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Wednesday started as a normal day for Jan-Tore Bariås. Around four thirty he got in his car to go to work in Oslo.
On the way, he is greeted by what he describes as a pile of snow and he puts on the windshield wipers completely. Then all of a sudden the road under the car disappears.
– I just dive to the edge where a landslide has gone, he says.
Bariås and the car go straight to the avalanche area. The hood hits the clay first and the airbag is activated.
– I flip the roof over and I wonder what the hell is going on, he says.
In the avalanche zone
Bariås loosens his seat belt and gets out of the car.
In the huge landslide zone, you are not alone. There, she meets a man who she estimates to be between 70 and 80 years old. The man is wearing a T-shirt and is barefoot.
– You have probably joined your house and slid 30 to 50 meters in the landslide. He’s sitting up and has some trouble getting back on his feet, and has had a small cut on his temple, says Bariås.
Sinking
Getting out of the landslide zone and getting to safety is almost impossible.
It is difficult to walk in the clay mass.
– I sink, I become clumsy, I get tired, he says.
But then after 40 minutes in the avalanche area, he and the older man are discovered by the rescue helicopter.
– Fortunately, they see us. We get a real “flash” in the middle of the mosaic from above, he says.
A rescuer is fired and connects with the old man Bariås has met in the area of the landslide.
– They pick it up, go back down and pick me up, he says.
– Very lucky
Despite the 60-year-old man falling several meters in the avalanche, he escaped the incident without serious physical injury.
A couple of tiny tears on one hand is the only witness to the drama he was exposed to on Wednesday morning.
– I ‘ve been very lucky. Very lucky. It was a real clay pit, in good Norwegian. War zone. Just a war zone, he says.