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Published: 12:45 BST, 29 June 2018 | Updated: 22:22 BST, 29 June 2018
This is the moment a Russian holidaymaker was rescued after being found seven miles out to sea on an inflatable lilo 'fried' by the sun for 21 hours.
Olga Kuldo, 55, was saved when she was spotted by a border patrol plane searching the seas for illegal immigrants off the coast of Crete. 
Mrs Kuldo, of Zelenograd, Russia , was swept out to sea at the resort of Rethymno on the north of the Greek island after being caught in a strong current. 
She floated through one night and was badly burnt by the hot sun the following day.
Dramatic images show her desperately grappling with the float as Frontex workers throw her a rope to climb onto their vessel.     
Dramatic pictures show the moment a Russian holidaymaker (circled) was rescued seven miles off the coast of Crete, Greece, after being swept away on an inflatable lilo 
Images show Olga Kuldo, 55, desperately grappling with the float as Frontex workers throw her a rope to climb onto their vessel
Russian tourist Olga Kuldo (pictured) has been found 'fried' but alive after being stranded on an inflatable sunbed for 21 hours when it floated out to sea off Crete
Medic Olga Kuldo, from Zelenograd, Russia, was swept out to sea at the resort of Rethymno on the north of the Greek island after being caught in a strong current
Frontex told The Sun in a statement: 'On 28 June in the morning, a Slovak patrol plane deployed by Frontex in Greece was involved in a Search and Rescue operation when the Hellenic Coast Guard requested our plane to search for a missing person in the sea above Rethymno, Crete.
'At 10.40 our aircraft located the missing person, floating on an air mattress, nine nautical miles from Rethymno and one nautical mile from the coastline close to Lavris.
'A Hellenic Coast Guard vessel was dispatched and rescued the 55 year old female who had been in the sea for about 20 hours '
Mrs Kuldo needed hospital treatment for exposure and resulting heart problems. 
She had been staying with her husband Oleg, 59, and daughter Yulia, 28, at the resort.
Family members alerted rescuers after she failed to return to her hotel room after a late afternoon swim.
But it was 21 hours later that she was spotted from the air after a huge boat and jet ski search failed to locate her.
A rescue vessel brought her back to shore and she was rushed to hospital with 'heart problems' and 'hypothermia' after suffering from exposure and sun stroke.
Her relieved daughter Yulia, 28, a TV producer, posted on social media: 'Miracles happen.'
The 55-year-old floated through one night after being swept away from the resort (pictured) and was badly burnt by the hot sun the following day
She had been staying with her husband Oleg (centre), 59, and daughter Yulia (right), 28, at the resort
Family members alerted rescuers after the medic (pictured) failed to return to her hotel room after a late afternoon swim.
She said her mother, an ultrasound diagnostics doctor, had been 'burned to ashes' by the daytime sun before the EU Frontex agency plane spotted her.
A local report on the island said she was on her subbed 'when she was carried away to the open sea so she could not be seen from the beach'.
It is unclear if she fell asleep but reports say she was carried away by a 'strong current'. 
Local reports described Olga as 'lucky' to survive.
The main damage to her health was from a cold night after she was wet for hours clinging to the air bed.
'She stayed alive despite a cold night, strong wind, occasional rain and even a small thunder storm,' reported neakriti.gr
'Her body temperature was as low as 32 C degrees' (normal is 37C) - causing hypothermia, it was reported.
'The tears of her family turned to incredible happiness.'
Day time temperatures can reach 35C, while at night they can drop to 18C - not cold but Olga had been hours in the water during the long night. 
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Published by Associated Newspapers Ltd
Part of the Daily Mail, The Mail on Sunday & Metro Media Group

Volume 218 , November 2022 , 106554
Author links open overlay panel Karel Šilhán
© 2022 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Applied Geography, Volume 107, 2019, pp. 38-50
Quaternary Science Reviews, Volume 134, 2016, pp. 100-113
Cold Regions Science and Technology, Volume 154, 2018, pp. 9-22
First tree-ring based chronology of snow avalanches on the northern Black Sea coast.
Data analysis of 310 P. nigra specimens revealed 639 growth disturbances.
A new multidisciplinary approach to distinguish snow avalanches and debris flows.
The effect of growth disturbance inertia on snow avalanche dating.
The southern coast of the Crimean Mountains is affected by both debris flows and snow avalanches. However, there is no systematic record of these dangerous natural hazards. Therefore, this study is aimed at compiling a chronology of snow avalanches and debris flows at one of the most exposed sites on the southern coast of the Crimean Mountains. Dendrogeomorphic analysis of 310 individuals of black pine ( Pinus nigra ssp. Pallasiana ) revealed 639 growth disturbances induced by 55 debris flow events (since 1705) and three snow avalanche events (since 1959). A multidisciplinary approach combining precise intra-seasonal tree-ring dating, event-response index thresholds, geomorphological mapping , and testing of spatial patterns of disturbed trees was used to distinguish the two processes. This method has confirmed more than 85% of the known events and has thus proven to be highly effective and can thus be used to compile a catalogue of natural hazards in the region of interest. A limitation for dating snow avalanches was the inertia of growth disturbances induced by debris flows preceding avalanche events. Based on the analysis of meteorological data , possible triggers and predisposing factors for the occurrence of the events of both studied processes are also discussed.
Data will be made available on request.
We use cookies to help provide and enhance our service and tailor content and ads. By continuing you agree to the use of cookies .
Copyright © 2022 Elsevier B.V. or its licensors or contributors. ScienceDirect® is a registered trademark of Elsevier B.V.
ScienceDirect® is a registered trademark of Elsevier B.V.


Publication
Background
Contents
Reviews
In Translation
Search

"A10.1: First USA Limited Edition, Four Season Foundation, 1968"
"A10.2: First USA Trade Paperback Edition, Four Seasons Foundation, 1968"
"A10.3: Delta USA Trade Paperback Edition, Delta/Dell, 1969"
"A10.4: First UK Edition, Jonathan Cape, 1970"
"A10.5: Laurel Press Mass Market Paperback Edition, 1973"
"Brownjohn, Alan. New Statesman, 4 Dec. 1970"
"Porter, Peter. The Observer, 3 Jan. 1971"
"Williams, Hugo. London Magazine, Feb. 1971"
"Malley, Terence. Richard Brautigan, 1972"
"Bokinsky, Caroline J. Dictionary of Literary Biography. Vol. 5: American Poets Since World War II, 1980"
"Nilsen, Don L. F. and Allen Pace Nilsen. Journal of Reading, vol. 26, no. 1, Oct. 1982"
"Bokinsky, Caroline J. Dictionary of Literary Biography. Vol. 5: American Poets Since World War II, 1980"
"Brownjohn, Alan. New Statesman, 4 Dec. 1970"
"Malley, Terence. Richard Brautigan, 1972"
"Nilsen, Don L. F. and Allen Pace Nilsen. Journal of Reading, vol. 26, no. 1, Oct. 1982"
"Porter, Peter. The Observer, 3 Jan. 1971"
"Williams, Hugo. London Magazine, Feb. 1971"

doi.org/10.7273/nvgh-ca61   OCLC #1054104600
American Dust is part of a network of projects led by by John Barber.
Each project has its own website. Explore the others.

The Brautigan Library
Radio Nouspace
Re-Imagined Radio
Or, RETURN to the top


Richard Brautigan's life and writing.  |  Scroll down.

This node of the American Dust website (formerly Brautigan Bibliography and Archive ) provides comprehensive information about Richard Brautigan's poetry collection The Pill versus the Springhill Mine Disaster . Published in 1968, this collection of ninety-eight poems was Brautigan's fifth published poetry book. Publication and background information is provided, along with reviews, many with full text. Use the menu tabs below to learn more.


Publication information regarding the various editions in English of Richard Brautigan's The Pill and the Springhill Mine Disaster is presented below. Corrections and/or additions would be greatly appreciated. By default all items are presented in ascending order. Use the checkboxes above to present the items in reverse order.


Front cover photograph by Edmund Shea of Marcia Pacaud ,
of Montreal, Canada. Taken early in 1968, in a excavation site for the
Bay Area Rapid Transit (BART), at the corner of New Montgomery and
Market Streets, in San Francisco ( William Hjortsberg 377). No back cover illustration or photograph.


Rear cover includes title, a list of reviouos works, two sentences of biographical information, distribution information, and, alont the top, a print ov $1.95.


Front cover photograph by Edmund Shea of Marcia Pacaud ,
of Montreal, Canada. Taken early in 1968, in a excavation site for the
Bay Area Rapid Transit (BART), at the corner of New Montgomery and
Market Streets, in San Francisco ( William Hjortsberg 377).
Over top left of photograph is the Delta logo and below that "DELTA//$1.95//$2.35 IN CANADA"
No back cover illustration or photograph, but the subtitle
"The Selected Poems 1957-1968" is added there.


The just jacket is yellow with most of the front panel consisting of the
photograph
used on the cover of the Four Seasons Foundation's first wrapper edition.


Yellow background with black printing and
photograph by Edmund Shea of Marcia Pacaud ,
of Montreal, Canada. Taken early in 1968, in a excavation site for the
Bay Area Rapid Transit (BART), at the corner of New Montgomery and
Market Streets, in San Francisco ( William Hjortsberg 377). No back cover illustration or photograph.


Vertical text reading "DELL 6956 95¢". Later printing priced at $1.25.



First published in 1968, The Pill versus the Springhill Mine Disaster , a collection of ninety-eight poems, was Brautigan's fifth collection of poetry, his seventh published poetry book.



This book is for Miss Marcia Pacaud of Montreal, Canada.


Several poems in this collection were dedicated to Marcia Pacaud .


In addition to thirty-eight previously uncollected poems, The Pill versus The Springhill Mine Disaster included The Return of the Rivers (May 1957), all nine parts of The Galilee Hitch-Hiker (1958), nine poems from the Lay The Marble Tea (1959), seventeen poems from The Octopus Frontier (1960), and all thirty two poems from All Watched Over by Machines of Loving Grace (1967).


The reference to "The Springhill Mine Disaster" in the title comes from
the 1958 mining disaster in Springhill, Nova Scotia, Canada. A popular
folk song, "The Springhill Mine Disaster," was written shortly afterward
by Ewan MacColl and Peggy Seeger.




The Pill versus The Springhill Mine Disaster collects ninety-eight poems by Richard Brautigan. Of those, thirty-eight were not included in his previous poetry collections.
The remainder of the poems in this volume include Brautigan's The Return of the Rivers (May 1957), all nine parts of The Galilee Hitch-Hiker (1958, here coounted as one poem), and poems from previous collections, color coded as follows:
Yellow Button = One of 32 poems from All Watched Over by Machines of Loving Grace (1967)
Orange Button = One of 17 poems from The Octopus Frontier (1960)
Cyan Button = One of 9 poems from Lay The Marble Tea (1959)
Gray Button = None of the Above


By default all of the poems are listed in ascending order of where they appear in the book. Use the checkboxes above to limit the list, to list the poems in alphabeical order, or to reverse the direction of the listing.


Horse child breakfast,
what are you doing to me?
with your long blonde legs?
with your long blonde face?
with your long blonde hair?
with your perfect blonde ass?


I swear I'll never be the
     same again!


Horse child breakfast
what you're doing to me,
I want done forever.


Connections
This poem appears in the feature film The Sun Ship Game , a
film about the competitions for placement in the 1969 National Soaring
Championships in Marfa, Texas. The 1971 film, directed by Robert Drew,
follows two competitors, George Moffat and Gleb Derujinsky. Moffat, an
English lecturer, reads the poem to a class at the beginning of the
film.


Selected Reprints
San Francisco Express Times , vol. 1, no. 32, Aug. 28, 1968, p. 6.
Learn more


     For the soldiers of the Seventh
Cavalry who were killed at the Little Bighorn River and the passengers
who were lost on the maiden voyage of the Titanic.
     God bless their souls.


Yes! it's true all my visions
have come home to roost at last.
They are all true now and stand
around me like a bouquet of
lost ships and doomed generals.
I gently put them away in a
beautiful and disappearing vase.


Textual References
"General Custer": Lieutenant Colonel George Armstrong Custer (1839-1876)
and the 264 men of the 7th Cavalry under his command were annihilated
by an estimated 5,000 Sioux Indians on the banks of the Little Big Horn
River in eastern Montana Territory, the morning of 26 June 1876.
"Titanic": The White Star liner RMS Titanic sank after striking an iceberg on its maiden voyage, 14 April 1912.


Selected Reprints
A First Reader of Contemporary American Poetry . Edited by Patrick Gleason. Merrill, 1969, pp. 23-26.
Learn more


San Francisco Express Times , vol. 1, no. 32, Aug. 28, 1968, p. 6.
Learn more


First Collected
The Octopus Frontier


Because you always have a clock
strapped to your body, it's natural
that I should think of you as the
     correct time:
with your long blonde hair at 8:03,
and your pulse-lightning breasts at
11:17, and your rose-meow smile at 5:30,
     I know I'm right.


Textual References
"Marcia": Marcia Pacaud , from Montreal, Canada, appeared in the photograph on the front cover of The Pill versus The Springhill Mine Disaster .
Written mid-July, while Brautigan was staying at Pacaud's Sausalito
apartment, 15 Princess Lane (apartment 5). Several poems in this
collection are dedicated to her.


Recorded
"Listening to Richard Brautigan." Harvest Records.
On one track of this album, titled "The Telephone Door That Leads
Eventually to Some Love Poems," Brautigan reads twelve poems collected
in The Pill versus The Springhill Mine Disaster , including this one. LISTEN to Brautigan read these poems.


Selected Reprints
San Francisco Express Times , vol. 1, no. 32, Aug. 28, 1968, p. 6.
Learn more


Oh, how perfect death
computes an orange wind
that glows from your footsteps,


and you stop to die in
an orchard where the harvest
fills the stars.


     Ah,
you're just a copy
of all the candy bars
I've ever eaten.


Background

A holograph broadside of this poem, written in ink by Brautigan on a
sheet of 9" x 12" sketchbook paper, in 1967, is known. Allegedly,
Brautigan was commissioned to produce a broadside poem and planned to
execute it by hand. This broadside may have been a practice effort by
Brautigan to enlarge his distinctively small handwriting. No other
versions, practice, finished, or reproduced are reported.


Recorded
"Listening to Richard Brautigan." Harvest Records.
On one track of this album, titled "The Pill versus The Springhill Mine Disaster," Brautigan reads sixteen poems collected in The Pill versus The Springhill Mine Disaster , including this one. LISTEN to Brautigan read these poems.


Selected Reprints
San Francisco Express Times , vol. 1, no. 32, Aug. 28, 1968, p. 6.
Learn more


Man: In the Poetic Mode , Vol. 4. Edited by Joy Zwiegler. McDougal, Littell & Company, 1970, p. 63.
"Learn more."


The petals of the vagina unfold
like Christopher Columbus
taking off his shoes.


Is there anything more beautiful
than the bow of a ship
touching a new world?


Textual References
"Christopher Columbus": Italian navigator (1451-1506), considered the "Discoverer of America" during Brautigan's youth.


Selected Reprints
Just What The Country Needs, Another Poetry Anthology . Edited by James McMichael and Dennis Saleh. Wadsworth, 1971, pp. xii, 22-26, 185.
6.5" x 9.5", 190 pages
A poetry anthology collecting 124 poems by 30 poets, including Brautigan.

Includes biographical notes for each contributor and an introduction by
X. J. Kennedy, who says, "Anyone who cares for poetry ought to encounter
much to delight and startle him here. Among such gratifications for me
was . . . Richard Brautigan, abruptly popular, whose best work (see "The
Winos on Potrero Hill") moves with a beautiful transparency" (xii).


Reprints five poems by Brautigan: "The Winos on Potrero Hill," "The
Quail," "The Pill versus The Springhill Mine Disaster," "Discovery," and
"Adrenalin Mother," all from The Pill versus The Springhill Mine Disaster .


The biographical note for Brautigan reads, "Richard Brautigan published
several small books of poetry in limited editions and then collected
them in one volume, The Pill versus The Springhill Mine Disaster , published first by Four Seasons Foundation and them by Delacorte. He has also published three novels and a book
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