Connect with us

News

Stranded woman drank water from moss after California crash

Published

on

Hernandez had been driving to her sister's home in Lancaster, near Los Angeles, on July 6 when a small animal crossed in front of her, causing her to swerve and lose control of her car, she wrote from her hospital bed Sunday in a Facebook account. (Pixabay photo)

Hernandez had been driving to her sister’s home in Lancaster, near Los Angeles, on July 6 when a small animal crossed in front of her, causing her to swerve and lose control of her car. (Pixabay photo)

LOS ANGELES — A self-described beachcomber says it was her luckiest find yet: A woman who survived a 250-foot car plunge off a cliff and a week stranded on a remote California beach.

“We freakin’ love that beach and we’re so glad she’s alive,” Chelsea Moore said Monday as she described the afternoon last Friday when she and her husband found 23-year-old Angela Hernandez of Portland.

Hernandez had been driving to her sister’s home in Lancaster, near Los Angeles, on July 6 when a small animal crossed in front of her, causing her to swerve and lose control of her car, she wrote from her hospital bed Sunday in a Facebook account.

“The only thing I really remember after that was waking up,” Hernandez wrote. “I was still in my car and I could feel water rising over my knees. My head hurt and when I touched it, I found blood on my hands.”

Hernandez said she broke a window of her car, jumped into the ocean and swam ashore. She fell asleep on the beach and realized what had happened after she woke up.

Moore, 34, and her husband Chad, 31, of Morro Bay were camping above an oceanside cliff in the rugged Big Sur area of Monterey County when they decided to climb down a cliff to a remote beach to find some good surfing and fishing spots — and a little adventure.

“We’re avid beachcombers. We get excited about sea glass and abalone shells,” Moore said.

Instead, they came on a car bumper and a short time later spotted a rusty and wrecked Jeep. Nobody was in it.

The couple took the license plate to show authorities. They also saw items scattered around that they also collected, among them, a poster for the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in Ohio, Moore said.

“In my head, I thought that maybe someone had died and we would give these items to the next of kin,” she said. “We both agreed that there weren’t survivors.”

But just in case, they walked further along the beach.

After another quarter-mile, the Moores heard a cry for help, and then another.

Then they saw Hernandez.

“She was really happy and she wasn’t sure we were real,” Moore said. “She told us we were the first people she had seen in days but she didn’t know how many days exactly. We told her we were going to help her and get her off that beach.”

Hernandez had two black eyes and burst blood vessels in her eyes.

“Her clothes were in tatters. Her socks were in scraps” and she was shoeless, Moore said. “She was very wet. At high tide there’s no beach. She said sometimes she’d been sleeping and she’d wake up at night with waves smacking her.”

“I found a high spot I was able to climb up to and found myself there almost every day,” Hernandez wrote. “I could see cars driving across the cliff and felt like if I could yell just loud enough, that one could hear or see me. That’s all it would take to make it back to my family. Just one person noticing me.”

By the third day, she made her way back to her wrecked car, found a 10-inch radiator hose and eventually used it and her hands to collect water.

Hernandez said she developed a daily ritual of walking the beach in search of new high ground, screaming for help at the top of her lungs and collecting fresh water.

Everything changed on Friday, when Hernandez woke up and saw a woman walking across the shore.

“I thought it was a dream,” Hernandez wrote.

While her husband stayed with Hernandez, Moore raced and sloshed her way through water and poison oak, scrambled up a rugged cliff trail to the top to get help from the camp’s host and brought back down a pack of food and clothing.

“She chose a peanut butter granola bar. We wrapped her in blankets…tried to keep her comfortable and talking.”

Hours later, rescuers were able to take Hernandez back up the cliff and helicopter her to a hospital.

“We’re just really lucky beachcombers,” Chelsea said. “She’s the hero.”

Moore and her husband spoke to Hernandez and her sister by phone in the hospital on Sunday night.

“She told us she wants to name her kids after us,” Chelsea said. “We’re like equally in awe of each other. It’s kind of cool.”

Continue Reading
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Latest

PBBM PBBM
News1 hour ago

PBBM expects ratification of PH-South Korea FTA deal this year

MANILA — President Ferdinand R. Marcos Jr. is expecting the ratification of the free trade agreement (FTA) between the Philippines...

tattooed man wearing orange shirt inside a jail tattooed man wearing orange shirt inside a jail
News1 hour ago

BuCor: 805 PDLs released in April

MANILA – Prison officials on Friday said 805 persons deprived of liberty (PDLs) were released from various operating prisons and...

News1 hour ago

Consumers using excessive water to get warning from MWSS

MANILA – Consumers with excessive water consumption in Metro Manila and nearby provinces may receive warning notices from the Metropolitan...

Headline1 hour ago

100 caregivers wanted in South Korea

MANILA – The Republic of South Korea is looking for 100 Filipino caregivers, according to the Department of Migrant Workers...

Entertainment19 hours ago

Kim heats up the summer as Metro’s latest cover star

Sizzles as Metro Body 2024 headliner Multimedia idol Kim Chiu shares her journey to healthy living and her reaction to...

Health19 hours ago

Can this thumb test tell if you are at increased risk of a hidden aortic aneurysm?

All the parts of our bodies share an inherent connectivity. This goes much further than “the foot bone’s connected to...

Dua Lipa Dua Lipa
Entertainment19 hours ago

Radical Optimism is Dua Lipa’s philosophy for dealing with life’s chaos – but radical openness is a better approach

  In a teaser video for her third album, Radical Optimism, Dua Lipa explained that every track has that “through-the-struggle-you-are-going-to-make-it”...

Mother Holding Her Baby Mother Holding Her Baby
Health19 hours ago

Do we really need to burp babies? Here’s what the research says

Parents are often advised to burp their babies after feeding them. Some people think burping after feeding is important to...

News19 hours ago

Our research shows a strong link between unemployment and domestic violence: what does this mean for income support?

MART PRODUCTION/Pexels Increasing income support could help keep women and children safe according to new work demonstrating strong links between...

Students Sitting Inside the Classroom While Using Their Smartphone Students Sitting Inside the Classroom While Using Their Smartphone
Canada News19 hours ago

Why students harmed by addictive social media need more than cellphone bans and surveillance

Recently, five school boards in Ontario filed a lawsuit against the major social media platforms: Facebook and Instagram, Snapchat and...

WordPress Ads