
I'd have said "Just doing what anybody would do". Well, looks like NOT everyone would do what is right. That man is sure glad that YOU did.
![ThumpUp [thumbup]](./images/smilies/msp_thumbup.gif)
I'm happy that you're OK with my posting of your video here. I thought I might be oversteping by posting your video here without asking you first but I justified that issue in my mind by remembering that heros never seek accolades and always make the statement "I was just doing what anyone should have done"oneshot wrote:BigD, thanks for posting this here.. I migrate between sites day to day, this site is still my favorite though..
oh man, thanks! i had no idea..Gringo Pescador wrote:![]()
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Made the Seattle Times
http://blogs.seattletimes.com/today/201 ... st-friday/
Looks like Oneshot got his thanks. It's nice to know there's some good people out there.Eventually, fire crews arrived and took the man out of the lake. The man was later able to thank Pulling for the rescue.
"He shook my hand very sincerely and didn't really want to let go, and just thanked me for helping him out," Pulling said.
Boating. Washington State has one of the highest
numbers of registered boats in the nation. Boating
carries risks for injury. The 2010 U.S. Coast Guard
national report show that in the United States:
• There were 4,967 boating incidents.
• There were 3,474 boating injuries.
• The fatality rate was 5.4 deaths per 100,000
registered recreational vessels.
• Almost three-fourths of all fatal boating deaths
were due to drowning; of those, 88 percent were
not wearing a life jacket.
It is estimated that 85 percent of Washington State’s
boating-related drowning deaths could have been
prevented if the person had been wearing a life jacket.
In 2011, alcohol was involved in about 20 percent of
all reported boating fatalities.11 In Washington in 2011,
there were 15 boating-related deaths and 54 injuries
reported to U.S. Coast Guard.