Anonymous ID: e683a8 June 18, 2023, 9:20 a.m. No.19027525   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>19027506

I said "Minor' babysitter, like the MEME keeps claiming.

You read it, did you not comprehend it? Or did you just want to be a jerk and post a slide to the truth?

Anonymous ID: e683a8 June 18, 2023, 9:43 a.m. No.19027648   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>7693

>>19027634

>Ashley is their daughter

 

Jill wasn't the minor "Babysitter" that the meme keeps claiming.

 

She was already married to someone else when she met Joe. It's been dug to death.

>Ashley is their daughter

 

>>19027497

 

>Jill wasn't the minor "Babysitter"that the meme keeps claiming.

 

>She was already married to someone else when she met Joe. It's been dug to death.

 

Hum … You projecting again?

Tisk, tisk

Anonymous ID: e683a8 June 18, 2023, 10:13 a.m. No.19027798   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>19027693

No, you have an agenda. Probably made the meme I was referring to.

 

The top of the bread meme, that everyone sees, and then other anon's repeat is where my post came from.

 

Your limp wristed, impotent soyboy tantrums won't work. You look to pounce on anons all the time, with your lower energy vibes and name calling.

Toddle back to reddit where you can pretend you have some power.

Anonymous ID: e683a8 June 18, 2023, 10:43 a.m. No.19027920   🗄️.is 🔗kun

After a Winter Deluge, California Rivers Are Too Dangerous to Enjoy

 

KERN COUNTY, Calif. — Gwyny Pett has been visiting the Kern River for decades, camping there as a girl and then taking her own children, now grown, to splash in shallows so calm they felt like a private pool. She has seen it in dry cycles like last year, when the river was difficult to explore not because of surging water, but because she turned her ankles on the exposed pebbles.

 

She has also seen the destructive power of the river during high-water years. And althoughPett,66, recently looked ready for a swim at a popular riverside campground — black bikini on, pool towel draped over her beach chair — there was no way she was getting in.

 

“I mean, this is dangerous,” she said, gesturing at the water speeding past.

 

After a parade– of epic winter storms,== the Kern River and other major waterways fed by melting Sierra Nevada snow have become wild torrents — a transformation so dangerous that several counties in central California have prohibited people from entering the water.

 

Since April, at least 16 people have died or gone missing in rivers across the state, according to The Mercury News, including two young siblings who were swept away on the Kings River in Fresno County in May. On Wednesday, a kayaker died on the Kern River, about 20 miles upstream from the campground where Pett was sitting.

 

“There is a historic amount of water right now: faster, colder and more deadly than we’ve seen in recent years,” said Brian Ferguson, a spokesperson for the Governor’s Office of Emergency Services. “There is no amount of training or exercise that prepares a human body.”

 

In the Central Valley and Sierra Nevada foothills, river swimming holes and rafting trips are a way of life each summer. The snowmelt-infused water can feel like nature’s gift to inland residents who must cope with sweltering heat without the benefit of ocean breezes.

 

But people die every year because they underestimate the currents they cannot see, often without wearing life jackets or knowing how to swim. This year, officials are warning everyone to take heed, especially those who have safely dipped in a river during normal years and may feel overconfident.

 

“During COVID, a lot of people found the outdoors,” said Mike Howard, the superintendent for the Auburn State Recreation Area, which includes two forks of the American River about 35 miles northeast of Sacramento. “But as they come to their favorite spot in June or on the Fourth of July, where swimming was relatively safe last year, this year is going to be very different.”

 

At least three people have drowned on the American River this year. Howard said that the state recreation area now has swift water lifeguards at some areas, but the currents are too unsafe for them to swim after a visitor in distress.

 

“We’re very focused on prevention,” he said.

 

In Fresno County, as waters rose in March, officials closed the Kings and San Joaquin rivers to anyone except professional rafting companies and threatened violators with $225 fines. Tony Botti, a spokesperson for the Fresno County Sheriff’s Office, said that compliance has been high.

 

“Unfortunately, the tragedy of losing two children reallywoke them up,”Botti said. “It’s life over recreation.”

 

moar

https://www.yahoo.com/news/winter-deluge-california-rivers-too-154131908.html