Lodi News-Sentinel

Chasing ‘likes’ on Instagram, highers break limbs — and need rescuing

- By Jaclyn Cosgrove

LOS ANGELES — As Wilson Guarin watched the green helicopter roaring above, he wondered if the men being hoisted into the sky felt the risk had been worth it.

Moments earlier, Guarin and his children, Olivia, 11, and Brandon, 12, had hiked to Hermit Falls in Angeles National Forest, one of the most popular waterfalls in the Los Angeles area.

Soon after they arrived, they saw a man dislocate his shoulder when he jumped into the rock pool at the base of Hermit Falls. Less than a minute later, another man jumped and appeared to break both his legs.

Guarin, 40, of Long Beach said the cliff jumpers’ intentions were obvious: They wanted to get a video of themselves and post it to social media.

A thirst among hikers, often inexperien­ced and under-prepared, to gobble up “likes” and shares on Instagram and other social media sites has led to a significan­t increase in rescue missions by first responders.

The Los Angeles County Sheriff ’s Department’s Search and Rescue teams conducted 681 missions in 2017, the largest number in five years. It’s a 38 percent increase from the 491 rescues they did in 2013.

The team’s leaders say the single largest factor for that increase is people posting videos of extreme activities online. Then, without any thought about the difficulty, others try to re-create their own 15-second version of glory. Rescue teams in Santa Barbara and San Bernardino counties have seen similar increases.

“People will post videos of themselves jumping off of Hermit Falls or the Malibu rock pool, and they post it in the springtime when there’s a decent amount of water, but now, the water is a lot less, so what used to be a 10-foot pool is now a 5-foot pool,” said Michael Leum, who oversees the Sheriff Department’s Search and Rescue teams. “You don’t want to be a lawn dart going into that shallow pool.”

On Instagram, posts from visitors venturing to waterfalls and swimming holes in Angeles National Forest and other recreation areas show hikers morphing into models, striking seemingly the same poses in the same places. There’s the sexy pose on a rock. Sometimes it’s the contemplat­ive one, where they gaze into the sky. The subject line is often a quote about nature, but sometimes it’s just a pun referencin­g “Waterfalls,” a hit by the ‘90s R&B group TLC.

Or maybe just someone bragging about how cool his friends are. A few visitors even dress up, either in suits and evening gowns for a photo shoot, or as mermaids. And then, sometimes, people just get naked — because YOLO (you only live once).

Growing up in the San Gabriel Valley, Robert Garcia remembers when Eaton Canyon and Monkey Canyon, a harder-to-reach swimming hole, were known only to locals. Today, it’s easy to find the routes online and videos on YouTube that explain just how much fun a person might have.

Garcia, the fire chief for Angeles National Forest, doesn’t discourage people from enjoying the outdoors. But he points out that many accidents are avoidable and happen either when people go off trail or ignore official warnings about an area being closed — such as the upper falls of Eaton Canyon — and go anyway.

“Beyond the safety element, there’s an element of resource damage,” Garcia said. “Trails are designed with mitigation and resource protection in mind, so user-created trails don’t have that level of planning.”

 ?? WALLY SKALIJ/LOS ANGELES TIMES ?? A boy struggles to hang on as he is about to slip into the water on a slippery rock at Hermit Falls in the San Gabriel Mountains on Sept. 22.
WALLY SKALIJ/LOS ANGELES TIMES A boy struggles to hang on as he is about to slip into the water on a slippery rock at Hermit Falls in the San Gabriel Mountains on Sept. 22.

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