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Windmills Tilted, Scared Cows Butchered, Lies Skewered on the Lance of Reality ... or something to that effect.
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Friday, June 20, 2014
Couple rescued from dense rhododendron mountain forest after five hour ordeal
A couple in their 50s had to be rescued from a dense rhododendron forest
after they became trapped in a "treacherous area" on an Irish
mountainside.
The five-hour rescue operation took place in the Knockmealdowns
Mountains, which straddle the border between County Waterford and County
Tipperary.
The couple, who are experienced hill walkers, got into difficulty on
steep ground overlooking Bay Lough on Sunday.
One of the rescuers said the plants were "like an impenetrable jungle".
Jimmy Barry from the South Eastern Mountain Rescue Association said the
rhododendron forest was so thick and deep that people could not hear
each other.
"It was horrendous - I have been a member of mountain rescue for 15 years and it was probably one of the most dangerous exercises or rescues I've been on," Mr
Barry said.
The couple had lost their way on a hillside that sloped down to a lake.
The rescuers located them quickly and managed to get into a position no
more than 400 meters away, but did not anticipate how difficult it would
be to reach the couple through the dense vegetation.
"We sent the first party of five in - I was in that party - and within
50 meters, we couldn't move. It was like a jungle and it was horrendous,
because everything dies underneath rhododendron," Mr Barry said.
"And it was messy, we had to crawl through it, carry our gear and then
try and locate the people as well."
He said he had never seen his rescue team struggle so much among
rhododendrons, and it took them two hours to walk about 350 meters.
"We kept going," he said. "Two hours later we finally reached the two
people inside the middle of the rhododendron forest, and then the fun
began, because we had to decide how we were going to get out of it.
We were 100 meters from the edge of the lake, so we decided to literally
drop down through the forest," he added.
The plant's dense foliage tends to block out sunlight and kill off
surrounding vegetation.
Mr Barry said this meant the rhododendron forest had produced very
difficult terrain on the mountainside.
"It's regarded as a weed. It's not a native plant to Ireland or any part
of the British Isles and they've just gone wild," he said.
"It looks beautiful, but underneath it nothing of our native plants
grows, and it's just horrible in there.
Dangerous, because where it was growing on the side of the lake, it's
very steep ground, so we were literally walking on rhododendron.
We could look down through the rhododendron and see 10ft drops, 20ft
drops and at the end we were looking at a 50ft drop, but we had to go
down through it to get out."
The couple and their rescuers eventually reached the lake where they
were picked up by a boat and taken to safety.
Mr Barry said the couple were not hurt but were "tired and very, very
relieved".
He added that his team was "exhausted" following the rescue.
The multi-agency operation also involved Cahir River Rescue and the
police.
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