July 14, 2018

"The boy was given what Thai and American participants described variously as a muscle relaxant or anti-anxiety medication."

"A panic attack in a chokepoint no bigger than a manhole would almost certainly be fatal. Finally, the boy was swaddled in a flexible plastic stretcher — akin to a tortilla wrap, Hodges said — to confine his limbs and protect him from the cheese-grater walls. And then, with his teammates watching, they pulled him under the murky water. The original plan had called for two divers — one in front of the stretcher, one behind. But that configuration was scrapped as too bulky for the shoulder-width passages and elbow turns.... Instead, a diver kept the swaddled boy in a body-to-body clinch for as much of the swim as possible, the officer said, handing the boy over to a fresh diver after his designated stretch. Keeping the child warm was critical.... The worst portion of the swim was the last one, a deep tubular swoop that held the water like a sink trap. All told, it was a grueling two-hour trek through muck-filled passages. 'It is crawling through mud and underwater tunnels, and you can’t see your hands,” said Erik Brown, a Canadian diver who was among the 18'..."

I'm reading the very detailed, well-written WaPo article "‘Time is running out’: Inside the treacherous rescue of boys trapped in a Thai cave."

I wanted to quote that particular part because it shows the ludicrous wrongness of the BBC graphic I called "excellent":

19 comments:

Kevin said...

“If you don't read the newspaper, you're uninformed. If you read the newspaper, you're mis-informed.” — Mark Twain

Just remember some of those boys couldn’t swim and you’d immediately see how ridiculous this graphic was.

Kevin said...

The media is not in the news business, they’re in the business of getting clicks and selling papers.

You say fake news. They say wildly successful business strategy.

See: Fallon, Jimmy

Eleanor said...

When I was in college, some of the guys used to go spelunking in New York State. The caves were small, and I never had any urge to enter the caves with them. But I used to go along and set up a small camp at the entrance of the cave. There was a timeline where if they hadn't returned I would go for rescue help. They always returned safely, but that didn't make them cocky. It's a dangerous sport, and while I applaud the coach's efforts at keeping the kids safe until help arrived, I haven't heard about any safety precautions he took before entering the caves. Nor have I seen anything on the various TV networks or in print about spelunking as a sport and the safety issues participants should consider. Maybe I missed it? Given the interest in the rescue and the recklessness of youth, it might be apropos to do a little cautionary teaching somewhere by someone?

Ralph L said...

How on earth did anyone find them? If he/they swam up that tube in murky water, they're the biggest hero IMO.

tcrosse said...

Given the interest in the rescue and the recklessness of youth, it might be apropos to do a little cautionary teaching somewhere by someone?

At least issue some Caveats.

gilbar said...

now, Remember! Elon Musk, the Coolest and Smartest and Bravest and Most Modest person EVER! generously took credit for thinking about sending a submarine made out of a used rocket fuel tube (a round cylinder about 2 or 3 feet in diameter); to SAVE THESE BOYS!!!
Elon, being the CSBMMpE, knew that With his cool submarine; they'd be able to just load the kids up into the sub, and scoot them out (once the widening of the cave to allow the sub to fit was completed).
Naturally, Elon (CSBMMpE) is taking FULL Credit for this rescue; After all, it was His Submarine that SAVED THOSE KIDS (or, would have been, if they'd just waited until it arrived, and then widened the cave so that it would fit)
https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2018-07-10/elon-musk-defends-mini-submarine-left-unused-in-thai-cave-rescue

Fernandinande said...

It's very brave to let someone drag you around while you're unconscious.

Fernandinande said...

Cave-rape drugs.

Narayanan said...

I read the Boys went in on their own as ritual after game win.

Coach goes in looking after parents are worried when they don't return.

Narayanan said...

American culture trait ... To hell with facts.

Wince said...

"The boy was given what Thai and American participants described variously as a muscle relaxant or anti-anxiety medication."

Not the first time that's been tried in Thailand.

ALP said...

"....akin to a tortilla wrap..."

WHOA! WHOA! What's this tortilla wrap shit about? The writer's days are numbered for not using the culturally correct analogy: a spring roll.

Yancey Ward said...

I suffer from mild claustrophobia due to a minor childhood incident, and reading this account of the rescue causes me some discomfort. All in all, quite a rescue effort.

Fritz said...

The news industry is often wrong but never uncertain.

rcocean said...

The BBC graphic looks like something out of a Bond movie.

rcocean said...

BTW, Scuba Diving in murkey water most be quite unpleasant.

Sydney said...

This struck me, about pumping the water out of the cave:
Within three days, more than 40 machines had arrived, Kobchai said. At more than 400,000 gallons an hour, the pumping power stabilized the water level, and lowered it on drier days. Downhill, it flooded the fields of 128 farmers, destroying their rice harvests for the year.

A lot of sacrifice for those young men. Not to mention the dead diver.

Mrs. X said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Mrs. X said...

About a quarter of the comments on the article amount to: “...but Trump is an asshole!” You stay classy, Wapo readers.