Current:Home > ScamsAlaska landslide survivor says force of impact threw her around ‘like a piece of weightless popcorn’ -ProfitPioneers Hub
Alaska landslide survivor says force of impact threw her around ‘like a piece of weightless popcorn’
View
Date:2025-04-23 09:42:13
WRANGELL, Alaska (AP) — Christina Florschutz was dressing after stepping out of the shower of her upstairs bathroom when she heard “a horrible noise, a very loud noise.”
Florschutz, who had heard both a tornado and a mudslide before, knew exactly what this noise was — a landslide.
The force of the mountainside slammed into the home she shared with her husband near the southeast Alaska island community of Wrangell, tossing her around “like a piece of weightless popcorn” before she lost consciousness, she told the Wrangell Sentinel and KSTV radio in a recent interview as she still waited to hear the fate of her husband, who remains missing from last week’s disaster.
The Nov. 20 landslide came down into the path of three homes, one unoccupied, after a storm brought heavy rain. She is the only person so far found alive.
Four people have been confirmed killed in the landslide: Timothy and Beth Heller and two of their children, Kara, 11, and Mara, 16. Two other people remain missing: the Hellers’ 12-year-old child, Derek, and Florschutz’s husband, 65-year-old commercial fisherman Otto Florschutz.
Debris has been cleared form the coastal highway, but access is currently limited to people who live on the south side of the slide.
When Christina Florschutz regained consciousness in the rubble, she was trapped between the roof of her house and debris.
“I was hanging kind of head down, at an angle, with my feet up,” she told the local newspaper and radio station in an interview from her hospital bed. “It was fairly uncomfortable.”
She felt around and found a bag of polar fleece from her upstairs sewing room.
“Right then and there, I knew I was going to live,” Florschutz said. “I was going to live. I was meant to live.”
She wrapped herself in the pieces of fleece cloth and waited until morning, not knowing if anyone in town knew about the landslide yet.
After sunrise, Florschutz was able to free herself and make her way to the back corner of the house. That’s when she realized it had slid down mostly intact until it slammed into an old shop, causing the bedroom to separate and continue further downhill. Parts of it were found in the ocean.
As she surveyed the landslide, Florschutz was shocked at how large it was. “Wow, I hope Wrangell is still around,” she thought to herself of the community 11 miles (18 kilometers) up the road.
Florschutz then found a bag of large women’s fleece pajama bottoms, which she buys at thrift stores for sewing projects. She covered herself in those and began walking across the debris field piled high with trees, looking for an edge to exit the rubble.
A group eventually found her and put her in a sled and dragged her across the debris field.
Florschutz spent most of last week recuperating from injuries she suffered at the local hospital but can’t wait to greet the third graders at Evergreen Elementary, where she’s an aide.
She considers the circumstances of her survival to be a miracle, and expressed gratitude to the community for their support.
Being in Alaska forces people “to learn to live with others and help each other. It forces you to not try to be an island,” she said.
veryGood! (974)
Related
- Taylor Swift Eras Archive site launches on singer's 35th birthday. What is it?
- Yes, carrots are good for you. But there is one downside of overconsumption.
- Off the Grid: Sally breaks down USA TODAY's daily crossword puzzle, Wing Woman (Freestyle)
- Pregnant Francesca Farago Reveals Why Planning the Babies' Nursery Has Been So Stressful
- IRS recovers $4.7 billion in back taxes and braces for cuts with Trump and GOP in power
- NASCAR race recap: Christopher Bell wins USA TODAY 301 New Hampshire after rain delay
- Trump will address influential evangelicals who back him but want to see a national abortion ban
- FBI offers up to $10,000 reward for information about deadly New Mexico wildfires
- Average rate on 30
- Sha'Carri Richardson on track for Paris Olympics with top 100 time in trials' opening round
Ranking
- Retirement planning: 3 crucial moves everyone should make before 2025
- The Wayback Machine, a time machine for the web
- Michigan sheriff’s deputy fatally shot pursuing a stolen vehicle in Detroit
- TikTok's Campbell Pookie Puckett and Jett Puckett Are Expecting Their First Baby
- Nevada attorney general revives 2020 fake electors case
- Heat wave sizzles parts of the country as floods and severe weather force people from their homes
- Pregnant Francesca Farago Reveals Why Planning the Babies' Nursery Has Been So Stressful
- Q&A: What’s in the Water of Alaska’s Rusting Rivers, and What’s Climate Change Got to Do With it?
Recommendation
Intellectuals vs. The Internet
Inside Charlie’s Queer Books, an unapologetically pink and joyful space in Seattle
South Korea summons Russia's ambassador over Moscow's new pact with North as inter-Korean tensions keep rising
Is Trump shielded from criminal charges as an ex-president? A nation awaits word from Supreme Court
DeepSeek: Did a little known Chinese startup cause a 'Sputnik moment' for AI?
Rip currents kill 4 in 48 hours: Panama City Beach on pace to be deadliest in US
U.S. to resume avocado inspections in Mexican state that were halted by violence
Mining the Sun: Some in the Wyoming Epicenter of the Coal Industry Hope to Sustain Its Economy With Renewables