USA
This article was added by the user . TheWorldNews is not responsible for the content of the platform.

A woman filming a "Bad Girls Gone God" reality show rescued from Mount Arizona

A group of women hiking the hot Phoenix Mountains by air on Thursday or rolling over the hot peaks for a religious reality show called "Bad Girls Gone God." I had to fall.

As temperatures rose above 100 degrees Celsius, a total of eight women needed the help of firefighters descending Camelback Mountain. According to local retailers, hikers weren't ready and didn't have enough water.

Two women were airlifted to the hospital, a few others rolled down the mountain, and three were able to get off on their own with the help of firefighters, the Phoenix Fire Department said. According to

KPNX-TV, three women aged 24, 42 and 50 were treated in the hospital for a fever-related illness.

Alabama, Tennessee, and California women's groups began hiking the Echo Canyon Trail early in the morning, using less water and other supplies, the agency reported.

According to the outlet, hikers were filmed to embark on intense activity to get closer to God.

Rescuers carry down a woman in a stretcher.
FOX10

"We admire, worship, test, and more. It's our physical test, but it's also spiritual, "Jasmine Huntertold KSAZ-TV.

Members of the unprepared group choked out the elaborate rescue of God's intervention.

"God was definitely with us," Tatiana Robinson added. "If they didn't call, we're thinking. I don't know what happened, but maybe we didn't."

A medic pushes a woman in a stretcher.
FOX10

"I really started to get dizzy, and after a while I just said" No, I'm this You can't do that, "Robinson added.

"I barely stopped it. There was an episode on the verge of fainting in the car. There were many," Kristen Livingston told the station.

Camelback Mountain is a famous landmark in Phoenix, and reaching the 1,280-foot peak on the unshaded Echo Canyon Trail is considered a daunting task.

A helicopter hovers alongside the mountain.
FOX10

"This is a challenging scramble / climbing, It's not a hike. "AllTrails review read.

"We weren't clearly aware of how intense it was," Livingston told KPNX-TV.

The Phoenix Fire Department did not immediately respond to the request for comment from the post.

Emergency vehicles line the road at the mountain.
FOX10

Rescue from trails is not uncommon and paths are sometimes very closed. On a hot day,government officials warn.

Peak actual temperatures can exceed 150 degrees Celsius, according to the Facebook group, "Don't die on Camelback Mountain, Arizona. Must be rescued." When.