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''RUN FOR YOUR LIVES!''
Reader's Digest Canada
|March 2022
At a northern B.C. hot spring, swimmers raced to save one another from a rogue black bear

A tropical oasis in the boreal forest, just south of the Yukon-B.C. border, the hot springs are a popular tourist haven complete with campsites and a playground. It was August 14, 1997.
As Kitchen relaxed beside the springs, watching the girls play, terrified screams suddenly erupted from a part of the park called the Hanging Gardens, where plants cascade down a natural terrace. The sound jolted Kitchen to his feet.
He rushed along a rain-slicked boardwalk and up some wooden stairs to reach the gardens' viewing platform-and stopped, horrified. On the wooden structure, a huge bear straddled a teen boy beside the motionless form of a woman. Both were covered with blood from deep gashes in their swimsuit-clad bodies.
PATTI MCCONNELL HAD been driving north from Paris, Texas, for over a week, heading for Alaska to start a new life. The vivacious 37-year-old mother hoped to get a job there and raise her two kids, Kelly, 13, and Kristin, seven.
It had been a tiring trip, and the children were delighted when McConnell turned off the Alaska Highway and into the Liard River park.
Denne historien er fra March 2022-utgaven av Reader's Digest Canada.
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