Accident Fell while hiking Injuries Frontal bone (forehead) fracture, six broken vertebrae, and a detached ear
The University of Colorado student was enjoying a short hike in September 2010 when she stopped to rest on a rocky perch just below a popular climbing area in Boulder Canyon. Then she slipped—and bounced 40 feet down the steep hillside.
Twelve hours later, two hikers found Brenna Fisch bleeding, hypothermic, and laying in the trail with a dent in her forehead. She stayed in the hospital for a month as doctors monitored her brain swelling and patched the fracture with a titanium plate, using IV antibiotics to ward off infection.
Two years after the accident, Fisch says she’s still not 100 percent, but she is hiking again, and her memory and focus continue to improve. “I lost the feeling that nature is always a safe and peaceful place, but I’m enjoying life and the outdoors more than I ever have,” she says. “And now, when I’m hiking alone, I always tell someone where I’m going and when to expect me back.”
Another notable example you might have mentioned is Hugh Herr who as an 18 year old teenager was caught in a snow storm on the side of Mt. Washington and spent three days there in sub-freezing tempertures before being rescued.
Hugh lost both legs below the knees but nevertheless turned himself into a world class climber. Also as a scientist at MIT he has developed some of the worlds most highly sophisticated prosthetic devices.http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hugh_Herr
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Another notable example you might have mentioned is Hugh Herr who as an 18 year old teenager was caught in a snow storm on the side of Mt. Washington and spent three days there in sub-freezing tempertures before being rescued.
Hugh lost both legs below the knees but nevertheless turned himself into a world class climber. Also as a scientist at MIT he has developed some of the worlds most highly sophisticated prosthetic devices.http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hugh_Herr
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