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Calif. woman survives 500-foot fall after zip line malfunctions

CLOVERDALE, Calif. -- A San Francisco Bay Area woman is recovering from what she describes as a harrowing near death escape while zip lining in Mexico, CBS San Francisco reported.

Heather Gladden tells CBS SF she is lucky to be alive.

The mother of four says she was on a zip line excursion when the line she was riding on malfunctioned, sending her on a 500-foot free fall down into a tree covered gorge in Puerto Vallarta's Nogalito Eco Park in Mexico.

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Heather Gladden and her husband Ryan. CBS San Francisco

Remarkably, Gladden says she suffered no broken bones.

"I have bruising throughout my leg with nasty cable burns," explained Gladden. "And a possible torn ACL."

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Heather Gladden shows some of her injuries from her 500-foot fall from a zip line in Mexico. CBS San Francisco

Gladden and her husband Ryan were on cruise, when the couple booked a day excursion zip lining trip.

Gladden told CBS SF it was the 5th zip line run of the day. She estimates she made it about half way across the run when she began to feel herself falling.

"Next thing I could hear the trees rustling through my ears and the noise of the tree branches," said Gladden. "And then just a hard yank and then when I opened up my eyes I was upside down in the tree."

Gladden's husband Ryan told CBS SF he was ahead of his wife on the next zip line platform, when he realized something was not right.

"All I saw was the wire literally go right through my legs, hit the ground and then went over the cliff," said Ryan Gladden. "And I told the guy what just happened and he was just like I don't know. This has never happened before."

Ryan Gladden rushed down a cliff into the gorge searching for his wife, guided by the sound of her screams.

He found Heather dangling upside down, tangled in the branches of the tree that broke her fall. After about 30 minutes, Heather was rescued by her husband, zip line company employees and fellow travelers, Monica and John Lee of Hayward, California.

The Lee's say they witnessed Heather's 500-foot fall.

"We heard the line snap. It was traumatic. It was unbelievable, couldn't believe what had happened," they said. "And then you just hear her yelling, you know, just screaming."

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Monica and John Lee of Hayward, California, who witnessed the zip line malfunction. CBS San Francisco

Prior to the airing of the Gladden's story, CBS SF attempted to contact the Nogalito Zip Line Company by phone and email, but did not receive a response.

However, a manager from the company reportedly told the Press Democrat that "the cable on the zip line did not detach or break at the end but only dropped when a cable support mechanism failed."

The manager also reportedly stated that "she believed it was a slow drop."

Heather Gladden and her husband Ryan say they are still in disbelief over what happened, but are grateful that Heather survived.

"The mental nightmares are horrible," said Heather Gladden. "It replays over and over and over."

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