came to expect that constructed order everywhere she went. And that kind of thought process has become all too common with people these days.
 
Wasn't the thing with McDonald's that their policy was to make their coffee hot enough to scorch the tastebuds so customers couldn't taste how bad it was?
It was probably more of a ploy to keep people from drinking it too quickly & asking for refills, since they only make money on cups sold.
 
Apparently they rangers have heard us and are now arresting the stupid (charges too lenient imo)
We were warned against interacting with black and brown bears in California as children so I don't understand how people became so retarded as to approach a grizzly mother with cubs. The fucking Revenant was a hit movie and you can see it on cable all the time and if a film where the protagonist gets mauled by a mother bear for getting too close to her cub doesn't stick in your mind maybe we should just let the momma bears take out these genetic dead ends for the good of the human race.

People are stupid. They think that since these animals are in a park with buildings and roads and restaurants and cars driving around all day, every day, that the animals in the park are tame and safe. They see a 2500lb Bison and figure it's basically a shaggy cow. They see a Brown Bear and think back to seeing the Country Bear Jamboree at Disney World. They don't understand that places like Yellowstone are still wilderness, despite the paved roads and rooms to rent at the lodges.

Fun fact: there is a hot spring/geyser right off the shore of Yellowstone Lake that back in the day fishermen would take the fish they just caught, still on the hook, and dunk the fish into the geyser to cook it. That's how hot some of these geysers and hot springs can get: you can fucking cook dinner in them. But fucking idiots will continue to just see them as nature's Jacuzzis.
 
I love dogs, have had them practically my whole life, and own three dogs currently, and I totally agree that many dog people are insufferable. It seems like the worst offenders are owners of little fluffy lap/purse dogs (mostly young women), owners of Pit Bulls and related breeds (especially Pibble Mommies and Thug Life types), and owners of Huskies and other sled dog breeds. Those are the types that in my experience tend to be the most obnoxious, ignorant, and most likely to let their untrained animals wander off-leash or take them to inappropriate locations like grocery stores, restaurants, or National Parks. As a dog owner who has always tried to be responsible with my animals, it fucking drives me bug-shit to see. Even though my dogs are friendly and socialized, I never let them off their leads outside my house or backyard. For one thing, I love my dogs too much to risk them getting hit by a car or bit by another dog. For another, I understand and respect that not everyone is comfortable around dogs, especially very large dogs like my Great Dane/Weimaraner mix (even though he's a big softy and absolute sweetheart), and I don't want my dogs running up to strangers uninvited and unwanted, potentially making someone extremely uncomfortable or possibly even triggering a panic attack. I wish more dog owners were at least half that responsible and considerate of others around them.



Eh, not so fast. When Mrs. Dude and I went there in 2007 we witnessed a bus-load of Asian tourists all crowding close to an adult Bison, gawking at it and trying to get their photos taken with it, mere feet away from it and separated from it by a five foot tall wood fence. There happened to be a ranger near by and I went to warn him about the potential tragedy in the making. The ranger went over to shoo the Asians away from the 2000lb animal, and no sooner had the last person in the group passed by the Bison, that's when the animal decided to hop right over the fence, landing right where that last person was standing mere seconds earlier.

Unfortunately people are getting stupider as time goes by, especially people who have spent their whole lives in urbanized areas and rarely if ever spend time out in the wild. They go on vacation with the kiddies to Disney World and are used to everything they see being safely controlled and strictly regulated, to the point where they take it for granted and subconsciously come to expect a safe and controlled environment everywhere they go. Case in point: my nephew had a girlfriend who accompanied my nephew, my sister-in-law, and the rest of their family on vacation to their cabin in Montana. The girlfriend had spent her whole life in American Mid-West cities like St. Louis and had never been in the woods or seen mountains in person. When she saw the Rockies for the first time she honestly and without irony ask my in-laws if the mountains had been man-made. And she wasn't a stupid girl, she was an A and B student. She had just spent her whole life in safe, controlled urban areas and came to expect that constructed order everywhere she went. And that kind of thought process has become all too common with people these days.
Huh, sounds like fighting in schools is actually a good thing. Nothing shatters the idea of safety like a punch to the face.
 
Don't blame the doggo for this.

There's place in eastern California called Hot Creek, where there are boiling pockets adjacent to a creek so people hang out near the boiling pockets where it's hot enough to be fun but not hot enough to die.

I swung by there a few years ago to see it, and they had a bigass display, the TLDR of which was "We can't prevent you from getting in here but there are actual hazards here and people have died."

One of the points the display made was that under NO UNCERTAIN TERMS should you take your dog in, and there was a newspaper article about just this scenario: the dog had gone into a boiling area, became distressed, and the owner went in after it. Both died.

One of the points that was made is that adult humans can look at water and see from steam, bubbles, and so forth that it's really hot. We've got decades of experience with very hot water in our own homes. It's not instinctive, it's learning with a sometimes steep curve.

Doggos don't have that knowledge, so they'll swim right into a scalding pocket and be in deep shit before either they or their owners can react.

I know this was a little doggo but he didn't know better.
 
Wasn't the thing with McDonald's that their policy was to make their coffee hot enough to scorch the tastebuds so customers couldn't taste how bad it was?
That would make sense but it's actually about the best you can get at a drive through. It's certainly better than Starcucks. It's also exactly the same everywhere because McDonald's has incredibly anal requirements about both the quality of the water used in the soda fountains and coffee makers, as well as routines for cleaning the machines constantly.
 
As a /x/ twat, I have heard a lot of spooky shit about what happens in that park. Your typical skinwalker shit, really. That alone tells me not to take any small, fluffy animal you care about.

I was going to call her a retard for saving her dog, but I probably would of done the same thing too if it was mine.
 
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