To avoid a 'knee-jerk' response. Too many of those flying about in here...
.............
hell, i help out when i can ....
-and what's wrong with knees huh????
( .. eee's havin' a go at knees now!!!! )
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To avoid a 'knee-jerk' response. Too many of those flying about in here...
ELKINS, W.Va. - More than 50 emergency responders and volunteers were searching Monday for an autistic hiker who strayed from his parents in the Dolly Sods Wilderness area.
Jacob Allen, 18, of Morgantown, was hiking with his parents, Jim and Karen Allen, on Sunday afternoon when he got ahead of them and didn't answer when they called out his name, said Chris Stadelman, public information officer at the command post.
The family declined to speak with the media, but thanked searchers for their efforts and asked for the public's prayers, Stadelman said.
While Allen is described by his mother as severely autistic, he is in good physical shape and likes to hike, Stadelman said. The family visits Dolly Sods, located within the Monongahela National Forest, a couple times a year, he said.
Temperatures dropped to as low as 38 degrees overnight, said Stadelman, but were rising steadily Monday morning, which was clear and sunny.
Residents of several counties were searching along with two search dogs and a crew in a National Guard helicopter.
The primary search area was about 4 square miles of terrain that included thick brush and steep inclines.
What were mom and dad thinking? Why did they let him wander ahead? Why were they taking him out into the 'woods' in the first place? A little common sense here, folks. He'd've been just as happy wandering around a petting zoo...and a lot less likely to get lost.
I wonder if he was having some kind of deep episode and some form of harsh paranoia kicked in to make him scatter... or some kind of euphoria.Allen is described by his mother as severely autistic
The kid is 18 not 8. You don't take an 18 year old to a petting zoo. He is autistic not retarded.
Adding to that, they're in West Virginia. I've been there quite a few times, andthat is definitely not a good place to be lost in the wilderness...and the two-legged predators are not taken into account in this. While some here like to look at the Appalachians with derision, those mountains ain't no joke to someone with no food, water, or ability to function with that kind of disability.While Allen is described by his mother as severely autistic, he is in good physical shape and likes to hike, Stadelman said.