Woman stuck 2-1/2 days after falling into the 400-foot Arizona Canyon

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Janelle Banda, 32, endured the heat of the day and the black nights before helicopter rescue from the dangerous edge of the world region near Sedona, Arizona.

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In a dangerous area near Sedona, Arizona, it is known as the edge of the world that Janelle Banda and her father camped as part of their father’s daughter’s outings.

Banda walked through rough terrain carved on steep cliffs and covered in thick forests, dropping hundreds of feet and nearly losing his life to a few days out of reach.

She was stuck for two and a half days and entered about 400 feet into a narrow canyon near the southern tip of Woody Mountain Road. She endured extreme daytime heat, cold and a pitch black night before the Pima County Sheriff’s helicopter rescue at noon on June 16th.

Sarah Banda, 29, was shaken with uneasy energy when she found out that her sister (32) had been saved.

“This was nothing but a miracle,” Sarah Banda told the Republic of Arizona, part of the USA Today network. Positive outcomes influenced her and her sister’s parents “an overwhelming amount of relief, joy.” She said her sister had gone missing by the third day and that Phoenix-area families are “very mentally prepared for the worst.”

The sister was surprised while walking, the sister said

News of Janelle Banda’s rescue came after uncertainty for a long time, but optimism preceded it. The searchers realized she was alive.

The sisters “always loved the outdoors,” said Sarah Banda, who hiked across the Phoenix area, including Camelback Mountain, along the trails in Sedona. However, this was Janelle Banda’s first visit to the edge of the world. She and her father have been in the area since around June 11th, Sarah Banda said.

Janelle Banda, a double degree graduate from Arizona State University and shopkeeper at Etsy, appears to be a little further away from her campsite, saying “sp-admiration for something” after she got lost in the dark woods on the evening of June 13th.

“If you walk the wrong path, if you walk the wrong path, you can walk and step on a place you shouldn’t be on the edge of a cliff,” Sarah Banda said of the edge of the world.

Their father and nearby camper van began searching for her, and soon after they called the authorities. The search was drawn to the Coconino, Maricopa, the Yavapai County Sheriff’s Office, and the Arizona Department of Public Safety.

Sarah Banda said the family is “very grateful” for those efforts and volunteers who “uncontinuously” and worked hundreds of hours to find their sister.

Injured injuries in the fall include ankle sprain and bruises

Janelle Banda was able to avoid broken bones and damage to the head and spine, her sister said. However, she endured two ankles and persistent amputations, bruises and skin rubbing, similar to road burns. She was also suffering from extreme dehydration, Sarah Banda said.

“She really can’t move,” Sarah Banda said. “She’s feeling a lot of pain.”

Sarah Banda said her sister was released from the hospital on June 17th after staying overnight.

Janelle Banda’s physical recovery involves a lot of rest and limited movements while caring for her parents, she said.

There are other healings, Sarah Banda said.

“Obviously there’s a mental sacrifice that there’s not only a fall, but also a trauma of being in a canyon,” she said. “It’s another fight she has to deal with.”

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