Please ensure Javascript is enabled for purposes of website accessibility

PBS and NPR Mount Last-Ditch Fight to Save Federal Funding

21 hours ago

Netanyahu Under Mounting Political Pressure After Party Quits

22 hours ago

Wall Street Opens Higher After Inflation, Bank Results

22 hours ago

Sick of Loud Ads on Netflix? A Proposed California Law Turns Down the Volume

2 days ago

Record Numbers of Americans Say Immigration Is Good for Country: Gallup Poll

2 days ago

In California Strawberry Fields, Immigration Raids Sow Fear

2 days ago

Newsom’s Office Attacks Stephen Miller, Calling Him a ‘Fascist Cuck’

2 days ago

Trump’s Spending Bill Will Likely Boost Costs for Insurers, Shrink Medicaid Coverage

2 days ago
How a Birthday Boat Ride on Lake Tahoe Turned Tragic
d8a347b41db1ddee634e2d67d08798c102ef09ac
By The New York Times
Published 3 weeks ago on
June 25, 2025

The 27-foot Chris-Craft boat of DoorDash executive Josh Pickles capsized, tossing passengers into the frigid water toward the south end of Lake Tahoe, Saturday, June 21, 2025. He and his parents died, along with five of their guests. (U.S. Coast Guard Northern California via The New York Times)

Share

Getting your Trinity Audio player ready...

The weekend seemed perfect for a summer excursion on the azure waters of Lake Tahoe. Josh Pickles, a DoorDash executive, took several family members and friends on his boat to celebrate his mother’s 71st birthday. His wife, Jordan Sugar-Carlsgaard, stayed home to care for their infant daughter.

Josh Pickles

But sunshine suddenly gave way to a ferocious storm on Saturday afternoon that caught even longtime Tahoe residents by surprise. Thunder and lightning roared from the sky, dumping rain and snow. Waves as tall as 8 feet ripped across the lake, according to some accounts.

The day ended in a nightmare. Pickles’ 27-foot-long boat capsized, tossing passengers into the frigid water toward the south end of the lake. He and his parents died, along with five of their guests.

And Sugar-Carlsgaard, 38, suddenly found herself a widow with a 7-month-old baby.

“We are devastated by this tragedy,” she said in a statement. “No words can express the pain and anguish we feel knowing their lives were lost during what was meant to be a joyful time on the lake.”

Pickles was an experienced sailor but the gold Chris-Craft boat was still new to him, said Sam Singer, a family representative. He had operated it twice last year, and Saturday’s outing was the first time he had taken it out this season.

Like many who work in the tech industry, the couple split time between their homes in the Tahoe region and in the San Francisco Bay Area, where Sugar-Carlsgaard is an executive assistant at Airbnb, according to Singer.

Lake Tahoe, the largest alpine lake in North America, is nestled within the mountains along the California-Nevada border. In the winter, the region becomes a snowy playground; in the summer, visitors fish, hike and swim. Ski resorts and multimillion-dollar vacation homes ring the lake, and casinos on the Nevada side draw gamblers.

‘Time to Get Off the Water’

The day before the boating accident, winds belted the Tahoe basin as a mass of cold air from the Gulf of Alaska approached Nevada. The National Weather Service had a wind advisory in effect for the area and warned of “choppy lake waters” as gusts of 80 to 100 mph whipped the ridgelines.

After sunrise Saturday, the winds eased, but the day felt more springlike as cold air pushed into the area. Afternoon temperatures were in the 60s, about 20 to 25 degrees below normal for this time of year. The cold air funneling into the region made the atmosphere unstable.

Thunderstorms are notoriously difficult to forecast with precision.

By the afternoon, storms emerged north of Lake Tahoe near Truckee, California, and Palisades Tahoe ski resort as well as near Incline Village, Nevada, delivering an unseasonable mix of rain and snow, as well as graupel, a hail-like pellet.

“I look at the weather every day, it caught me off guard that day,” said Neil Lareau, an atmospheric scientist and professor at the University of Nevada, Reno.

Eric Mein, who owns the Topside Boat Training school, was on the water before the storm. He said he felt a “sixth sense” that the calm would soon give way to calamitous conditions.

“The lake was laying down, the clouds were building up. You could see the wind was ready to start blowing,” he said. “It was time to get off the water.”

Just after 2 p.m., high winds blew through and persisted for at least 90 minutes. Wind data collected from an anemometer in D.L. Bliss State Park, on the west shore near where Pickles’ boat capsized, showed that wind speeds spiked upward at 2:10 p.m. and continued to strengthen.

One of the worst locations might have been where Pickles’ Chris-Craft was situated that afternoon. Winds usually come out of the south, but they came from the north that day, intensifying as they raced across nearly the length of Lake Tahoe.

“You have a longer distance for those waves to travel across the lake,” said Kyle Floyd, officer in charge at the U.S. Coast Guard station in Tahoe City, California. “That greater distance can build the waves dramatically.”

Boaters were caught unaware. The abrupt, unpredictable storm did not meet the weather service’s criteria for severe weather Saturday, said Dawn Johnson, the warning coordination meteorologist at the weather service office in nearby Reno, Nevada.

“We would issue a severe thunderstorm warning if we were seeing a strong thunderstorm capable of reaching near 60 mph winds,” Johnson said. “Nothing we saw on radar showed us that an event like that was capable of occurring.”

‘It Looked Like the Ocean’

Lindsay Chandler, a service manager at a local marina, said she felt the air temperature drop quickly and saw waves churning the lake.

“It looked like the ocean. We couldn’t see across the lake, it was snowing heavily,” she said. “I’ve never seen anything like that in my 15 years living in Lake Tahoe.”

Several boaters were in distress.

Dan Johnston was out on his 26-foot MasterCraft with his wife, their son and several friends when the winds kicked up. Water surged over the back of the boat, and everyone grabbed coolers and trash cans to start bailing it out. Even so, water crept into the engine compartment, and Johnston said his boat began to stall.

“As I was losing power, my wife was like, ‘We should call 911,’” he recalled.

A marine rescue team arrived and started towing his boat toward shore. But as their momentum slowed, Johnston said, his watercraft rolled over. He and his wife swam to shore, he said, and rescuers pulled other passengers from the water, who were loaded into an ambulance.

On the ride to the hospital, Johnston said he could hear calls over the radio about a desperate rescue effort underway on the west side of the lake.

Shortly before 3 p.m., the El Dorado County Sheriff’s Office received several calls about Pickles’ capsized boat. Of the 10 people on board, two were rescued by emergency responders and taken to a hospital.

Six bodies were recovered from the water. Two more were located over the next two days.

The victims were Pickles; his parents, Terry Pickles, 73, and Paula Bozinovich, 71, of Redwood City, California; his uncle, Peter Bayes, 72, of Lincoln, California; Timothy O’Leary, 71, of Auburn, California; Stephen Lindsay, 63, of Springwater, New York; and Theresa Giullari, 66, and James Guck, 69, of Honeoye, New York.

Pickles, 37, was a senior director at DoorDash, and had worked for the food delivery app for nearly seven years, following stints at other major tech companies in the Bay Area.

“Josh loved his team and was an inspiration to everyone who had the privilege of knowing him,” Ravi Inukonda, chief financial officer at DoorDash, said in a statement. “We miss him deeply and will carry his memory with us always.”

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.

By Laurel Rosenhall, Amy Graff and Alex Hoeft/

c.2025 The New York Times Company

RELATED TOPICS:

DON'T MISS

What Are Fresno Real Estate Experts Predicting for 2025 and Beyond?

DON'T MISS

First California EV Mandates Hit Automakers This Year. Most Are Not Even Close

DON'T MISS

So Your Doctor Is a DO. Does That Matter?

DON'T MISS

Fresno Man Found Dead After Hike Near Courtright Reservoir

DON'T MISS

Former US Army Soldier Pleads Guilty in Phone Company Hacking, Extortion Case

DON'T MISS

Fresno City Attorney Briefly Ineligible to Practice Law, Cites State Bar Error

DON'T MISS

Grass Fire East of Sanger Contained at 21 Acres, CalFire Says

DON'T MISS

Age Is Just a Number: 80-Year-Old Conquers Death Valley to Mt. Whitney Ultramarathon

DON'T MISS

What to Know About the Epstein Files, a Perfect Recipe for Conspiracy Theories

DON'T MISS

US Military to Remove 2,000 National Guard Troops From Los Angeles

DON'T MISS

Mexico Pledges Action Should US Talks Fail by August Tariff Deadline

DON'T MISS

Fresno Police Arrest Armed Man Found Asleep in Car

UP NEXT

Fresno Man Found Dead After Hike Near Courtright Reservoir

UP NEXT

Former US Army Soldier Pleads Guilty in Phone Company Hacking, Extortion Case

UP NEXT

Fresno City Attorney Briefly Ineligible to Practice Law, Cites State Bar Error

UP NEXT

Grass Fire East of Sanger Contained at 21 Acres, CalFire Says

UP NEXT

Age Is Just a Number: 80-Year-Old Conquers Death Valley to Mt. Whitney Ultramarathon

UP NEXT

What to Know About the Epstein Files, a Perfect Recipe for Conspiracy Theories

UP NEXT

US Military to Remove 2,000 National Guard Troops From Los Angeles

UP NEXT

Mexico Pledges Action Should US Talks Fail by August Tariff Deadline

UP NEXT

Fresno Police Arrest Armed Man Found Asleep in Car

UP NEXT

Trump Says Democratic Rival Schiff Should Be ‘Brought to Justice’ for Alleged Fraud

Fresno City Attorney Briefly Ineligible to Practice Law, Cites State Bar Error

14 hours ago

Grass Fire East of Sanger Contained at 21 Acres, CalFire Says

14 hours ago

Age Is Just a Number: 80-Year-Old Conquers Death Valley to Mt. Whitney Ultramarathon

14 hours ago

What to Know About the Epstein Files, a Perfect Recipe for Conspiracy Theories

14 hours ago

US Military to Remove 2,000 National Guard Troops From Los Angeles

14 hours ago

Mexico Pledges Action Should US Talks Fail by August Tariff Deadline

15 hours ago

Fresno Police Arrest Armed Man Found Asleep in Car

15 hours ago

Trump Says Democratic Rival Schiff Should Be ‘Brought to Justice’ for Alleged Fraud

16 hours ago

Madera County Authorities Seeks Help Finding Missing Bass Lake Man

16 hours ago

Crypto Bills Hit Procedural Snag in Congress

17 hours ago

So Your Doctor Is a DO. Does That Matter?

By most measures, osteopathic medicine is a profession in its prime. The number of doctors of osteopathic medicine, or DOs, has grown 70% in...

12 hours ago

The number of osteopathic doctors has increased dramatically. People still don’t know what they are. (Sonia Pulido/The New York Times)
12 hours ago

So Your Doctor Is a DO. Does That Matter?

13 hours ago

Fresno Man Found Dead After Hike Near Courtright Reservoir

A hooded man holds a laptop computer as cyber code is projected on him in this illustration picture taken on May 13, 2017. (Reuters File)
14 hours ago

Former US Army Soldier Pleads Guilty in Phone Company Hacking, Extortion Case

14 hours ago

Fresno City Attorney Briefly Ineligible to Practice Law, Cites State Bar Error

A grass fire east of Sanger burned 21 acres Tuesday, July 15, 2025, afternoon before being contained, CalFire said. (CalFire)
14 hours ago

Grass Fire East of Sanger Contained at 21 Acres, CalFire Says

14 hours ago

Age Is Just a Number: 80-Year-Old Conquers Death Valley to Mt. Whitney Ultramarathon

Jack Posobiec, a far-right political activist, carries a binder labeled “The Epstein Files: Phase 1” as he exits the White House in Washington, Feb. 27, 2025. Here’s what to know about the disturbing facts and unsubstantiated suspicions that make Jeffrey Epstein, a registered sex offender, a politically potent obsession. (Haiyun Jiang/The New York Times)
14 hours ago

What to Know About the Epstein Files, a Perfect Recipe for Conspiracy Theories

A demonstrator raises his hand holding flowers as members of the National Guard stand in formation outside a federal building during the No Kings protest against U.S. President Donald Trump's policies, in Los Angeles, California, U.S., June 14, 2025. (Reuters File)
14 hours ago

US Military to Remove 2,000 National Guard Troops From Los Angeles

Help continue the work that gets you the news that matters most.

Search

Send this to a friend