The Yellowstone Hot Springs | A Short Documentary | Fascinating Horror
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- čas přidán 9. 07. 2024
- "On the 1st of March, 1872, Yellowstone became the first National Park in the United States of America..."
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CHAPTERS:
00:00 - Intro
00:53 - About Yellowstone National Park
01:54 - Three Hot Spring Incidents
08:22 - Conclusion
MUSIC:
► "Glass Pond" by Public Memory
► "Dolphin-esque" by Godmode
#Documentary #History #TrueStories
A park ranger at Yellowstone has said they have a hard time designing dumpsters that are bear resistant that people can still use, because there is a considerable overlap between the smartest bears and the dumbest tourists.
Yep, I remember a guy saying it 30 years ago.
There’s no absolute zero 0 Kelvin, in case of people $2πdity level.
@@EM.1 wut
I live in Livingston MT, 55 miles from the north entrance. My friends and a take a yearly drive through. Every year there are tourists dangerously close to animals. Bears, of course are potentially hazardous, but so too bison and moose. In and of itself the tourists become part of the curious, shaking your head, sights.
@@jimpatterson1111 saw a man accidentally get headbutted by a giraffe at a drive thru wildlife park in Texas, he got knocked out instantly and the car started rolling, it was wild lol I felt bad for the giraffe cause all the screaming really scared it :(
Steaming hot: check
Strangely colored: check
Devoid of water plants and fish: check
Yep, must be safe to dive in.
The water is extremely beautiful, but you’d have to be a fool to willingly jump in.
@@pyroshayniac1090 Or suicidal
@Linda Grammer i live near a bog that emits disgusting methane and sulfure sometimes. It's gross. Nature can be icky 😆
@Linda Grammer yup. Gross
@@pyroshayniac1090 yea.. there is literally a supervolcano under there 😂
The only sign that should be written in Yellowstone:
'You are now in an active volcanic crater. Every step may mean your death.
Have a nice visit...'
"This place is not a place of honor. No highly esteemed deed is commemorated here."
Another sign should be, "This ain't 'Bambi'. Get over yourself and leave the animals alone."
Idiots: I'm going to jump into boiling water 😎
"Not only will everything in this place kill you, it will hurt the entire time you're dying."
right smh
I'm a seasonal employee at Yellowstone and just a couple weeks ago, some other employees from another company here were out drinking around Old Faithful and one of them fell into a hot spring. She didn't suffer major burns, I think I read in the paper that only 5% of her body got 2nd and 3rd degree burns, but either way, that kinda stuff happens frequently. A couple months ago I was with someone at the clinic at OF and while I was waiting on him, someone came in looking for a ranger to report that some kids (teenagers/young adults) were throwing rocks into one of the hot springs and one of them stuck his arm in it and started freaking out and screaming that it was hot (no shit???). His arm was totally scorched and I don't know what he expected honestly. A couple years ago we had a guy fall into a hot spring and by the time people came to recover his body, he had completely dissolved in the acidic, boiling water and all that was left at the scene was a single flip flop. That happened because he and his sister were looking for a hot spring to sit in, which is completely idiotic. It straight up turned him to goo. It's sad, and some people here think the people who do that stuff deserve to get hurt, but it's sad, and I can't even imagine the trauma their families went through hearing about their loved ones dying so horrifically.
A lot of people out here can be really ignorant when it comes to the wildlife and the springs, especially tourists who seem to think this is some sort of amusement park, and people suffer greatly because of it. There are signs everywhere saying to stay away from the wildlife and stay off the thermal ground, but a lot of people still don't listen and it's honestly infuriating sometimes. Other than that though, working here has given me some of the greatest experiences of my life and I've never been happier working in my entire life. It's incredible, the other people working here and the rangers are amazing people, and the land and wildlife both are so stunning. I just wish more people would be smart about viewing it all.
Update: Right after watching this I went back to work and my manager said just yesterday a woman's dog ran out of the car and into a geyser, so she jumped into the geyser to save it. I heard she made it out alright but there's no word on the dog's condition.
I'm very dubious that the pools at Norris are that acidic to actually dissolve a body within 48 hours, even though they are super heated they are only as acidic as lemon juice not battery acid. Besides it doesn't take an acidic pool to "dissolve" a body just the heat itself is enough to "cook" a body that is not quickly retrieved, the flesh basically cooks and falls off the bone and sinks out of sight. Look at the history of Crested Pool (near Castle Geyser) when a boy fell (or dove) into the pool. (Andrew Clark Hecht) They were able to temporary drain the pool within, I think, a day and all they were able to retrieve was his clothes and bones. Crested Pool is NOT acidic but super heated.
Maybe the park shouldn’t allow people to bring their pets to a freaking active volcano. Maybe ban stupid people too.
@@LT-et5rr the park literally bans them, but just like all rules some idiots is gonna break the rules and find a way to sneak them in anyway. if they do that, I honestly don't care about their mental health caused by the death of their pets like dogs caused because you bring it to here
It must be rewarding to be fully immersed in the park as you say, but also confusing to see the best in humans connecting with such a unique wilderness contrasted with the worst in modern humans that carry ignorance or hubris in the face of wilderness threats.
You said it. You have to be smart and stoic. When in the West there are areas where you are not the apex predator and the Earth will show you quickly about reality if you are stupid.
This video should be required viewing at Yellowstone’s visitor center.
Definitely yes, it's the bear necessity!
Along w/ a pot of boiling water they have to stick a finger into - if they are dumb enough to do that then kick them out of the park
@@jwarmstrong Dang dude I'm sure that a small cigarette burn upon admittance to the park would keep young and old with a remaining memory of being burnt long enough to get them safely through the trip .
Word
@Pla Sma Embrace Natural Selection Then maybe?
Iceland is currently desperately reminding tourists that walking on lava is a bad idea.
Let that sink in after watching this.
And in El Salvador, really poor people live on black lava beds. Most of them don’t have shoes.
@@coolgirlfrozenfeet there's a difference between newely emerged lava and lava stayed from old errruptions.
@@coolgirlfrozenfeet go away Karen
@@melodi996 I know that, thank you. I’m not an idiot. I just remember how hot it was and that the lava beds were black and I’m sure they felt hot to walk on.
@@handsomejack7901 they’re just sharing a story lol
Completely agree with other comments saying we should rename these "acid springs". Helps differentiate between vacation hot springs/onsen from these geothermal murder springs. I remember being confused as a little kid when I saw Ash and May in a hot spring in the Pokemon Anime because I'd heard you should never go in a random hot spring you find because you might boil to death.
I think "geothermal murder spring" should be the new title for them.
Yeah. Not from US nor from Japan but we also do have quite a few thermal baths, hot springs. Would never think that a 'hot spring' is boiling hot
they could call them "Burning cauldrons of DEATH ACID" with photos of actual burn victims and some idiot would still try to prove "they ain't all THAT bad"
I have actually had the opportunity to visit Yellowstone before Covid. Two things…….First take as many pictures as possible because it won’t be enough! Second the dangers are completely obvious. Just freak accidents. In my opinion it is one of the most beautiful places on earth!
Does the name Thermal Hot Spring not work well enough for that? Also it is clearly posted and reminded at every opportunity that these are dangerous. After working over the summer multiple years I have seen employees and tourists do stupid shit. The park is sooo wonderous and fun that it gives people a false sense of security even when they know better. This last summer I saved a co-worker who had wanted to "go up and touch the water" curious as to how hot it was not realizing that the ground at least 2 feet if not more surrounding the pool was merely a few inches thick. He had crossed the surrounding clearly marked "DO NOT CROSS! DANGER!" fencing around the pool. I was literally screaming at him telling him not to fucking do that. Fortunately he listened and we had a long talk afterwards and he felt really dumb about it. Especially after I pointed out how you could clearly see that the pool was surrounded by very thin earth. Had I not been with him I 100% believe that would have been another fatality. The issue is not the terminology, nor the signage, nor the barriers. Its merely people on vacation having too much fun not realizing that the park can be extremely dangerous as well. I keep multiple bear spray on me when hiking and sell them (or flat out give them away sometimes) whilst on trail. You would be amazed at the amount of people who hike very notoriously and clearly marked grizzly hot spots without taking any basic measure of safety precaution. I have run into grizzlies and cubs many times and it can be terrifying even with bear spray and the knowledge of what to do. Yellowstone is amazing and one of the most phenomenal places in the world but give it the respect it deserves or you could pay very dearly.
I remember when my mom took my brother and I to Yellowstone ( I was about 9 or 10 and my brother was a year older). A couple months before the trip she gave us a ton of literature and media about the park, a decent amount of it was about safety. Those books were actually where I first heard the story of the man dying trying to save the dog, which was pretty scary to read at that age but incredibly effective. (No lasting trauma there either, ended up being much more terrified by the ghost stories I read while there than by any of the real tragedies lol)
We ended up having an absolutely amazing time and safety guidelines were never questioned and always followed with out ever feeling stifling. I think its a good model for other people to follow, especially if they're bringing children. Having honest and blunt education on safety is necessary to enjoying places like these.
A term that pops up quite a lot in the comments here is "respect", and I think that's the key to safety here, which your mum did a great job with - making sure you respected the dangers of the environment there, and also reapected them for what they really were (wild animals & habitat) rather than as some kind of theme park? Some of the behaviors one sees from visitors to nature areas do my head in, & I can only imagine it's gotten WAAAY worse in the age of the IG selfie! 😬
honestly. ✋💀no matter how beautiful it is, a huge park teeming with bears and acid hot springs doesn't sound like a very fun place to go camping 😭😆
My parents did the same thing with my brother and me who were around the same age. I don't remember once ever questioning them or their rules while at the park.
When I was 9 and visited Yellowstone I stepped off the boardwalk to go look at a rock or something dumb like that and my mom lost her mind and yelled at me and held my hand the rest of the trip. Didn’t quite understand why until watching this.
Yep, that's exactly why bad shit happens--people don't understand the risks of places with which they're unfamiliar.
You don't have to even fall in the pool, the dirt isn't stable, you can step right through the ground to the water underneath.
I also visited Yellowstone when I was nine, in 1965. My father warned us in graphic terms by reminding us of how we cook lobsters and crabs! I kept to the center of the walkways and was kind of shaky when there were no fences or railings.
@@mariekatherine5238 that should not have been as funny as it was
@@stethespaniard2 Do the math! If I was nine years old in 1965, what is my age in 2021?
Or was your comment intended for someone else? I don’t see where ignorance comes into play.
If you’re around hot springs, don’t ever try to jump over random bodies of water in the dark...actually i take the first bit back, just don’t try to jump over random bodies of water in the dark...
Or in general, because you never know if you're jumping over a Bolton Strid or a tiny puddle.
I suggest not jumping over any kind of bodies in the dark
Great, guess I need a new pre-sleep ritual now
Yeah, we learned that from the video.
I will wait until morning instead of risking to be slipped under the boiled water
My heart goes out to the guy who lost his dog AND his best friend on what was supposed to be a fun vacation
Just one leash could have prevented this.
@@svenjansen2134 Or some rolled up windows....
@@jovetj But then the dog might suffocate or die of heat exhaustion. Plus the dog might have opened the door by the handle.
@@Liusila The dog won't die with cracked-open windows. Opening the door is possible, depends on the car.
I don't think pets belong joyriding in cars at all. To the vet is enough. No reason to subject your belovëd pet to the risk of a car accident.
@@jovetj or should’ve just left the dog at home for a few hours
I remember going to Yellowstone as a youth and I was terrified by the bubbling mud pots and clear pools.
I would be standing on the rickety boardwalk only 20 feet from these portals to hell, no barrier except the occasional rotting rope and just stare in silent horror while other tourists passed behind me, taking pictures, chatting happily.
The juxtaposition between the casual happiness and the beyond easily accessible death traps was insane to me.
True story: when I was 14 I had a small role in a TV movie called “Supervolcano” that was about what would happen if the Yellowstone Supervolcano erupted now. I played a bitchy teenager who got killed in a landslide.
Omg I love that movie! And I remember your part! You're awesome.
@@DiagonalByte sure, but nobody would know who I am.
@@amydamjanovic9183 apparently they do…
Awesome 👏 I like how you described your role. Thank you
Holy crap! I got to show that movie when I did my student teaching! Awesome movie
My dad is also an old geezer that has been erupting for decades.
Looking good Jan 👌
Looking good Jan 👌
Looking good Jan 👌
via which end?
It's called geizer not geezer
This video should be mandatory viewing before going to Yellowstone. You should do a video on The Strid. It looks like a tiny stream that is actually super deep and no one that has fallen in has survived. They just get sucked under.
Indeed! Possibly the most dangerous stretch of river in the UK so i understand, and relentlessly slippy.
OH YES THIS please do a video on this
Was going to say exactly this!
There's a guy who's made multiple videos about its danger and has dropped a camera down into the water, and it pissed me off so bad that he would get right next to the water and didn't pooeven wear a life vest.
I grew up in Montana and my father has worked in the park for 50 years, you hear stories like this all the time. Every time we go to the park together, I learn something new! Like his poor friend who died in an avalanche while working there. It’s totally worth talking to old rangers and learning their stories there. He has some nice books he has written, and if you want to make an old man giddy, buy a book in the park by Michael H. Francis!
Ayyyy, another Montanan! I grew up closer to Glacier, but the trips we took to Yellowstone were always amazing (including the school trip where our bus broke down lol). And yeah, old rangers always have the best stories and tips :)
I love his photos!
I remember that some people swam in the hot springs because they thought it was like the hotsprings in japan, not realizing that Yellowstone's hotsprings have a lot of sulfur in them, therefor are part sulfuric acid and emit sulfuric gas.
One guy who jumped in was dead before he could resurface and his body was dissolved within 30 minutes.
Obey the signs kids.
Like someone else in the comments said: the name shouldn't be called 'hotsprings', but more like 'acid springs' or something more menacing, because when I think about hotsprings I also think about those in Japan.
There are a lot of issues with signs especially in an American context where literally everything we buy, no matter how innocuous, comes with a warning on it. A sign also usually requires cultural info (including language) that people from other countries and cultures don't necessarily have. You can't expect people to be able to differentiate between signs that say "stay on trail!" when one means "don't step on native plants :)" and one means "you will literally, immediately die if you get too close to this hot spring which looks exactly like the one you sit in at home"
Is that what makes the pretty colors (besides the bacteria).
@@M0oranshi instant death pool?
If it's called instant death pool, it won't be a visitor site anymore. Some people are just reckless. Please guys and girls out there, increase your senses 100% in a new environment coz danger comes out from every direction.
.
I missed traveling. Covid crisis suck
A lot of visitors to Yellowstone seem to think its a theme park where they can touch the animals and get close to the deadly boiling pools. Drives me nuts
I think it’s because is called a “park” and most people’s understanding of that word is some manicured safe area. I had a foreign friend that was road tripping, passing by and wanted to stop and hike in Death Valley Natl. Park. They thought it was just some roadside park and that they could hike around in t-shirts and flip flops with no water. Meanwhile I won’t even drive through that area without a full tank of gas and a gallon of water on hand.
Soon to be known as Yellywood.....
Kinda off point, but a friend of mine worked at one of the entrances many years ago. A tourist once asked him, “So, when do the deer turn into Elk around here?”
that's SO weird that so many people think that! I visited Yellowstone when I was age ten and even at that age understood you need to be VERY careful there and not go near the pools or touch the animals and honestly I'm not even that smart lol I don't understand why people would do that cause being killed by a wild animal or a horrible hot pot death would be some of the most terrifying and painful ways to go!
No no let them do that. Let the stupid people die so we won't have to deal with them in society
I remember reading an horrific story many years ago,of a blacksmith / foundry worker in the 1800s,casting molten metal ,while his young son was his apprentice. The lad somehow fell into a huge vat of molten metal,and in a heartbeat,his father made the only decision he could,reached over and plunged the boys head beneath the surface,sacrificing his arm- sadly,he clearly knew there was absolutely no chance of survival,and tried to end it as quickly and humanely as possible…..the story haunted me for years.
Do you remember where you read this?
@@mattdunn4977 I’m sorry, I don’t remember the title of the book Matt, I was very young myself, and I think the book was written in the 1800s- my family had a lot of old books.
Damn... Talk about fucked up dude.
That smacks of BS to me. That smacks so much of BS to me that it seems to me more likely to be an act of unplanned murder that he covered up by bamboozling the investigators with trade knowledge.
Was at Yellowstone last month and there were a lot of warning signs against the hot springs. The smell enough told me I shouldn't get too close.
The people or the springs?
Maybe they should call them "boiling springs," instead of "hot springs." Get the point across to those who don't get it!
They should call them Death Springs
boiling hot acid springs
@@rickc2102 Boiling Hot Acid Death Springs. Its acronym pronoun BHADS!
@@mysteryjunkie9808 that's a good idea!
Should be called “AHHHH HOLY SHIT THATS HOT!” Springs
For reference, a "grain" is an outmoded pharmacology term, equaling roughly 65 mg. This is, thankfully, an enormous dose of morphine, I'm sure that poor fellow needed every bit of it.
That Dr sent him on pain free. Good guy Dr.
Thanks for this comment bro.
I used to have a little cardboard pill box that had a paper label on it "Morphine 6g." I would guess that was not the pastor level dose.
@@rogersheddy6414 Interesting! Any idea how old it was? Could have been packaged for a pharmacy/dispensary.
@Frank Marano o
When my family visited Yellowstone when I was a kid my dad bought a book about all the deaths in Yellowstone. He read parts of it and its where I learned the term degloving. It terrified me and kept me from doing anything stupid.
I choose not to Google that term and just stay away if I'm ever near those pools
@@nthgthI made the mistake of doing that. Don’t google it.
@@nthgth you did the right thing, you see some pretty gnarly sh!1 if you search for that.
@@thecapone45 I became familiar with the term after witnessing an industrial accident.
You'll never think of 'like a glove' the same way again.
One of the top professors in the geology department at the university was a head ranger at Yellowstone for some time before coming to the university. He was there when the college kids went into the pit of boiling water and had to help with the whole situation.
Horrific!
Damned Old Geezers, they lurk everywhere
:)
Lol
Lmao
😂😂
Hey watch it I’m a geezer ...
I don’t get why they don’t call them “boiling springs” or “acid springs” ? Imagine if they called Death Valley “warm valley” or something lol people would definitely be a lot less aware of how deadly it is
Less tourist money i guess
@Linda Grammer People die in death valley despite their intelligence though, it's the ONLY way through if you don't want to travel 2.5 times the trip. Tires melt to asphalt if you stop, not even Einstein can predict exactly when you get a blowout. Sometimes fate just catches you with your pants down
@@well_as_an_expert_id_say I’d rather take the long way round, thank you.
WARM VALLEY
Touche
After visiting Yellowstone it's hard to forget, it is beautiful, deadly, and relaxing all at once and at night the stars are super bright and the sky is super visible and then there is the large amount of warning signs like "PLEASE ABSOLUTELY DO NOT WALK HERE EVEN THOUGH IT LOOKS SAFE" and "DO NOT SWIM IN THE HOT SPRINGS" honestly a beautiful trip
I'll never understand why people bring pets to such places. I love mine enough to keep them safe...at home with a sitter. It's enough keeping yourself safe in wild nature. Too many unknowns and events that you have little or no control over. Various terrains and wildlife are considerations no one should take lightly in any national park!
Because Legally Blonde Mentality. Wuffles the Chihuahua is a people too.
@@puppiesarepower3682 I get it. That's how I feel about my pups. I just hope Wuffles and mom have superior survival skills if they encounter a bear, cougar, etc. I know mine would try to attack to protect me, and we know how that would end. 😪
@Diva in the Woods Agreed. It's so rare to see a properly leashed, controlled, much less trained dog these days. Sadly, the type of people who roar around in those godawful gigantic motorhomes are also the type who have at least one yappy little dog with them, utterly unsupervised or contained. I call those dogs Eagle Chow.
@@DivaInTheWoods They'd end up as puppy chow.✌️
@@aquachonk I love your comment; I actually have an aunt like that. Her breed of choice, Shih Tzu. LoL!👍
I feel so awful for the guy who ran in after his friend's dog, he probably just ran after her on instinct and by the time he realized what he'd done he was already horribly burned.
Several ppl told him it was a bad idea. He said f it anyway and died because of it.
Nope, he jumped in because he didn't believe that it was as hot as others were trying to make out. Soon discovered to his cost, that they were understating it.
the 2 people that commented, your stupid. the man ran on instinct before people started shouting, You dont run on instinct then go "oh shit nvm let the thing i want to protect die right before my eyes lol"
@@teddysoul85 : based on multiple accounts I read, there were people yelling at him not to go in before he did. Considering he thought it urgent to rescue the dog, he knew that it was really hot. I'll add a couple things to this: (1) while knowing the water was really hot, he apparently didn't know just how quickly it can cause major damage, like maybe he at least keeps his head above water if he goes in at all; and (2) the closest people to true villains/dummies in the story are the people who didn't close the car windows up high enough to guarantee the dog wouldn't escape.
@@kevinmartin2516 : see above.
I remember reading a story about a man who died in a hot spring and by the time the National Park Service we're able to attempt to recover his body there was nothing to recover because of how acidic the water is.
if there was nothing then how were they able to know that the spring was his cause of death? were there bystanders?
@@TheLineCutter The man's body literally dissolved. People were there, but he essentially became human soup within seconds.
@@compatriot852 if there were people there then it makes sense ye
I read this too, he bounced to the a and e hospital didn't he?
@Generik, @finsclapping, @Compatriot: The man's name was Colin Scott. He and his sister had been looking for a merely warm spring in which to soak. He didn't dissolve "within seconds", but the Park Service couldn't retrieve his body the same day because of an electrical storm and the dissolution mostly occurred overnight. For more details, see www.cnn.com/2016/11/17/us/yellowstone-man-dissolved-trnd/index.html.
When I was in Yellowstone once as a kid, I remember seeing someone reach out past the walkway to touch a stream of water running off a hotspring and it stressed me out, I was afraid I was gonna see someone stupid die while I was on vacation.
I visited the Cliffs of Moher in Ireland a fee's years back. The tour guide warned up before getting out not to go past the barriers, as several people fall off every month. I'm not sure if that's true, but it scared me straight for sure.
I live very close to those cliffs in county Clare and what the guy told you is partly true, every year there is a number of people who fall off the cliffs. Some accidentally some jump on purpose both very tragic and sad however
@@jamesms8351 you're lucky to live in such a beautiful place! I loved Ireland and can't wait to go back.
When my mom went to Yellowstone as a kid, a ranger told her that if you want to test how hot the water in a hot spring is, use a finger you don't mind losing.
Lmao if they said that now, imagine alllll the fingers that would be melted up in there and allllll the lawsuits from idiots? Lol!
that's a good one!
I was there last summer. There are warnings everywhere both posted signs and written in several places in the map you're given at the entrance. It's absolutely beautiful there and a bit terrifying. Don't treat this place like a theme park. It's real and wild and it will kill you.
Wholeheartedly agree. It’s a beautiful place with plenty of warning signs and even then you’ll have stupid people who won’t follow the rules. When I went, I saw a guy walk up behind a bison, (that was laying down) sit down, and start playing the bongos while his girlfriend recorded him. People shouted at him till he had to stop filming but I could not BELIEVE what I was watching. That’s how you go viral in the worst way.
I was there last summer too, and the amount of people who thing they can just go up and pet a bison without getting charged at is concerning
We saw huge-lens camera bros screaming at a bear to get it to do something instead of eating flowers. I had no idea frat bro types were into nature photography but there were multiple and I hate them
*It was a black bear and very reasonable
Hard to believe that this was the entirety of America at one point.
"To make Yellowstone safe, would make it no longer wild. And to take away that which it makes it worth preserving in the first place." Very well said. Yes take reasonable precautions. But at the end of the day, there's danger.
YOOOOOOOOOO! I NEED this as a podcast! I love this kind of content while driving. I am a truck driver and if I’m in an accident and my cell phone records indicate I was “watching” CZcams videos I could be fined, lose my job, or even go to jail. Even if I was only listening and/or the incident was not my fault.
@Somebody Someone
Try Mr Ballen, he has a podcast :) and talks about the dark, spooky and mysterious. I love his 411 series!
Nation Parks After Dark is a good podcast for National Park related stuff as well, highly recommend.
There’s a hot spring in Yellowstone that straight up dissolves people.
Acid and all that
*serial killers taking notes*
Norris Geyser Basin is the most acidic area in the park. Hottest also. Some of the pools get up to 260° F! A swimmable hotspring is at most 110° F. I live 12 miles away from Norris, in Canyon Village :D
So THAT's why so many people disappear there.
I remember a horrific story where a guy fell in and his sister tried to save him but by the time police got to him he was almost dissolved
I'm surprised that the incident where a man was recorded jumping into an acid pool by his sister wasn't mentioned here. I believe that was quite a well known incident.
@@PennyMsElite i heard that he just tripped and fell in. and maybe it wasnt included because it happened somewhere else and not Yellowstone. im not sure though
It indeed happened in Yellowstone in 2019, the name of the deceased was Colin Nathaniel Scott, 23. He, quote, "was looking for a place to “hot pot,” or soak in warm water, according to a final accident report".
@@PennyMsElite czcams.com/video/K7cwHK5gVR8/video.html
Possibly an acid pool is different from the hot springs theme?
@@PennyMsElite He went way off trail in Norris Geyser Basin, looking for a pool obscured from the main path to "hotpot" in. Apparently he slipped as he tested the water temperature - like all the springs in Norris (and most in Yellowstone), it was boiling hot AND acidic. He ignored the paths and multiple signs - it was death by stupidity.
I like that you added the personal story on this. I think it helps us remember that these aren't just stories, but horror that people experience.
When I went to Yellowstone in the late 90s, I saw a staggering number of people meandering off the walkways. I'm honestly surprised the park hasn't seen even more fatalities.
I'm not sure the two young people who survived, would actually consider themselves lucky, at least not until years later.
I mean stupid is stupid
Once they themselves were geezers?
Found the doomer
Your name is rather ironic on this video.
Maybe call themselves lucky in an unrelated lottery incident
Imagine losing your friend and dog in the same event. Ouch.
And then decades later you see everyone in the CZcams comments calling him an idiot for attempting to save your dog
@Omar. FiveEleven They (the owner and the friend) were already absolute idiots to take the dog to the park, when they know it is dangerous. There is always the chance a dog would free itself from being put on a leash our sitting in the car.
@Omar. FiveEleven I'm pretty sure he wouldn't do it if he knew the danger fully, let's not romanticize dumb moves, it can lead to others doing similar unwated actions after seeing all the praising.
If it was his wife , sounds like every country song 😮
So he lost his two best friends………🤔
The real wonder of our family's visit to Yellowstone was me not being mauled by a bear. While we were in our car, me (4 years of age) in the backseat, idled in a parking lot while everyone who could read was huddled over a map. As it went down in family history, my father heard me say, "Oooooh, daddy, there's a bear!" and looked over to see me hanging out the window, my fingers only inches away from a Grizzly. I vaguely remember that I was trying to pet it, attracted by the dark shaggy fur. I was immediately yanked back as my father put our car into gear and peeled out.
My grandparents took me there when I was 10. Apparently there had been an accident of some kind shortly before we arrived. They went walking along the boardwalk around the hot pools but locked me into the car. I was mad. In looking back I should have thanked them.
This is one reason why we left our dogs except my service dog at home when we went to yellow stone. I am terrified that my labs would just dive in
I don't blame you! Labs love water, and that would be awful if they ran in thinking it was just a regular pond. Smart decision to leave them home.
I'm surprised that a dog would do this. Dogs generally have a heightened sense of awareness about potential dangers. Having said that, it has happened to dogs before so...
@Safwaan they're animals and shouldn't be so carefree really.
I was surprised as well. Even domesticated animals usually still have strong instincts. I guess for some animals playfulness wins. Of course, you hear about the 100 dogs that jumped in, not about the 100000 dogs that visited the park and went home safe.
@Paul Yoxy so are you but people still let you in public
Highly recommend "Death in Yellowstone" if you want a whole book on all the dumb things humans do collected by a park ranger!
Yes that’s a great book , and Over the Edge Death in the Grand Canyon is even better , both books super fascinating no boring parts
Oh thanks for the info!
I didn’t know there was a *Yellowstone specific* book of the *Darwin Awards!*
👍❤️
I'm going to try and find this.
Was about to recommend this book as well! I recognized the story about the dog from there; made me want to shrivel up and die reading it and hearing it had the same effect 😂.
Thanks for the recommendation - I suggested it to my library to buy!
You are an incredibly good documentarian and you really do all the stories justice!
My boyfriend and I made a day stop in Yellowstone only a few weeks ago on a cross country road trip. It was absolutely breathtaking, but you could definitely see dangerous areas all around. Stay safe, but do all you can to not deprive yourself of such an experience.
"We should fence off the dangerous parts!"
It's a supervolcano. That's at least half of the park if we're just talking about the caldera.
To be fair, there is no way to fence off the caldera to make it safe
Technically if you wanted to fence off the supervolcano's entire danger zone then you'd need to wrap a gigantic fence around the entire planet and shoo everyone away to live on the moon. :D
A sinkhole developed in a parking spot overnight. Come next day to find a big hole and traffic cones around it.
Place is crazy.
@@mattstorm360 That was my point. Just the caldera is half the park, but the whole thing is part of the supervolcano really.
it might just blow up real good!
This should be viewed by anyone who plans to visit Yellowstone.
It’s dumbfounding to me that these things even need a warning once you’re past the age of 5. I think it’s time we stop labeling things that are obviously evident to cause harm in order to save some oxygen for those who are more useful than being merely biodegradable. 😂
Probably should have been viewed by the people that died at least
@@SimonVanliew26 they’re in a safer place either way. 😂
I’m literally leaving for Yellowstone on Friday and I’m so glad I saw this lol, just for an indication on *just how dangerous* this stuff can be
@@cinnamon_coco14 have fun and be safe! Don’t want to hear about how bad it went on here, please.
I've been to Yellowstone twice, and one of the most beautiful things about the park to me is how wild and untamed it is. There's some sort of haunting beauty in the unforgiving force of nature that is Yellowstone, and you must respect that power, because nature won't let you off the hook just because you're on vacation. That being said, it's not like the park itself is actively trying to kill you, its only a National Park after all. But there are things within the park that have the ability to kill, whether that be the animals or the natural features of the park itself, and they must be treated with respect. Both times I've been to Yellowstone, I've thoroughly enjoyed myself, and I was able to have an amazing time while also heeding the warnings given to me and my family by the park rangers. Safety is fun!
“Nature won’t let you off the hook just because you’re on vacation.” I’m gonna use that one. Because indeed there should be respect given to the area. As I read in another comment, it’s not a park, it’s a habitat. The sobering reality of it all should give folks more reason to be safe and act accordingly.
I remember when I was eight years old, I visited Yellowstone with my family. The hot springs were incredibly breathtaking. But one memory that sticks out to me was driving down a road in the middle of nowhere and stopping by a small light whitish blue hot spring that my dad wanted to look at. We walked up to it and my dad put his whole hand in it for several seconds. It was such a wtf moment. He then took his hand out and said it was hot but not scalding. He encouraged me to stick my hand in too. Being a dumbass kid, I did. I remember it being really warm, but not boiling. It was like a hot tub. It was probably the only non lethal hot spring in Yellowstone lol.
The edges are usually not as hot as the deeper parts and center of the spring because they tend to cool more easily. Had you stuck your whole hand even a few inches further or deeper, you would've price for it!
Also many of the pools are extremely acidic, so even if it wasn't boiling, it might still have melted your skin off.
Random note for pedants like me: Describing 202 degree F water as "boiling" is in fact accurate at Yellowstone's altitude, where water boils at around 198 degrees.
Indeed, I forgot about the elevation change.
I should have known. Cool stuff.
Also -- as anyone knows who's ever camped there, Yellowstone is *cold* at night, even in July and August, again because of the elevation. (It's Wyoming, eh? All four seasons in one day. In WY it's *normal* to hear a freeze warning come over the radio on a hot summer afternoon while you're sweltering in a sun-baked truck. It only seems strange the first time or two.) Which is why the big killer in high desert isn't heat or thirst but hypothermia.
Nighttime frost can happen in any month of the year; I met it in early August. This makes the hot springs very tempting things to be close to.
(I felt that temptation; but approaching from the wrong side that wasn't signed I noticed a dead cow-elk floating in the simmering waters. Better warning than any sign; I looked at the boiled cow-elk, looked at that smooth, damp, slippery tufa surrounding the spring, saw how an agile animal with four-hoof drive fell in -- and stayed the hell away.)
great job. you just made all these people's injuries worse.
AKA 94 degrees Celsius
Should have gone to Jellystone. It’s safer and the bears talk.
And only your pic-a-nic basket is in jeopardy.
😂😂😂😂😂
I went to jelly stone for a three day trip. It rained days two and three, so I got to ride a 90ft water slide in drenching rain. The cabin’s upstairs was about 3 ft tall so you had to crawl and we got infested with ants on day two, I’m talking THOUSANDS of ants. And on the the third day I tripped and hit my foot really hard
Other than that stuff, it was a cool place and I’d recommend it
or just take some acid. don't have to go anywhere and it's always a surprise what will start talking
Fonz!! Love you man!
My family and I have been to both Yellowstone and the Grand Canyon National Parks. Despite the best efforts of the NPS, people stick their hands and fingers into the Hot Springs not realizing how boiling hot the water is. People routinely ignore the signs to get better "selfies", pics or other video footage of nature in action. How scary it was for us, one night we were exploring in the dark a natural feature not far from the tourist center. I practically walked into a baby "something" (I thought it was a baby moose but in the dark I could be wrong). I side stepped the creature and herded the family back to the car. If it had been a moose, the logical question is "where's mom?" and would she be angry. The same when we were leaving the park and people saw a baby black bear. No one, after jumping out of their cars to take pictures ever asked the question, "where's the mother bear?". So if the Hot Springs don't get you, the wild life would.
My grandparents went to Old Faithful in the mid '50s. They said they were terrified of the rickety walkway that was barely two feet wide. As they were with a tour group, they couldn't turn around and go back. Luckily, they survived. I hope the walkway is wider and sturdier now.
Boiled Alive .just the slightest burn on a finger is wildly painful.
I'll never complain about scolding my mouth over hot tea or coffee ever again lol
Dropped boiling hot top ramen on myself earlier this year and that hurt like hell and I screamed. It left a burn on my ankle that lasted for weeks. I can only imagine how next level that pain must be in a hot spring.
@@Mskittenlover12 third degree burns burn off the pain receptors in the skin along with the rest.
@@Goddot oh wow.... I had no idea...
@@Goddot yeah but if you get anything just shy of that, God help you. Also, the loss of pain can be a negative thing as it is lifelong and you'd still be horribly disfigured
i saw a man at Yellowstone drop his hat in a hot pool then burn two fingers trying to retrieve it. he kept screaming he’d sue the park 🙄
Insert "Injured? Good!!!" Meme here.
Case of: I'm going to sue you for my stupidity.
Thats is utterly dumb ass of him but that can be America
He should sue God lol
@@lukeak4010 that idiot: "ok i just sued god- *fucking dies*
These videos are insightful and raise awareness helping to save lives. The beauty of nature can mask extreme risk. One example that comes to mind is the dangers of rip currents. A video on this subject would be greatly appreciated.
I love this channel and your delivery! I really like the detail you go into and how you explain what happened and why it happened! Just wanted to send some love to your channel today 💜 I’m a long time subscriber and still enjoy your content. Thank you, bud :)
"That was stupid. How bad am I? That was a stupid thing I did." Oh god my chest hurts, that quote got to me
When I read that I cried for like 5 minutes straight I was not expecting such a sad thing
Poor man. God rest his soul.
Same. I feel like I would want to do the same for a dog in trouble. Sometimes you don’t think when you’re in that situation. RIP
@@thelouisfanclub yeah the dogs cries must have been horrible and he just couldn't stop himself
Say what you will about Kirwin's foolishness however; The man dove into a pool that he knew would injure him, with no hesitation, waded through it despite grave injuries and pain, for a dog that wasn't even his own. What a champ, and rare kind of selflessness.
This video makes me wonder why anyone would ever bring a dog to such a deadly park. This isn't the safest place to trounce around and explore.
I've always wondered why Australians have dogs, with all the different deadly things they have. If I lived there my dogs would never leave the yard.
@@markhammar3977 You need to look at the localised risks. Yellowstone National Park is simply no place for dogs or stupid people that think they are above the safety 'rules'.
Plenty of places to take dogs in Australia, with zero risk of them being boiled alive or bitten by a snake.
@@kevinmartin2516 I was thinking of crocs
@@markhammar3977 You mean those things up in the tropics or in the zoo? The nearest wild ones to me, must be 2000 km away! Snakes are more widespread or even ticks are very harmful to dogs.
Animals typically have quite the instinct for staying alive.
This reinforces a long-held value of mine: Never go outside if you can avoid it, and if you can't, make sure you're out there for the absolute least amount of time required.
A few months before I went, we heard of someone who wandered off the marked trail and fell through the “crust” or dirt, and sunk immediately. Supposedly they searched for the body with underwater equipment two days before giving up. We asked why they stopped looking and they said they stopped because “the bones would’ve disintegrated and there would be nothing left to find.” Truly horrifying.
No matter how many guards, fences, etc. that could be put up to "protect peopke", you can't fix stupid.
That's because the really good stuff is on the other side of the fence.😁
How about not jumping in ANY water in Yellowstone, no matter how nice it looks?!? (Unless CLEARLY marked safe!)
I dare you...!
There are some nice, safe areas that are CLEARY marked for such a use. I know, I've camped in Yellowstone many times over 15 years living in Montana.
@@sarasunshinemt4444 I have pictures of my daughter and her friend in one of the rivers (not the Firehole but a permitted swimming point). It's memorable and safe.
Yolo
@@sarasunshinemt4444 well, I mean, if it's clearly marked okay to swim or go in the water, that's one thing. But in some of these cases, these folks should know better. I am sad about what happened to them, of course, but damn. Common sense could prevent so many of these incidents.
I went to Yellowstone with my family when I was 19, I'm 35 now and I still remember that it was the most incredible experience I ever had in my life! We were in a camper and a herd of buffalo walked through our campground just feet from is as we stood outside and watched them pass. Everything in that park was so beautiful even though we all knew dangers of the geysers and pools it was still a spectacular sight to see. I can still remember standing on a boardwalk over a lake and reading the sign that stated I was standing on the very top of an active volcano. That was a real eye opener.
i've lived in MT about 3 hours from Yellowstone my entire life. i've only been twice and the stupidity i witnessed was otherworldly. saw a woman approaching a bear cub trying to pet it. we drove away before something bad happened. heard stories of earlier that week a guy lost his hat into the prismatics and ran in after it. people would climb over the guard rails to "get a better view". our local news outlet is constantly reporting bear maulings and the like. it is definitely pretty but it is also deadly when the rules are not followed.
I have a book called "Death at Yellowstone" that I got while visiting there. It purports to contain an account of every death in Yellowstone that was related to the park itself (meaning it didn't cover traffic deaths or purely medical-related deaths like heart attacks). It was extremely interesting and morbid to read while at the park. Certainly there were some absolutely horrific accounts of deaths from the thermal pools including one from a park employee who fell into a thermal pool at night after a evening spent with other employees at a not-fatal hot spring. And plenty of stupid or tragic wildlife deaths as well.
I have that book. Ghosts of Yellowstone is also good. Read them everytime I visit.
I just heard about that book. I worked at Yellowstone park, old faithful lodge in the 90s, and I'm just starting to hear about all these horrific deaths.
Funny I got the same book but it focuses on all of the deaths at the Grand Canyon
I live in WY and have that book. I couldn't remember the name (it's in storage right now). Thanks!
i want that book. id love to visit yellowstone, but try to be as careful and respectful as i can.
Im mad people are letting their dogs off of their leads while in a park that has predators and boiling hot acidic springs and pools, why even take the risk, I guess it's because they don't take it seriously and respect the wilderness as something dangerous
Nature is nature. It has always been dangerous. Thats kinda how we got to this point.
Also no one let their dog off the lead. The dog escaped from the vehicle. How tf the dog didnt sense the danger is beyond me.
@GeeLee Most Hotsprings are basic. Just like you.
@@pleasureincontempt3645 dude ur so edgy. Good job!
@@thankyouverymuch dude most of these ppl in the video were doing stupid ish that put them in that situation. The dog was just trying to save its owner. It sucks the ppl died but they were going against instinct while the dog died reacting to its instincts that we as a species have bred into them over thousands of years
So many people visit National Parks think it's like Disneyland. It's not, it's WILDERNESS. There are things there that can kill us. Boiling springs are just one of those things. If you take precautions and use your head, Yellowstone is truly an amazing place!
So crazy! I just read a story on Instagram last night, that happened recently, about a young dental assistant whose little dog ran into the Hot Springs and she rushed in after and now is in a coma.
Most bodies of water: has life rings in case you fall in.
Yellowstone: has rifle in case you fall in (at least I hope. Don't die trying to save me and don't let me linger like that).
I agree. Id rather off myself than live thru that kind of thing.
or at LEAST, a conveniently located pan of Safety carrots, onions, celery and cubes of bouillon you can throw in with the unlucky victim...
@@BrilliantDesignOnline you're wrong for that lmao
@@Starstruck_Seven But oh-so deliciously right!
@@BrilliantDesignOnline 😂 don't mind me! Just making some stew!
Honestly, who among us has such a dedicated friend as to go into a boiling cauldron to rescue your dog? That is the saddest story....
😩😩😭😭😭...DON'T TAKE ANY DOMESTIC ANIMALS TO YELLOWSTONE NATIONAL PARK - IT IS A WILDERNESS - ON TOP OF A VOLCANO!! NOT AN AMUSEMENT PARK OR DOG PARK!! NOT SAFE FOR SERVICE ANIMALS EITHER!! AND KEEP THE KIDDIES ON A LEASH! THEY'VE LOST SEVERAL OF THEM AS WELL! NASTY WAY TO DIE!!
🚨 *amogus *🚨 ⛽️ red sus red sus!
AMOGUS
Came into the comments expecting Among Us memes, got exactly what expected.
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AMOGUS
I'm surprised it wasn't mentioned that a lot of the springs there have a ton of sulfur in them, making them highly acidic too (also contributing to a lot of the colors. When I visited Yellowstone as a teenager, I remember one of the first things I did was walk up to a "pothole" roughly the size of a manhole cover to dip my hand in and feel the water. The fact that the dirt around it didn't cave in, or the fact that it was only "very warm" as opposed to boiling, OR the fact that it wasn't highly acidic means somehow my dumbass self got 3x lucky and got to keep my hand (and life)
I love your point about educating people on wilderness safety. It’s a subject that isn’t taught as often as it should be!
Rip the guy who tried to save the dog. Yes, it was a dumb decision, but it proved you had a heart of gold.
Agreed. He was a good man who made a dumb decision out of caring.
No, it proved he was an idiot.
Heart of gold for sure. And rocks for brains
Well, his heart was mostly boiled so it couldn't have been gold. His brains weren't very functional to start with either, as he let a dog escape his car and then jumped into acid boiling water as people told him not to.
i was looking for this comment. He had to have known with all the people yelling at him and the way the dog was yelping that it wasn't a light dip in a summer pool...but he did it anyway AND pushed past the pain to keep trying.
You could do a similar video about the Grand Canyon (oh wait, I see that you already did!). People go there and play around on the edge like they think they're at a Disney park.
I get a little concerned around parts of the Grand Canyon that are off the beaten path, knowing what would happen if I slip at a certain point.
I suppose this is no different than driving on a two-lane highway.
I imagine this is why the book Death in Yellowstone is in every shop across the park, front and center for all to see.
There are signs everywhere, yet I've still seen tourists walking off of designated boardwalks/piers and dipping their hands into hot springs. Personal responsibility.
*"dipping their hands into hot springs"????* I get nervous just frying eggs, and these people are over here just "oh don't mind if I do" sticking their hands into boiling water??
@@lj9392 I'm with ya! That sounds TERRIFYING to me! Plus what if they slip or the crust caves in and they fall into the pool! SO scary!
@@lj9392 some of them are just pleasantly warm. problem is, you don't know until your finger is already in there. plus, some of them are super acidic and that could burn you if the temperature doesn't. it's just plain stupid to stick your hands into anything in that area.
@@lj9392 Adrenaline junkies often love to do that
For anyone interested- there’s a whole book called “Death in Yellowstone” that is fascinating and worth a read!
Thank you. Just looked it up. Totally buying a copy.
I saw the title of this video and thought "Somebody bought that Death in Yellowstone book..."
There are TWO versions...one is updated with stories that happened since the first edition
I’ve got to buy it now then
Also buying it! Maybe two, one for my mom
They have Death in the Grand Canyon also.
In the age of selfies, barriers only present an exciting challenge to be over come! As we've witnessed in thousands of pics and videos. Heartbreaking!
I just love Yellowstone and am lucky enough to have spent a bit of time there over the years! I saw my only moose and beaver there. The river coming out of the Western entrance of Yellowstone going into Idaho, is naturally heated to a pleasant bath tub temperature year round! If you have never been, the two National Parks you don't want to miss are Yellowstone and Yosemite-totally different both awe-inspiring! My eldest daughter worked many summers at National Parks-Yellowstone, Grand Canyon, Lake Powell and King's Canyon! It is a great summer job for young people. Living in such beauty and getting paid to do so and, they also hire retirees to work the Parks in the summer! If you know anyone in these two categories, I urge them to look into it. My daughter still says it was the best time of her life and she met her husband working at King's Canyon!
On today's episode of Fascinating Horror: Ten minutes of people being boiled alive.
And a Hot dog .
That's why it's called Fascinating Horror rather than Innocuous Facts.
@@Michael-io3dd Hello, my name is Michael, and I attend the school of stating the bleedin' obvious.
Right.
@@ottosump3356 by the bright blue/yellow/red water…
I remember my parents taking me to Yellowstone park when I was a kid in the early 80s and I was absolutely terrified of the walkways because there were no hand rails!! I couldn't believe how easy it seemed to just slip and fall into one of those pools. Couldn't wait to leave, honestly. Still haunts me to this day.
I cant see the attraction of wandering around inside a geothermally active volcanic cauldera myself!
@@amandadonegan2137 It's gorgeous and unlike anything you'll see anywhere else
@@emilyb.8219 We're aware of that. but did you watch the video?
There’s hand railings now in most parts. Come back to visit.
The hot springs may be a beautiful area but so unnecessary to waste time looking at. It’s a hot spring……pools of boiling hot water……very dangerous and not worth the time. I’d rather park on the road and check out the bison, elk and other animals…..staying in the car, of course.
I'm in New Zealand & we have a large geothermal area with hot pools, mud etc. We've had people die in them, some don't stay on the paths, others fall, one that sticks out for me is a death at Kuirau Park, someone walking through the park found the body, its thought he ignored the fences & got into the pools. But there have been more at that park, there are the others to think about. It's sad we've had to fence such beautiful attractions.
As someone that is deathly afraid of burns (I've had a couple of minor burns and they've been some of the most painful things I've ever experienced) and someone who loves the outdoors, this video honestly brought a tear to my eye.
"Let's climb over this fence for an impressive selfie...."
Well you can't get a good selfie from a safe distance like some kind of pleb
There's a bridge in my country where some idiot think it's cool to climb the bridge and takes a selfie. That idiot fell and drowned. You know who is blamed for this incident... Ruler of the Sea (I'm not joking...)
Yeah right. Stupidity reigns.
lol
Exactly, how many times on this channel alone has it been reported that someone ducked under / climbed over a fence, someone employed to do something for safety didn't, or someone locked a door that was a emergency exit or failed to maintain it as an exit.
Sorry but the idea you could or should fence off or otherwise mitigate danger in a wild place more than they obviously do silly.
I’m sitting here and covering my ears and thinking “No, no, no, no, no!!”
Boiling water and my entire body is shrinking at the thought.
Not just boiling water. The yellowstone hotsprings have a lot of sulfur in them. Its a boiling pit of sulfuric acid.
Idk which is worse: boiling alive in sulfur water or drowning in an pitch black underground cave. Both are my nightmares.
@@healinggrounds19 aargh, thanks, what a thought, it’s a good thing I’ll never be doing either lol
I live in the geothermal city of Rotorua in New Zealand. Rotorua is second to Yellowstone in the world on the top geothermal places list. Growing up we knew about the dangers of hot pools and mud pools as it was common knowledge. We knew to be careful around the hot spots like Kuirau Park, Govt Gardens, Whakarewarewa, etc. Sadly we get a once a year case of someone jumping in a hot/mud pool to commit suicide. I stress heavily that if you ever go to a geothermal park, listen to the guides and stay on the track.
Haven't been there for absolute ages, but I remember swimming in one of the nearby lakes at night as a kid, and there were all these sudden startling warm spots where mild geothermal vents opened up under the water!
Visiting the geothermal parks really brings home how active the plate boundary under us here is all the time. Can't understand how people can have so little common sense when visiting such spaces? But I guess they're like that everywhere, not just in nature 😣 At least here we don't have massive predatory species in the mix as well, oof!
The suicide incidences are really sad - not just for their families, but also for the park workers & local first responders having to handle that situation? 😢
@@anna_in_aotearoa3166 there is no common sense if they do not understand to begin with. And yes if one has taken their own life, emergency workers must be equipped with what's necessary to retrieve a body.
the dog passing probably upset us all more than the people in events like this :(
Dog-lovers: "I wouid DIE for *my* dog!"
Yellowstone Hot Springs: "Let's test that theory."
I just keep my dog well away from supervolcanos. She doesn't need that kind of stress in her life.
I would, a dogs life is more important than mine, dogs can’t intentionally be bad, they are the perfect creature, I’d die for a dog, if I couldn’t save the dog I’d rather die.
@@MINRoadkill noble, but then the dog and you are both dead and it's kinda a waste. Better to just keep the dog away from the like, three spots on Earth where "running in the mud" will kill it.
@@StumpfForFreedom I mean yeah, I’m not dumb enough to take my dog to a hot springs with boiling water everywhere, I mean if someone else’s dog fell in I would try and save it because it’s not the dog’s fault for their owner being a dumbass.
If a dog falls into boiling water it can’t be saved. It’s already dead or will soon be.
My Dad witnessed this as a kid, said a girl brought her dog and it broke loose and dived in a pool, it yiped and cooked, she just freaked out, jumped in her car and left. Probably the 60's.
Understandable reaction
god that would be so traumatizing
Heartbreaking
Glad she was smart enough to not jump in too like that dude in the vid
@@mrybird4044 Yet she was stupid enough to bring her dog there. She is responsible for his/her painful death and she will be living with that guilt and trauma for the rest of her pathetic life.
Not the dog!!!
I’ve just recently been released after four months from hospital after being in a house fire back in May, and I only had 20% burns. Yellowstone is beyond scary.
I went on vacation to Yellowstone as a kid and it gave me some of my fondest childhood memories. Really amazing sights, including the springs. Would love to go again one day.
I remember my dad asking one of the rangers if about accidents involving the springs, and hearing the story about the dog. Really scared me, obviously! It's fascinating to hear about this story I heard when i was 7-10 be told in a CZcams video I'm watching 6-9 years later haha
"Put up signs and fences" so they can be ignored just like the ones ready up🤦🏾♀️
Exactly
We call it "gun law logic"!
I say we just take the signs down and let nature run its course
Exactly! I remember when I went to the park, they gave us a little pamphlet on the importance of staying FAR away from wildlife. It even showed you how many buses away from each animal you should be. If I remember correctly, the same day someone got to close to a bison and was rammed into.
I laugh every time I see video of that one lady getting charged by the bison
Poor first guy lol I can't believe he fell three times like could u just imagine being in the worst pain of your life 3 times back to back ? Wow
Yeah he must have overreacted and freaked out and slipped over and over
The ground isn’t entirely solid in some places. Walking off the designated path is very dangerous. People need to learn.
@@coolgirlfrozenfeet it was in 1926. It was nothing like it is now
His description kind of reminded me of Nordberg's injuries in the Naked Gun movies lol.
He probably didn’t feel it for very long. Destroyed nerve endings and shock would make that happen
I grew up partially in Idaho and had the opportunity to go to Yellowstone National Park quite a bit. My parents were very stern when we would visit the hot springs and the repeated warnings have always stuck in my mind. It's a beautiful place, but definitely not somewhere to mess around
I just love your sensible , rational and realistic commentary ….you speak many wise words! 👍
Having grown up in Iceland where we have hot springs, thermal pools, big waterfalls, volcanos, glacial lakes, crevasses etc, you learn as a kid to respect those things and the danger of nature. I can't tell you how many times I've seen foreign tourists doing incredibly stupid things and in their sheer ignorance being shocked afterwards when told of the actual danger they were in just seconds a go.
Riptide’s out on the Jupiter,Neptune,etc beaches nearby Jacksonville,Florida?
The majority of deaths are from tourists!!! 85%+!!!