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64-year-old veteran skateboarder pushes the limits and defies expectations: “I take every day as a gift”
Skateboarding has exploded in recent years with an estimated 85 million people worldwide grabbing a board.
Around 75% of skateboarders are 18 years old and under, but in Santa Cruz, California, a veteran skater is defying the expectations of age.
Judi Oyama is a world champion and at 64 years old, she said she feels stronger than ever. In her 50-year professional career, she has traveled around the world competing. So far this season, she’s ranked second in the world in slalom ahead of teenagers who are a quarter of her age.
“When I go to the airport or I’m like getting rides and I have skateboards, they go, ‘Oh where’s your grandkids or your kids?’ And I’m like, ‘Uh, no, these are mine,'” Oyama said.
Oyama was a kid herself when her brother built her first skateboard in 1973. From there, it was her parents who encouraged her love of skateboarding, at a time when so few girls were in the sport.
Oyama said she used to struggle to be her own advocate for equal pay and opportunities in such a male-dominated sport.
“When they first did some of the X Games events, … the women’s first prize was $2,500,” she said. “They were giving men $2,500 to show up and skate. They didn’t even have to place and they were getting the same amount of money that the women were getting for winning the event.”
Oyama, who teaches amateurs how to skate, encourages more women to pick up a board. She sees a bright future for women in the sport as she has been pushing the limits for decades.
“I think it’s headed in a really good space. I think that it’ll just be natural and normal for a young girl to say, ‘I want to skateboard and I want to compete.'”
But Oyama herself isn’t slowing down anytime soon. This fall, she’s heading to the World Skate Games in Rome.
“I think I take every day as a gift and I try to get more out of a day than I think most people. I think I took skateboarding as some fun thing that not everyone gets to do,” she said. “I just feel like I wanted to get the most out of it, but I never thought I would still be getting the most out of it.”
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Bear rampaging through Japanese supermarket for 2 days is lured out with honey, then killed
A bear that rampaged through a Japanese supermarket for two days was lured out with food coated in honey, local officials said. The animal was trapped and later killed on Monday, police said.
Japan has a growing problem with bears, with a record six human fatalities from attacks and more than 9,000 of the animals killed in the previous fiscal year.
In the latest incident, police received an emergency call early Saturday that a bear had wounded a 47-year-old man in a supermarket in Akita, on Japan’s main island of Honshu. Japan Today reported the man, a store employee, was expected to recover.
A gash on the man’s head “will take at least a week to heal once his stitches get removed, according to a doctor,” a police spokesman told AFP.
The supermarket was evacuated with the animal left inside, where it laid waste to the meat department, according to the Asahi Shimbun daily.
Finally early Monday, the bear walked into a trap containing “rice bran, bananas, apples, and bread, all coated with honey,” an Akita official told AFP.
“We prepared two traps, and one of them captured the bear on the backyard side of the supermarket,” he said.
The animal was killed later Monday, Japan Today reported, citing police.
Human-bear interactions on the rise in Japan
Human fatalities from bears in the fiscal year to March 31 included an elderly woman attacked in her garden and a fisherman whose severed head was found by a lake. A bear attack was also suspected after a college student was found dead on a mountain in northern Japan.
The period had the highest number of deaths since the government started collecting data from 2006 to 2007.
More than 200 other people were involved in incidents with bears.
In the current fiscal year so far, three people have been killed.
Experts told CBS News that as Japan’s population shrinks, humans are leaving rural areas, and bears are moving in.
“Then that area recovered to the forest, so bears have a chance to expand their range,” biologist Koji Yamazaki, from Tokyo University of Agriculture, told CBS News.
Other factors include climate change affecting the omnivores’ food supply and their hibernation times. This summer tied for Japan’s warmest on record.
In the previous fiscal year, a record 9,097 bears were killed, more than twice that of the previous period, according to the environment ministry.
Local media have reported that authorities are having problems finding enough hunters to shoot the animals, citing Japan’s declining and ageing population.
The country has two types of bears: moon bears and the larger brown bear, which can weigh 1,100 pounds, outrun a human and, in Japan, only lives in the main northern island of Hokkaido.
Last August , hunters killed an elusive brown bear nicknamed “Ninja” in Hokkaido after it attacked at least 66 cows, the Associated Press reported. And, in October 2023, local Japanese officials and media outlets reported that three bears were euthanized after sneaking into a tatami mat factory in the northern part of the country.
CBS News
Dog rescued from Hurricane Milton floodwaters finds forever home: “We are going to give him the best life”
A 5-year-old bull terrier that was abandoned and reportedly tied to a post in chest-deep water as Hurricane Milton barreled toward Florida in October has found a new home.
Over the last few weeks, hundreds have applied to be Trooper’s forever family after he was rescued from Milton, which made landfall as a Category 3 storm, by Florida Highway Patrol Trooper Orlando Morales.
“I was kinda enraged at some point, how could anybody just possibly even think of doing an act like this, it was just awful,” Morales previously told CBS News when he was reunited with his four-legged friend.
Amy Raddar with the Leon County Humane Society in Tallahassee, Florida, said they were looking for a very specific adopter for Trooper.
“The outpouring has been so great,” she said.
Bull terriers are a unique breed, known for being sweet dogs, but are also high energy, strong and stubborn.
“I don’t always say people have to have breed experience, but in that particular dog, I think it’s important,” Raddar added.
Carla and Frank Spina, who live 400 miles away from Tallahassee, in Parkland, Florida, have 33 years of experience with bull terriers.
A friend forwarded a story about Trooper to the couple.
“I said to Frank, ‘Did you hear this story?’ And see I’m going to start crying, and he said, ‘Yeah, I didn’t tell you because I knew you would get upset,'” Carla Spina said.
The Spinas are bull terrier owners and love the breed. They got their first, named Krunchie, in 1992, followed by Diesel. A few years ago, they adopted Dallas.
“We’ve always had an infinity for bull terriers. That’s the breed that we love, they’re special,” said Frank Spina.
They said when they saw Trooper, they knew his needs and wanted to help. They applied to adopt the beloved dog, but there was one major hurdle. Trooper is weary of men because of his past trauma and the humane society wasn’t sure it would work out because of Frank.
The Spinas drove more than seven hours to Tallahassee to see if Trooper would fit in their family.
“Amy said, ‘Frank, why don’t you sit on that bench and see what happens?’ He came over and he got under my legs and I started scratching and his foot started moving,” Frank Spina said.
It was a perfect match, giving Trooper who was once tossed aside, a loving forever family.
“We will take good care of him,” Carla Spina told Raddar when she dropped off Trooper. “We just want everyone to know we are going to give him the best life.”
For the Spinas, it feels like their family’s missing piece was found.
“We are like living in a dream,” said Frank Spina. “We just can’t believe that a month ago we saw a news report and now a month later he’s in my bedroom.”