Tuesday, August 26, 2008

Hayden Update

I've received a lot of emails asking how Hayden is doing. The last 24 hours have been full of ups and downs. Last night there was a huge down when things took a turn for the worse and looked pretty bleak. However, tonight, there appears to be some good news:

Wild animals, maggots attack Australian lost in Laos

Hayden Adcock ... close to death when found.

Hayden Adcock ... close to death when found.

An Australian man who survived a harrowing 11 days missing in the jungle in Laos had terrible injuries inflicted by wild animals and an infestation of maggots, his mother says.

Hayden Adcock, 40, is recovering in a Thai hospital following his ordeal, with medical staff saying his condition has improved slightly since yesterday.

Hayden suffered multiple health problems after he went missing on a short walk to a waterfall in a national park in the Khammouane province of Laos on July 31.

A helicopter search found him on August 10 and he was airlifted to hospital in Bangkok.

His mother, Lynne Sturrock, who is with her son, said Hayden was badly injured when he was rescued.

"He came upon a beautiful escarpment of coloured rocks, something he hadn't seen before and went over to have a look, maybe strayed off the track a bit, and some huge lizards came out," she told the Nine Network today.

The lizards chased him, and he was injured when he fell from the escarpment, becoming prey to local wildlife, she said.

"Wild animals had attacked him and he was covered in wounds," she said.

"... Flies had bitten him. He ended up with maggots in his wounds, which is a good thing, people are saying, but they ended up laying eggs in the good layers of the skin as well."

His 78-year-old father Stan Adcock, who lives at Yandina on Queensland's Sunshine Coast, said medicos administered an injection last night to stop Hayden's internal bleeding, and it appeared to be working.

Michael Morton, an Australian doctor working at the hospital where Hayden was being treated, emailed Mr Adcock to say he had seen his son this morning and he was "conscious, alert and responding well".

"He has several medical problems all interacting with each other and has a long way to go," Dr Morton wrote.

"Both he and Lynne are very happy with the care he is receiving and the Australian embassy has been very supportive."

Mr Adcock said he was encouraged by the overnight development after bleeding in Hayden's stomach had caused him to take a turn for the worse on Sunday night.

"It's better news today because it's been a couple of terrible days," Mr Adcock said today.

"I'd almost given up hope for him."

If the injection did its job, surgeons at the Bangkok hospital would not have to operate.

This was something they had been reluctant to do, given his significant weight loss, multiple health problems and weakened condition.

KEEP SENDING HAYDEN GOOD THOUGHTS!

Monday, August 25, 2008

Community Combs



(PICTURE: A community comb at karaoke)

One thing that always makes me giggle is when I go into a bathroom and there is a comb sitting on the sink. These combs are community combs -- they're for whoever wants to use them.

What makes me giggle even more is when I see someone using them.

That said, my hair has never looked so straight.
...but my scalp has been itching a lot.

Sunday, August 24, 2008

Lilah Meets Uncle Ben

It's almost like I'm home...

Man, we both look so young!

I just went through my photos and found the closest picture of Zev that matches up with Lilah. Don't they look alike?

Saturday, August 23, 2008

Hayden Update II

This is good news:

Aussie lost in Laos jungle 'improving'

August 22, 2008 - 4:34PM

An Australian man who was lost in a Laotian jungle for 11 days without food is having his body re-built "one organ at a time", his father said today.

Queensland-based Stan Adcock said he was hopeful his 40-year-old son Hayden would make a full recovery after being rescued from a remote jungle location in central Laos and evacuated to Thailand.

"He's still in a critical conditon of course, he's not out of the woods yet, but they're working on it and they feel there will be a total recovery - well they're hoping so," Mr Adcock said.

"I'm hoping that means not only will he survive but they'll have all of his bodily functions restored, he won't be in a wheelchair or anything."

Hayden Adcock, who was born in Victoria and grew up on Queensland's Sunshine Coast, went missing after setting out on a short walk to a waterfall in a national park in Khammouane province on July 31.

The Australian embassy in Vientiane was notified he was missing on August 8 and two staff immediately travelled to the area to help coordinate search efforts.

However, heavy rain and flooding hampered efforts on the ground and it was not until a helicopter search was conducted two days later that he was found and evacuated to Bangkok.

Mr Adcock said his Hong Kong-based nephew arrived in Thailand yesterday and held the telephone to Hayden's ear so he could talk.

"They'd just taken the tube out of his throat and he's still got an oxygen mask on and they put the phone to his ear and he was able to try and talk to me," he said.

"I couldn't understand a word he said of course because the tube in the voice box had upset his throat but that was the most thrilling piece of news we'd had."

Mr Adcock said it was still early days for his son but the family was feeling positive.

"I'm thrilled that Hayden has got such a fighting spirit and that gives me a lot of confidence," he said.

"If he'd dropped his bundle or something like that that would have been hard to bear."

Hayden Adcock's mother will arrive in Bangkok tomorrow, Mr Adcock said.

------------------------

I also found a news story on him: http://video.yahoo.com/watch/3349231/9393172

You know he's going to end up selling his story rights for millions. I hope he lets me write his screenplay.

Friday, August 22, 2008

She's a GIRL!!!

...which we knew. What we didn't know is that she's GORGEOUS!!!

Lilah Rose August, 8 lbs 3 oz, 20 inches, was born by c-section safe and sound early this morning Vietnam Time.

Congratulations Zev and Kathy!!!


I know what you're all thinking: She looks just like her Aunt. I agree, she's got Huyen's cheeks.


Uncle Ben

Thursday, August 21, 2008

The Countdown Is On...

(PICTURE: Kathy, ready to pop!)

...Nope, not for when I'm thrown out of Vietnam. I'm sure that's imminent.


The countdown is on for when I'll be an uncle!!! Zev and Kathy have gone to the hosptial. The doctors will be hooking Kathy up to an IV to induce her around 5-5:30 am.


Lilah! Lilah! Lilah!


Note for the people of the future who read this blog: tailgating should become a part of giving birth. How awesome would it be to have all your friends in the parking lot, BBQing, drinking beer and chanting your name. Okay, yeah, I'm sad I'll be missing Jets games this year.

Hayden Update

Here's the latest on Hayden. He's still in critical condition but improving:

Jungle tourist critical: father

Hayden Adcock ... close to death when found.

(PICTURE: Hayden Adcock ... close to death when found.)

Alex Tibbitts
August 21, 2008 - 3:36PM

THE father of the Australian tourist who was lost in the jungle for 11 days in flood-ravaged Laos has no idea how his son survived.

"It's a good question," Stan Adcock said. "He was in pouring rain and he was covered in scratches and bruises and goodness knows what. His stomach was empty, the doctor said, so he hadn't been eating and he was pretty close to death when they found him.

"He was conscious but away with the fairies. He wasn't able to make a great deal of sense."

Mr Adcock, who lost his other son in a motor accident at age 16, is unable to find out much more because his son is still in intensive care in Bangkok General Hospital after being found on August 10.

Hayden Adcock, 40, set off for a short walk to the Tad Namsanam waterfall in the province of Khammouane on July 31.

"He's a bushwalker, he just loves that type of thing," Mr Adcock said.

"He just went out for a two-hour walk to a waterfall in the jungle and there was a second waterfall and he decided to go to that as well.

"Then the downpour of rain just washed away all the walk tracks so he became hopelessly lost.

"When he didn't return to his lodgings they went searching for him, a ground search, but that was at the wrong waterfall."

The Australian ambassador to Laos, Michele Forster, said the embassy was not told of Mr Adcock's disappearance until August 8 and sent two officials to the area. "At the time, it was raining in the village, quite cold and the conditions were very difficult," Dr Forster said. "The village community and local government had done a lot to try to find him but they had been unable to locate him."

After two days, the embassy and the Red Cross organised a helicopter search.

Mr Adcock was found at the other waterfall but the helicopter was unable to land.

It took villagers almost four hours to carry him out on a stretcher, cutting through the thick jungle.

Mr Adcock, who has worked around Australia and the world, had taken 12 months off from his job with the Tax Office to teach English in Vietnam before heading to Laos.

His father has managed to speak to him once since his rescue. "He just said it took them three hours to get where he was and that's all they'd allow him to say," he said.

Doctors took Mr Adcock off a ventilator yesterday.

"He's in critical condition but there has been slight improvement," his father said.

"Now and again he has to have a special operation. Yesterday he had an operation for bleeding in the stomach."

Dr Forster said the embassy planned to support a small tourist office with guides to lead treks to the waterfall and the surrounding jungle.

"We will be looking at different ways to support the community," Dr Forster said. "We feel deep gratitude to the local villagers and authorities that assisted us."