So I watching this show I found where kids are trapped in the canadian rockies via planecrash when trying to go a cheerleading contest or whatever.
Kids die and their cheerleading coach dude loses a leg on the crash. The plot is basically catty bpd girls trying to survive.
The thing is the show could have been over in 3 episodes if they started a massive forest fire. It can be seen from MILES into the sky via smoke and the rangers nearby would show up to put it out. This occurs to me 20m into the show but doesn't occur once to 20 plus women, 3 dudes and the coach missing a leg. After some grok questions it appears the type of trees actually create a lot of smoke and even burn well when cold out.
Honestly seems too easy but maybe offscreen they thought they might burn up in the fire? No idea. Fire can burn fast if there's too much wind but personally I'd survive.
Jump in the discussion.
No email address required.
Take this with a grain of salt because it's a woman, but Yan Boulanger from Natural Resources Canada recently said:
"We have some fires that ignited in 2022 and 2023 that are still burning on Oct. 1, 2024 and will still be burning in 2025," she said."
The Canadian wilderness is vast and remote. They can't manage every fire that breaks out.
In all likelihood, the Yellowjackets would start a fire, it would end up killing them, and no one would ever even investigate the fire.
Maybe if they didn't happen upon the cabin in the woods, it would have been a reasonable last ditch effort to be found.
Jump in the discussion.
No email address required.
i never hear anuthjng about canada that makes it sound like a nice place to be
Jump in the discussion.
No email address required.
More options
Context
More options
Context