On the day before the twenty -eighth birthday of Tiffany Slaton, she was looking forward to eating a group of Dunkaroos – cookies with a declining frost – which was saved by a temporary birthday cake. This was the only real food that I left after I survived 24 days in the Sierra Nevada Mountains, and lives on the wilderness Boiled leak and snow.
It originally started as a single vacation for a three -day vacation around Chevir and Huntington Lakes in Fresno Province, California, turned into a week -long stay. It ended at a cabin more than 40 miles away, at Vermillion Valley, where the owner of the product found Slaton on Wednesday.
By the time when it was rescued, the baskets of 13 snowstorms and climbed at 11,000 feet rises, officials said on Friday. In addition to dropping 10 pounds from this ordeal, she also lost her tent and sleeping bags, and forced to give up her bike in a head mark.
At a press conference on Friday, along with her parents and Sharif Fresno John Zanoni, Salton spoke publicly about her journey for the first time. Zanoni described her story one “They will make movies”.
“It is really an incredible story about perseverance, design and survival,” Sharif added.
The authorities said that Slaaton, an outdoor person from Jeffersonville, Georgia, had disappeared by her parents on April 29 after they had not heard of them in nine days. A large -scale operation was performed to locate the Slaton from May 6 to May 10, and it extends and spreads 600 square miles A helicopter.
Officials said on Friday that the local authorities and volunteers covered 4,300 miles on foot and a car in search of Salton.
Slaaton started her journey on April 20, equipped with basic camping supplies, including an electric bike and a cana bag, expected to disappear for only a few days.
She said that Slaaton fell early in Jurf, and she was unable to return to the main road due to a modern ice collapse. She was consciously for about two hours, and when consciousness was restored, she had to divide one of her legs and “float on the other knee in place.”
On Friday, she said that she tried five calls to 911 – without success – and she could not run the navigation system on her phone. From frustration, she asked her phone about the site of the nearest Starbucks – gave her a site 18 miles, which is closer to restoring her way to the garden entrance.
Classon pressed, relying on her trick and what she could find in the wild. Her skills k Artcher is high -levelHer medical knowledge, such as dialysis and her gardener training, has proven very important to its survival. She wrote every day in an attempt to “keep the sane”.
“The worst thing you can do in the event of an emergency is panic,” said Sallet.
Five days later, Sallaton has run out of most of her food and relied on her skills in searching for the leeks she knew A citizen in the Sierra Nevada group. She said she made tea every day with Manzanita and pine needles.
Slaaton moved Kaiser Pass, a 9000 -feet -feet top top of 10 to 12 feet of snow before it was plowed earlier this week. Ultimately, her way to Vermilion Valley and Lake Edison, where she was finally rescued.
When I watched for the first time the cabin of Vermilion Valley Resort, I thought it was its tanning and “somehow managed to reach the Arctic.” She opened the door, which was opened, and found inside what she described as “the best bedroom I have ever seen.”
Salton was found on Wednesday – a day before her twenty -eighth birthday – by resort owner Christopher Guterres. The snow had cleared the roads, allowing it to reach its property to prepare it for the summer. Guterres told the authorities that he had left the cabin unlocked in the event of the wandering of the way.
“This was the thirteenth high school storm in which I was, and it was the last.” “If it does not come that day, they found my body there.”
Zanouni described it as a “miracle” that the road occurred on Tuesday, which enabled Guterres to reach the next day. When Slaaton was found, the resort owner said he got acquainted with her missing person’s report.
“I went out, did not say a single word, and just ran, and all that she wanted was embrace. It was a beautiful surreal moment,” Guterres told a press conference on Wednesday. “And that when I knew. This is when I realized this.”