6 people rescued after raft tumbles over waterfall

The passengers were on an unguided, rented raft when it plummeted 30 feet down a waterfall in Pennsylvania’s Ohiopyle State Park, authorities said.

#ABCNews #Raft #Rescue #Waterfall

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24 thoughts on “6 people rescued after raft tumbles over waterfall

  1. You can get a guide on the middle section of the yough, but it costs way more than just renting a raft. It's a calm relaxing float down the river with a small section of class 2 Rapids. I have no idea how you couldn't see the sign. My 5 year old saw the signs and let me know. It's also only about a 20 foot drop at the most.

  2. "Didn't have a guide" is probably inaccurate/misleading advice. This river was raging over 5 feet-flood level. Normal level is 1.5 to 2.0 feet. I question the rental company for renting a raft at this level. The trip was to be run on the Middle Yough, a Class II run that is absolutely perfect for a non-guided trip. But only at low water. Of course, one issue with the Middle Yough is that before you get to the Lower Yough (Class II with a IV and "Dimple Rock", a rapid with an undercut rock that has trapped and drowned people), you encounter this waterfall (OhioPyle Falls). At normal flows, the warning signs are very visible and you have plenty of time to get to shore, no matter how inexperienced your group is. But at flood stage, stuff happens. Flooded rivers require extreme awareness and considerable skill. Things move fast and the river is very powerful, often so much so that one missed stroke can make the difference between life and death. Agreed though that the lifejackets were the biggest reason for the high survival rate here. Even at low water, in the Class II rapids upstream, you need to have a properly fitted PFD-people die all the time in what seem to be placid rapids. Another factor that saved these people is the angle of the raft as it goes over the falls. You usually want to hit a hydraulic straight-on, full force. Definitely not sideways. Though if you look at the rafters with their paddles not moving (particularly the "leader", the person if the stern who is holding his up in the air), they just got lucky. They also somehow managed to take the one "run" in this falls that you can do and survive. So yea, a guide at this water level would have been better, but I sure wouldn't want to guide a bunch of newbees at 5 feet, even on the Middle Yough. Again, I question the sanity of the raft rental company here. And I'll bet their insurance company is questioning too-very close call. This isn't the first type incident. Amazing river rescue story if you have some time….https://www.americanwhitewater.org/content/Accident/detail/accidentid/34359 Yes you are correct. Ohiopyle Falls is 20 feet high. It is illegal to run the falls, except once a year, there is an extreme kayak race over this waterfall. I've heard it's a fairly easy run, if you are good and take the right route. Never done it….maybe someday.

  3. The footage of the “parks recreations manager” looks like it’s from the 1970’s. 🎥🎞📺
    I’m happy they are all safe now. 🎉

  4. They said like 40 ft that is NOT a high waterfall the raft came right back up. I guess they didn't know the raft had handles.either? This is like that my Everest shit lol

  5. 40 feet? Are you serious?! What are they looking at? That's not 40 feet. LOL! 15-20 feet at the most. It was about 2 raft lengths, maybe a little more. It actually wasn't that bad of a fall.

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