@phuongtuinhatrang: Túi Đeo Chéo Vải Bố unisex#tuibaotu #tuideocheo #tuinhieungan #tuixinh #xuhuong

Phượng Túi Nha Trang
Phượng Túi Nha Trang
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Sunday 17 May 2026 22:53:00 GMT
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@McNolty318 🚨 Safety Alert - I’ve spent 4 months thinking about @andymessnersnow accident this past March, where he suffered multiple fractures to his pelvis / hip. Initially when I saw his footage all I could think about was how lucky that things didn’t turn out worse. Andy is a father and a husband first and foremost. As time has passed this summer I’ve decided to share what I refer to as a post incident debrief, goal being - prevention and in worse case scenario will lead to swifter incident management.  As Andy left the lip I could see his thumb throttle hand slip off the bar and he was unable to leave the “dead air” travel with his snowmobile and was landed on in less then desirable snow conditions. As you can hear in my voice it was like watching a horror movie. I HATE seeing ppl get hurt. I was filming near my sled, my sled was facing the direction of the jump with no obstructions in front of it. It took 7-8 seconds to start my sled and proceed forward to execute my plan. I arrived at Andy 18-19 seconds after he was pinned under his sled. It took 28-29 seconds to remove the snowmobile off of him. I didn’t know I yelled until I watched the video, I was calm as cucumber and I think the only reason I made noise was to ensure the sled lifted the bars high enough I could toss it off Andy without risk of it coming down on him again. Shortly after that we performed a rapid body search to isolate and determine scope of injury. We set up VHF relay to Cell service and hailed SAR. SAR was so busy this day they could not send air support and if we didn’t evacuate Andy on our own he would have spent the night and with his injury that could have been fatal. We medicated him and that tuff / stubborn / in shock human rode his own sled right to the ambulance with the support of his friends as assists. I’ve been doing this a long long time and avoiding serious injury is at the forefront of every action i take. I’m not risk adverse, I believe in the pursuit of doing dangerous things safely. Not everyone gets this but passion leads my way. However it is critical to ensure your prepared for the worse case situation and your crew is trained and prepared. It could save a life. #realtalk
@McNolty318 🚨 Safety Alert - I’ve spent 4 months thinking about @andymessnersnow accident this past March, where he suffered multiple fractures to his pelvis / hip. Initially when I saw his footage all I could think about was how lucky that things didn’t turn out worse. Andy is a father and a husband first and foremost. As time has passed this summer I’ve decided to share what I refer to as a post incident debrief, goal being - prevention and in worse case scenario will lead to swifter incident management. As Andy left the lip I could see his thumb throttle hand slip off the bar and he was unable to leave the “dead air” travel with his snowmobile and was landed on in less then desirable snow conditions. As you can hear in my voice it was like watching a horror movie. I HATE seeing ppl get hurt. I was filming near my sled, my sled was facing the direction of the jump with no obstructions in front of it. It took 7-8 seconds to start my sled and proceed forward to execute my plan. I arrived at Andy 18-19 seconds after he was pinned under his sled. It took 28-29 seconds to remove the snowmobile off of him. I didn’t know I yelled until I watched the video, I was calm as cucumber and I think the only reason I made noise was to ensure the sled lifted the bars high enough I could toss it off Andy without risk of it coming down on him again. Shortly after that we performed a rapid body search to isolate and determine scope of injury. We set up VHF relay to Cell service and hailed SAR. SAR was so busy this day they could not send air support and if we didn’t evacuate Andy on our own he would have spent the night and with his injury that could have been fatal. We medicated him and that tuff / stubborn / in shock human rode his own sled right to the ambulance with the support of his friends as assists. I’ve been doing this a long long time and avoiding serious injury is at the forefront of every action i take. I’m not risk adverse, I believe in the pursuit of doing dangerous things safely. Not everyone gets this but passion leads my way. However it is critical to ensure your prepared for the worse case situation and your crew is trained and prepared. It could save a life. #realtalk

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