According to a National Park Service news release, the 42-year-old Belgian tourist was taking a short walk Saturday in the Mesquite Flat Sand Dunes in 123-degree heat when he either broke or lost his flip-flops, putting his feet into direct contact with the desert ground. The result: third-degree burns.

“The skin was melted off his foot,” said Death Valley National Park Service Ranger Gia Ponce. “The ground can be much hotter — 170, 180 [degrees]. Sometimes up into the 200 range.”

Unable to get out on his own and in extreme pain, the man and his family recruited other park visitors to help; together, the group carried him to the sand dunes parking lot, where park rangers assessed his injuries.

Though they wanted a helicopter to fly him out, helicopters can’t generate enough lift to fly in the heat-thinned air over the hottest parts of Death Valley, officials said. So park rangers summoned an ambulance that took him to higher ground, where it was a cooler 109 degrees and he could then be flown out.

  • @sploosh
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    31 month ago

    Others are bad at risk assessment by over estimating risk. They are boring buzzkills.

    • @samus12345
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      41 month ago

      Much better to overestimate risk than underestimate it when the risk is death!

      • @sploosh
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        01 month ago

        But how worth living is a life overly guarded?

        • @samus12345
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          51 month ago

          There’s a big range between “never takes any risks” and “takes stupid pointless risks.”

        • @[email protected]
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          fedilink
          31 month ago

          Is “not wearing flip flops in death valley” or "not climbing 200ft up a tree really OVERLY guarded, though? 🤔