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  • In January 2025, Thomas Plamberger and his girlfriend Kerstin Gurtner set out to climb the Grossglockner — Austria's highest peak — on a technical winter route they had planned together. What happened over the next sixteen hours would result in Kerstin's death from hypothermia, a forensic investigation using GPS watch data and confiscated phones, a surprise courtroom witness with a story eerily similar to Kerstin's, and a verdict that sent shockwaves through the international climbing community. In this episode, Julie and Kaycee walk through the documented timeline minute by minute — the equipment choices, the missed helicopter, the calls that weren't made — and bring in the medical realities of what Kerstin's body was experiencing in those final hours on the mountain. The case raises a question that has no clean answer: when two adults choose to climb together, at what point does one of them become legally responsible for the other? The court gave its answer in February 2026. Whether it was the right one is still being debated.

    00:00 Patreon Mention
    00:34 Disaster Strikes Intro
    01:38 Cold Open On The Ridge
    03:05 Case And Legal Question
    04:13 Meet Thomas And Kirsten
    06:26 Ascent Plan And Early Delays
    08:23 Missed Call And Warning Signs
    10:02 Helicopter Flyover No Signal
    11:18 Gear Illness And Deterioration
    12:58 Leaving Her And Rescue Timeline
    19:36 Investigation And Trial Twist
    23:11 Verdict And Family Response
    28:30 Why This Case Changes Climbing
    30:28 Final Reflections And Goodbye

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    KEY REFERENCES:

    Climbing Magazine — "Climber Faces Homicide Charges After His Partner Dies. When Does a Bad Decision Become a Crime?" (December 8, 2025) Climbing Magazine — "Austrian Climber Found Guilty After Girlfriend Dies of Hypothermia on Grossglockner Mountain" (February 20, 2026) CNN — "Climber Accused of Leaving Girlfriend to Die on Austria's Tallest Mountain Goes on Trial" (February 19, 2026) Irish Times — "Alpine Climber Guilty of Manslaughter Over Girlfriend's Death on Austrian Mountain" (February 19, 2026) Irish Times — "Climber Found Guilty of Manslaughter After Leaving Girlfriend on Austrian Mountain" (February 20, 2026) Global News — "Climber Convicted of Manslaughter After Leaving Girlfriend to Die on Mountain" (February 20, 2026) Global News — "Man Charged with Manslaughter After Girlfriend Freezes to Death on Austrian Mountain" (December 13, 2025) The Daily Beast — "Climber Whose Girlfriend Froze on Mountain Convicted in Shocking Verdict" (February 2026) LBC News — "Climber Who Left Girlfriend to Die on Austria's Biggest Mountain Spared Jail After Being Found Guilty of Manslaughter" (February 2026) LADbible — "Man Goes on Trial for 'Leaving Girlfriend to Freeze to Death' on Top of Mountain" (February 19, 2026) LADbible — "Man Accused of 'Leaving Girlfriend to Freeze to Death' on Mountain Allegedly Abandoned Ex in Same Place" (February 19, 2026) NewsNation — "Climber Guilty of Manslaughter After Leaving Girlfriend on Austrian Mountain" (February 2026) KCRG / AP — "Court Convicts Climber Whose Girlfriend Froze to Death After He Left Her Behind on Mountain" (February 21, 2026) Die Zeit (Germany) — Interview with Gertraud Gurtner (Kerstin's mother) (February 2026) Innsbruck Public Prosecutor's Office — Formal charging documents and prosecutorial statements (December 2025) Innsbruck Regional Court — Verdict and judicial statements, Judge Norbert Hofer (February 20, 2026)

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  • Hosts Kaycee McIntosh and Julie Henningsen recount Finnish corporal Aimo Koivunen’s March 18, 1944 ordeal during the Continuation War: leading a seven-man long-range ski reconnaissance patrol in Soviet-controlled Lapland at −20°C, he collapses under exhaustion during a Soviet encirclement and, unable to dose properly with mittens on, swallows the patrol’s full bottle of Pervitin—30 tablets (90 mg) of methamphetamine. After a brief surge, he develops psychosis, is disarmed by teammates, and skis on “autopilot,” later waking alone after covering about 100 km. He mistakenly skis through a Soviet camp, burns down a cabin by lighting a fire on the floor, survives on pine buds, steps on a landmine, and spends a week in a ditch before rescue in early April—two and a half weeks later—with a 200 bpm resting heart rate, 43 kg body weight, and frostbite requiring toe amputations. The episode adds WWII stimulant history and argues war repeatedly pushes armies toward chemical solutions.
    00:00 Podcast Intro
    00:28 Lapland Night Chase
    02:28 Pervitin Decision
    03:21 Finland Versus USSR
    07:07 Aimo Early Life
    11:43 Elite Ski Scouts
    15:43 Ambush And Escape
    21:00 What Is Pervitin
    26:14 Pervitin Kicks In
    27:24 Psychosis Takes Hold
    30:17 Disarmed and Blackout Skiing
    31:43 Autopilot Navigation West
    34:48 Soviet Camp Close Call
    36:16 Cabin Fire Hallucinations
    37:10 Crash Hunger and Landmine
    38:51 Week in the Ditch
    40:31 Rescue and Aftermath
    43:02 Life After the War
    44:02 Story Published and Legacy
    45:26 War and Drugs Through History
    48:40 Limits of Human Will
    50:29 Closing and Listener Support

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    REFERENCES Koivunen, Aimo — Personal memoir account published in Kansa Taisteli (1978). Wikipedia — "Aimo Koivunen." Grokipedia — "Aimo Koivunen." Commonplace Fun Facts — English translation of Koivunen's memoir excerpts. Ohler, Norman — Blitzed: Drugs in the Third Reich (2016). Wikipedia — "Otto Friedrich Ranke." Wikipedia — "Pervitin" and "Drug Policy of Nazi Germany." Yle (Finnish Broadcasting Company). MyHeritage / Geni — Genealogical records. Wikipedia — "Long-range reconnaissance patrol" and "Detached Battalion 4." Finnish Army Jaeger Brigade / Bushcraft USA — rakovalkea and kaukopartio equipment. PMC / Brieflands — stimulant psychosis research. PNAS / Nature Neuroscience — spatial navigation neuroscience. History.com / VA History — Vietnam and Civil War drug history. Wikipedia — "Winter War." WFYI / HyperWar — Finnish mobilization 1939. History of Finland — Wikipedia.

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  • When three-year-old Brittany Eichelberger slipped out of her family's trailer in Elkins, West Virginia on Christmas Eve 1990, no one knew she was gone. She was found hours later, clinically dead in the snow — frozen stiff, her heart stopped, her body nearly 25 degrees below normal temperature. A neighbor, a determined paramedic, and a rural hospital team that refused to quit launched one of the most extraordinary resuscitation efforts ever documented in emergency medicine. The cold that stopped her heart may also be the reason her brain survived. This is a story about what happens when everyone around you decides it isn't over yet.

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    00:00 Podcast Intro

    00:29 Door Left Open

    01:44 Meet Brittany

    03:15 How She Wandered

    04:34 Found In Snow

    05:34 CPR In The Yard

    08:32 Hospital Fight

    10:16 Three Hour CPR

    15:08 Flight To Pittsburgh

    17:23 Waking Up Again

    18:59 Why Cold Saved Her

    20:00 Recovery After Discharge

    22:03 Living With The Story

    23:36 Honoring Rescuers

    26:08 Lessons And Wrap Up

    27:08 Outro And Reviews

    REFERENCES

    Associated Press. "Girl, 3, Found Clinically Dead in Snow, Is Revived." Los Angeles Times, December 28, 1990.

    Associated Press. "Clinically Dead Tot Who Was Found Frozen Is Revived." Deseret News, December 27, 1990.

    Gordon, Haley. "Woman Looks Back on 'Christmas Eve Miracle.'" The Intermountain, December 24, 2019.

    "Longtime Randolph County Coroner Dailey Passes at 68." The Intermountain, February 13, 2026.

    "Brenda Kay 'Bren' Dailey." Obituary. The Intermountain, February 14, 2026.

    "Snowgirl Save." Rescue 911, Season 3, 1991. Rescue 911 Wiki, Fandom.

    Dr. John Veach, Davis Memorial Hospital — quoted in AP wire reports, December 1990, and Rescue 911, 1991.

    Dr. Shekhar Venkataraman, Children's Hospital of Pittsburgh — quoted in AP wire reports, December 1990.

    National Weather Service historical records for Elkins, WV, December 24, 1990 — referenced in The Intermountain, 2019.


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  • In this Disaster Strikes segment of the Crux podcast, host Kaycee McIntosh recounts the November 17, 2025 tragedy on Torres del Paine’s O Circuit at John Garner Pass, where a forecasted cyclone hit hurricane-force gusts up to 193 km/h and whiteout conditions. A group of nine independent hikers—many experienced and including multiple physicians—attempted the crossing after being told by Los Perros refugio staff conditions were “normal for Patagonia,” while no CONAF rangers staffed the mandatory checkpoint due to election-day staffing shortages. Survivors improvised rescue with satellite devices, makeshift stretchers, and CPR in the hut, but five people died of hypothermia: Victoria Bond, Christina Calvillo Tovar, Julian Garcia Pimentel, Nadine Lache, and Andreas Vine. The episode details delayed official response, survivor-led self-evacuation, an ongoing negligence investigation, and calls for ranger staffing, emergency planning, better communications, and hiker tracking.

    00:00 Disaster Strikes Intro

    00:47 Ominous Hut Warning

    01:33 What Went Wrong Tease

    02:28 O Circuit Overview

    05:09 Patagonia Weather Reality

    06:16 Safety Systems Gaps

    07:57 John Garner Pass Danger

    09:21 Nine Hikers Meet

    11:51 Los Perros Forecast Failure

    14:17 Dawn Departure Decision

    15:01 Point of No Return

    16:49 Whiteout Chaos Above Treeline

    18:08 Warnings Turn Some Back

    19:00 Hurricane Force Trap

    20:01 Whiteout Hypothermia Spiral

    21:16 Falls And Descent Decisions

    22:23 Hut Turns Triage Center

    23:18 Stretcher Rescue And CPR

    26:12 Missing Hikers Go Public

    28:54 Bodies Found And Airlifts

    30:13 How Did This Happen

    32:49 Ranger Checkpoint Failure

    34:50 Survivors Demand Reforms

    37:50 Human Spirit And Aftermath

    39:14 Closing Reflections

    REFERENCESPRIMARY SOURCES Dapcevich, Madison & Zonshayn, David. "I Triaged Patients During the Deadly Patagonia Storm." Outside Magazine, Dec 24, 2025. (Dr. Zonshayn firsthand account) Gillette, Sam. "Survivor of Deadly Blizzard Lost Sight of Friend." People Magazine, Nov 23, 2025. (Christian Aldridge testimony) Thorpe, George. "Chile snowstorm deaths were 'avoidable tragedy.'" BBC News, Nov 24, 2025. (Survivor recommendations) Annapurna, Kris. "The Torres del Paine Tragedy: What Really Happened." ExplorersWeb, Nov 23, 2025. (Timeline, Dr. Wingfield quotes) Jackson, Katie. "Sudden Blizzard on Patagonia's 'O' Circuit Leaves Five Hikers Dead." The Trek, Nov 20, 2025. Knight, Marlee. "Extreme Snowstorm Claims Five Lives on Torres del Paine's 'O' Circuit." Teton Gravity Research, Nov 21, 2025. Johanson, Mark. "Deadly Storm Strikes Popular Trek in Patagonia's Torres del Paine." Outside Magazine, Nov 18, 2025.VERIFIED FACTS Date: November 17, 2025 Location: John Garner Pass, Torres del Paine, Chile Deaths: 5 (Victoria Bond-UK, Cristina Calvillo Tovar-MX, Julian Garcia Pimentel-MX, Nadine Lichey-DE, Andreas von Pein-DE) Wind: 193 kph (120 mph) Forecast: Issued Nov 13, updated Nov 15 Rangers: Zero on duty at John Garner Pass sector (CONAF confirmed) Medical response: 27 hikers required treatmentAll quotes and details verified from published sources.

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  • Kaycee McIntosh and Julie Henningsen recount the June 2008 Regatta de Amigos disaster in the Gulf of Mexico, when the 38-foot racing sailboat Cynthia Woods lost its keel, punched a hole in the hull, and capsized in 30–60 seconds about 11 miles south of Matagorda. Safety officer Roger Stone woke to rising water, warned the crew, and pushed two sleeping sailors up through the flooding companionway, but never surfaced; five others survived by lashing together, keeping a positive mindset, and signaling with a single flashlight until the Coast Guard rescued them 26 hours later, while their EPIRB and life raft were trapped below deck. The episode highlights wearing life jackets early, carrying a waterproof light, having a float plan, and mounting EPIRBs for automatic access, then covers conflicting investigations, a settlement supporting Stone’s children, and his posthumous Coast Guard Gold Lifesaving Medal.
    00:00 Podcast Intro
    00:29 Nightmare Below Deck
    02:49 Meet the Crew
    07:23 Rough Night Conditions
    10:42 Keel Failure Chaos
    15:23 Escape Into Darkness
    17:17 Staying Alive Together
    19:46 No Beacon No Raft
    21:46 Needle in Haystack Rescue
    25:05 Recovery and Loss
    25:31 Safety Lessons Offshore
    29:24 Investigations and Lawsuit
    33:44 Honoring Roger Stone
    36:07 Final Takeaways and Outro

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    KEY REFERENCES: "Roger Stone: The TAMUG Hero You've Never Heard Of." The Nautilus, Texas A&M University at Galveston. https://www.tamug.edu/nautilus/articles/2025-Roger-Stone.html Sail-World Cruising. "Cynthia Woods Capsize — 'It Wasn't Us,' Says University." Sail-World Australia, July 18, 2009. https://www.sail-world.com/59170 Associated Press. "Texas A&M Report Blames Boat Design for Fatal Capsize." ESPN, July 18, 2009. https://www.espn.com.au/college-sports/news/story?id=4338686 Southeast Texas Record. "Mitchell Company Settles Wrongful Death Suit from Capsizal of 'Cynthia Woods.'" March 2, 2010. https://setexasrecord.com/stories/510612701-mitchell-company-settles-wrongful-death-suit-from-capsizal-of-cynthia-woods Soundings Magazine. "New Report, New Theory for Keel Failure." https://www.soundingsonline.com/news/new-report-new-theory-for-keel-failure Ocean Navigator. "Lawsuit Filed in Cynthia Woods Sinking." https://oceannavigator.com/lawsuit-filed-in-cynthia-woods-sinking/ Wikipedia. "SV Cynthia Woods." https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/S.V._Cynthia_Woods U.S. Coast Guard. Gold Lifesaving Medal. https://www.dcms.uscg.mil/

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  • In 1936, a Russian man named Karp Lykov watched a Soviet patrol shoot his brother dead in a field — and in that moment, he made a decision. He gathered his wife and two young children, packed seeds and a spinning wheel, and walked into the Siberian wilderness. He never came back. For 42 years, the Lykov family lived in a one-room log cabin more than 150 miles from the nearest human settlement, raising two children who had never once seen another face besides their own family's. Julie and Kaycee tell the full story — the hunger, the ingenuity, the grief, and the one member of the family who is still out there today.

    01:08 Podcast Intro

    01:29 1978 Helicopter Discovery

    03:20 Why They Fled

    05:36 1936 Escape Into Taiga

    08:45 Building A Mountain Life

    11:55 Hunger And Hunting

    14:08 Akulina Sacrifice

    16:12 Faith And Isolation

    20:08 First Contact 1978

    23:05 Modern World Revealed

    24:53 Deaths After Contact

    29:08 Agafia Alone Today

    31:27 Helper And Visitors

    36:33 What This Survival Means

    37:49 Sources And Farewell

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    KEY REFERENCES:

    Vasily Peskov, Lost in the Taiga: One Russian Family's Fifty-Year Struggle for Survival and Religious Freedom in the Siberian Wilderness (Doubleday, 1992)

    Mike Dash, "For 40 Years, This Russian Family Was Cut Off From All Human Contact, Unaware of World War II," Smithsonian Magazine, January 28, 2013 (updated October 2, 2024)

    "Lykov family," Wikipedia (citing primary Peskov reporting and Komsomolskaya Pravda archives)

    "Meet the Last Lykov," Vice News, 2013 (interview with Agafia Lykova)

    "The Lykov Family That Fled Civilization and Lived in Total Isolation for 42 Years," All That's Interesting

    "The Lykov Family: How They Survived 42 Years Alone in the Siberian Wilderness," Rare Historical Photos

    "The Lykov Family: Forty Years Beyond the Edge of the World," Utterly Interesting

    "The Russian Family of Six, Cut Off from All Human Contact for 42 Years," Abroad in the Yard

    "How Did Agafia Lykova Stay Alive," Ranker

    "The Lykovs' 42-Year Exile," Fun Fact / Top News Source

    Komsomolskaya Pravda archives, Vasily Peskov series on the Lykov family, 1982

    Agafia, documentary film, RT (Russia Today)

    Far Out: Agafia's Taiga Life, documentary film


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  • In February 1959, nine skilled winter hikers vanished in Russia's Ural Mountains during what should have been a routine expedition. When rescuers found their tent weeks later, it had been slashed open from the inside, and the bodies were scattered across the mountainside—some nearly naked in minus 25-degree temperatures, some with crushing injuries, one missing facial features. For over six decades, theories ranged from secret military tests to supernatural forces, but no explanation could account for all the evidence. Now, groundbreaking scientific research offers a chilling answer that's somehow more unsettling than any conspiracy: the mountains themselves. Join us as we reconstruct that fatal night and explore how experience, training, and determination sometimes aren't enough.

    01:03 Disaster Strikes Intro
    01:43 Night of Terror
    03:42 Meet the Expedition
    04:38 Soviet Hiking Grades
    06:16 Team Members and Yuri Talk
    08:47 Trek Begins and One Turns Back
    11:20 Camp on Dead Mountain
    12:58 Search Finds Slashed Tent
    15:49 Bodies by Cedar and on Slope
    19:00 Ravine Discovery and Autopsies
    23:24 Radiation and Case Closed
    27:45 Avalanche Theory Reopened
    28:27 Modeling the Slab Avalanche
    31:49 How They Tried to Survive
    35:12 Why the Mystery Persists
    39:55 Final Reflections and RIP

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    REFERENCES Dyatlov Pass incident - Wikipedia Gaume, J., Puzrin, A.M. "Mechanisms of slab avalanche release and impact in the Dyatlov Pass incident in 1959." Communications Earth & Environment (2021) "The Dyatlov Pass Incident: Why the Hiker Deaths Remain a Mystery" - History.com "Russia's 'Dyatlov Pass' conspiracy theory may finally be solved 60 years later" - Live Science "Has science solved one of history's greatest adventure mysteries?" - National Geographic "Prosecutors say avalanche killed Dyatlov group in Urals in 1959" - TASS Soviet Investigative Case Files 1959 - dyatlovpass.com Autopsy Reports - Boris Vozrozhdenny, 1959 Radiological Analysis Report - Sverdlovsk Sanitary Epidemiological Station, 1959 "The Russian Roswell" - Science History Institute Russian Prosecutor General's Office Investigation Report (2019-2020) Dyatlov Group Diaries and Photographs (1959) "We May Finally Know Why Nine Soviet Hikers Lost Their Lives In The Dyatlov Pass Incident" - All That's Interesting "The Dyatlov Pass Mystery May Have Just Been Solved by New Video Evidence" - Vice (2024) Official Search and Rescue Reports - Sverdlovsk Oblast (1959)

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  • In July 2025, 13-year-old Cody Trenkel Jr. set out on a routine skateboard ride through his grandmother's quiet Missouri neighborhood—and never made it to his destination. What began as a normal summer morning turned into a multi-day search across miles of wooded terrain, with no clear clues and time running out. As search teams struggled to narrow down where to look, one unexpected factor changed everything. This episode follows the critical decisions, the hidden dangers close to home, and the narrow window that can make the difference between life and death.

    01:08 Podcast Intro
    01:30 Meet Daryl The Bloodhound
    03:29 How Cody Vanished
    08:54 The Ravine Fall
    10:34 Surviving Heat And Trauma
    13:22 Three Day Search
    15:21 Bloodhound Tracks The Trail
    18:10 Rescue And ICU Fight
    21:05 Recovery And Reunion
    22:09 Other Bloodhound Saves
    25:44 Prevention And Check Ins
    29:58 First Aid If Found
    33:35 Closing Reflections
    35:37 Listener Outro

    SOURCES

    Neely, Shanie. "Paws to the Rescue: How a K-9 Helped Find a Missing Boy." Reader's Digest, April/May 2026. rd.com/article/dog-rescues-missing-boy/

    "He's a Fighter: 13-Year-Old Missouri Teen Rescued Alive in Ravine After 76 Hours Missing." KSDK, July 31, 2025. ksdk.com

    "A Teen Missing for 3 Days Needed a Miracle — A Dog Came to the Rescue." WGRZ, September 2025. wgrz.com

    "Missing Boy Found in Missouri Ravine After 4 Days." KSDK, July 30, 2025. ksdk.com

    Holcombe, Madeline. "3-Year-Old Casey Hathaway Told Authorities a Bear Kept Him Company." CNN, January 29, 2019. cnn.com

    Heat Stroke. Mayo Clinic. mayoclinic.org

    Bloodhound Breed Information. American Kennel Club. akc.org


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  • In October 1897, eight whaling ships became trapped in pack ice near Point Barrow, Alaska — the northernmost tip of North America — with 265 men aboard and no possibility of rescue by sea until the following summer. With the crew facing starvation, President McKinley ordered the only vessel capable of Arctic work, the Revenue Cutter Bear, to attempt the impossible: get food to those men before they died. What followed was a 99-day, 1,500-mile overland march through an Alaskan winter, at temperatures as low as negative 45 degrees Fahrenheit, led by volunteer officers on foot and snowshoes. The plan hinged entirely on a herd of reindeer — and on a missionary who left his wife and children alone in a remote Bering Strait village to guide them through the most brutal leg of the journey. This is the rescue that almost no one knows about, and it is one of the most remarkable survival stories in American history.

    00:06 Wilderness First Aid

    01:08 Podcast Intro

    01:32 Point Barrow Rescue Tease

    03:27 Sources Listener Shoutout

    04:19 Whalers Trapped In Ice

    06:14 Rescue Mission Problem

    07:30 Reindeer Rescue Plan

    07:43 Meet The Volunteers

    12:00 Reindeer Program Origins

    13:37 Overland Trek Begins

    14:37 Team Splits To Survive

    17:00 Negotiating For Reindeer

    20:09 Driving The Herd North

    21:15 Arctic Medicine Reality

    22:32 Snow Blindness Solutions

    23:14 Snowblindness Hacks

    24:06 Power Bar Wrapper Goggles

    25:30 Calorie Deficit Breakdown

    27:02 Bad News From Tilton

    28:10 Belvedere In Ice

    28:57 Arrival At Point Barrow

    30:54 Scurvy And Reindeer Cure

    32:53 Bear Breaks Through Ice

    34:14 Medals And Missing Credit

    35:55 Where They Ended Up

    39:49 The Lost Ship Wanderer

    40:21 Jarvis Philosophy And Wrap

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    REFERENCES

    Jarvis, David H. Expedition Journal, 1897–1898. As quoted in U.S. Coast Guard and NOAA primary source accounts.

    McKinley, William. Message to Congress, January 17, 1899. The American Presidency Project. presidency.ucsb.edu.

    Thiesen, William H. "The Overland Expedition — Saving Lives Above the Arctic Circle Over 120 Years Ago." NOAA Ocean Exploration, September 9, 2019.

    Thiesen, William H. "David Jarvis, the Early Bering Sea Patrol and the Famous Overland Relief Expedition." NOAA Ocean Exploration, June 3, 2021.

    Thiesen, William H. "The Cutter Bear and the Arctic Expedition to Save 265 Whalers." Maritime Executive, September 13, 2019.

    "The Incredible Alaska Overland Rescue." Naval History and Heritage Command, U.S. Navy. history.navy.mil.

    "Surgeon Call — Arctic Hero of the Coast Guard and Public Health Service." National Coast Guard Museum. nationalcoastguardmuseum.org.

    "Overland Relief Expedition." Wikipedia. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Overland_Relief_Expedition.

    "David H. Jarvis." Wikipedia. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David_H._Jarvis.

    "W. T. Lopp." Wikipedia. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Thomas_Lopp.

    Taliaferro, John. In a Far Country: The True Story of a Mission, a Marriage, a Murder, and the Remarkable Reindeer Rescue of 1898. New York: PublicAffairs, 2006.

    Lopp, William Thomas. Diary of the Relief Expedition for the Whalers in the Arctic Ocean, 1898.

    Lopp, Ellen Louise Kittredge. Ice Window: Letters from a Bering Strait Village, 1892–1902. 2001.

    "There Was Much Money to Be Made in Reindeer Herding." HistoryNet. historynet.com.


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  • On September 20th, 2025, 26-year-old Colorado guide Olivia Copeland fell 80 feet to her death while demonstrating a rappel to tourists. The cause: an improperly threaded belay device—one strand instead of two.

    The investigation revealed shocking gaps at Arkansas Valley Adventures: no written training materials, no backup safety systems, and no competency testing. Training was "experiential"—watch someone do it, then do it yourself. Some guides didn't even know backup systems existed.

    This episode examines how Olivia's death exposed critical flaws in Colorado's via ferrata industry, where companies create their own training standards with minimal oversight. When routine becomes autopilot, when there are no redundancies to catch mistakes, disaster waits. A cautionary tale about the dangerous gap between "professional" and truly prepared.

    00:00 Disaster Strikes Intro
    00:45 The Fall Begins
    01:45 Via Ferrata Explained
    03:37 Colorado Oversight Gaps
    06:47 Olivia Copeland Background
    08:26 Training And Gear Questions
    11:24 Route And Rappel Setup
    13:20 Witnessed Fatal Mistake
    15:49 Emergency Response Aftermath
    18:49 Investigation Findings
    24:25 Industry Debate And Standards
    28:17 Lessons And Closing Tribute

    References:

    Incident Reports & Investigations:

    Colorado Division of Oil and Public Safety - Amusement Rides and Devices Program. (2025, November 21). Investigation Report: Arkansas Valley Adventures Via Ferrata Fatality. Federal Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA). (2025, September 22-November). Investigation into workplace fatality at Arkansas Valley Adventures. Idaho Springs Police Department. (2025, September 20). Incident Report: Fatal accident at Mount Blue Sky Via Ferrata.Via Ferrata Safety Research: Austrian Alpine Association. (2019). Via Ferrata Safety Study: Analysis of 162,000 trips and 62 deaths over 10 years.News & Media Coverage: Various national news outlets covering the September 2025 incident (specific sources not cited in transcript).Background Information: Arkansas Valley Adventures operational manuals and training documentation (referenced in investigation). Witness statements from customers and employees (collected by Idaho Springs Police and state investigators). Previous Colorado via ferrata incidents: 2018 Telluride fatality, 2021 Telluride fatality.Biographical Information: Kansas State University Legacy Award records (2022). Copeland family statements (September 2025). Former Olathe Mayor Michael Copeland public records.

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  • In December 2006, elite endurance athlete Danelle Ballengee slipped on black ice near Moab, Utah, fell 60 feet, and shattered her pelvis while unknowingly bleeding internally. With only eight ounces of water, two energy gels, and a shower cap, she crawled a quarter mile in five hours, then endured roughly 52 hours in a freezing canyon, rationing snowmelt, doing crunches for warmth, and developing severe frostbite while unable to signal for help. Her dog Taz repeatedly ran the five miles to the trailhead and back until search and rescue followed him to her just before dark on the third day, leading to an airlift, major surgery, and a remarkable recovery. Ballengee later walked and raced again, and renamed the area Taz Canyon in her dog's honor.

    00:00 Welcome to Crux
    00:28 Cold Open Crisis
    01:48 Meet Danelle
    04:05 Trailhead Routine
    05:51 Black Ice Fall
    08:42 Crawling for Survival
    10:41 Night One Decisions
    12:48 Realizing She Needs Rescue
    14:21 Missing Person Alarm
    16:03 Second Night Breaking Point
    17:57 Search Team Mobilizes
    19:57 Taz Leads Them In
    22:38 Rescue and Airlift
    24:18 Why Taz Left
    26:29 Surgery and Recovery
    28:56 Aftermath and Reflection
    31:15 Closing and Call to Action

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    References – Crux Podcast: Danelle Ballengee Episode

    ESPN – "Dog Comes to Racer's Rescue" (December 2006) Primary news report from just after the rescue, including quotes from Marshall and details on her athletic record. https://www.espn.com/outdoors/general/news/story?id=2704879 Summit Daily – "Miracle in Moab: The Stunning Rescue of Danelle Ballengee" (December 2006) Detailed account of the search and rescue operation, Dorothy Rossignol, and John Marshall's quotes. https://www.summitdaily.com/news/miracle-in-moab-the-stunning-rescue-of-danelle-ballengee/ Snowshoe Magazine – "Screams of Pain: The Danelle Ballengee Story" First-person account written by Ballengee herself. Confirms Taz's full name (Tasman) and details of the fall. https://www.snowshoemag.com/screams-of-pain-the-danelle-ballengee-story/ Triathlete Magazine – "The Ultimate Test of Endurance" Covers her survival tactics, the shower cap, the puddle, crunches, and the Taz Canyon naming. https://www.triathlete.com/culture/ultimate-test-endurance/ Deseret News – "About Utah: Near-Fatal Fall on Moab Trail Changes Runner Danelle 'Nellie' Ballengee's Life" (2012) Confirms Sports Illustrated 2003 quote, Pikes Peak wins, Primal Quest wins, Milt's diner ownership (BC Laprade), and Taz's Canyon. https://www.deseret.com/2012/4/2/20404197/about-utah-near-fatal-fall-on-moab-trail-changes-runner-danelle-nellie-ballengee-s-life/ iRunFar – "Danelle Ballengee and the Art of Suffering" (Interview) Direct interview with Ballengee covering her athletic career, the accident, and life afterward. https://www.irunfar.com/danelle-ballengee-and-the-art-of-suffering-an-interview-with-a-mountain-legend Colorado Running Hall of Fame – Danelle Ballengee Profile Confirms athletic stats: four Pikes Peak wins, three Primal Quest wins, six Athlete of the Year awards. https://corunninghalloffame.com/2013/01/31/danelle-ballengee/ Endurance Town – "Faces Behind the Races: Danelle Ballengee" Confirms kinesiology/biology degree from CU Boulder, coaching since 1993, and 50+ events organized. https://endurancetownusa.com/faces-behind-the-races-featuring-danelle-ballengee/ Colorado Triathlete – "Documentary Portrays Danelle Ballengee's Extraordinary Tale of Survival" (2010) Confirms the I Shouldn't Be Alive episode and the 52-hour rescue timeline. https://coloradotriathlete.com/documentary-portrays-danelle-ballengees-extraordinary-tale-of-survival/ IMDb – I Shouldn't Be Alive, Season 3, Episode 1: "Trapped in the Canyon" (2010) Confirms rescuer name as Bego Gerhart (note: not "Beo" as written in the script — worth correcting). https://www.imdb.com/title/tt1575882/ Backpacker Magazine – "Profiles in (Dis)Courage: Danelle Ballengee" Additional survival account details. https://www.backpacker.com/survival/profiles-in-dis-courage-danelle-ballengee/

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  • On February 14, 2007, elite paraglider Ewa Wiśnierska launched from an Australian mountain for a routine training flight. Within minutes, she was sucked into a massive cumulonimbus cloud and carried to altitudes where commercial jets cruise — with no oxygen, no pressurization, and temperatures colder than anywhere on Earth. Her GPS recorded everything that happened next, including 40 minutes she doesn't remember. Another pilot caught in the same storm wasn't as fortunate. This is the story of an accidental world record that no one would ever attempt on purpose.

    00:06 Wilderness Aid Promo

    01:08 Podcast Intro

    01:31 Everest Storm Hook

    03:33 Meet Eva The Champion

    04:49 Race Day Warnings

    06:07 Launch And Early Flight

    06:43 What Is Paragliding

    07:45 Storms On The Horizon

    08:56 Sucked Into The Cloud

    11:51 Hail And Hypothermia

    13:59 Death Zone Explained

    16:42 Record Altitude On GPS

    18:07 Wing Collapse Begins

    18:26 Wing Reopens Midair

    19:24 Frozen Controls Decision

    20:28 Spiraling Down to Land

    21:36 Rescue Text and Aftermath

    22:39 Another Pilot Lost

    25:04 Hospital Miracle Recovery

    26:51 Back Flying and Career

    29:16 Data and World Record

    31:16 Luck Lessons and Farewell

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    REFERENCES

    Wikipedia: Ewa Wiśnierska

    ABC News: "Paraglider Pulled Six Miles High by Storm — and Lives to Tell About It" (February 16, 2007)

    CBS News: "Paraglider Cheats Death In Thunderstorm" (February 16, 2007)

    The Sydney Morning Herald: "Ewa Sucked Into Storm and Lives to Tell" (February 17, 2007)

    People Magazine: Ewa Wiśnierska interview (September 2024)

    Cloud Appreciation Society: "Paraglider's Ears Nearly Fall off in a Cumulonimbus Cloud" (April 2007)

    The Age (Australia): "Storm Rider's Miracle Survival" (February 2007)

    Bored Panda: "'I Had No Idea Where I Was': Paraglider Explains How She Survived 10,000 Meters Above The Earth" (September 2024)

    Cultura Colectiva: "The Woman Who Survived Being Sucked Up 32,000 Feet High In A Storm"

    History and Other Things: "The Woman Who Survived The Storm" (October 2018)

    Noiser Podcasts / Real Survival Stories: "Ewa Wiśnierska: How to Survive in the Stratosphere"

    Freedom Parapente: "Maximum Altitude Record in Paragliding — Ewa Wisnierska"

    Dvorak News Blog: "Paraglider Survives Storm That Sucked Her Up to 32,000 Feet" (February 17, 2007)

    Documentary: Miracle in the Storm (ABC1 / France 5, 2010)


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  • On October 1st, 2025, 23-year-old Balin Miller stood near the summit of El Capitan in Yosemite National Park — glitter on his cheeks, orange tent packed, having just completed one of the most psychologically punishing climbs in the world. In the first nine months of 2025 alone, he had accomplished feats that made legends of the sport shake their heads in disbelief, all while living out of a beat-up silver Prius on a shoestring budget. But in the moments after his greatest triumph, something went terribly wrong. This is the story of a young man who packed more living into 23 years than most people do in a lifetime — and the single, heartbreaking oversight that ended it all. Bring tissues, and maybe don't listen to this one alone.

    Timestamps:

    00:34 Disaster Strikes Intro
    01:20 El Capitan Tragedy Setup
    03:18 Baylen Alaska Origins
    04:49 Prius Glitter Lifestyle
    06:26 Reality Bath Solo
    08:21 Denali Slavic Direct
    11:18 Sea of Dreams Explained
    14:02 Livestream Orange Tent
    16:09 Rappel Off Rope End
    17:37 Stopper Knot Theory
    19:10 Aftermath And Tributes
    22:13 Legacy And Lessons
    25:13 Safety Reminder Outro

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    References "Balin Miller: American climber dies aged 23 while climbing El Capitan." October 3, 2025. https://www.cnn.com/2025/10/03/sport/climbing-balin-miller-death-intl CBC News. "Climber Balin Miller, 23-year-old who achieved rare Banff summit, dies in fall at Yosemite's El Capitan." October 3, 2025. https://www.cbc.ca/news/world/yosemite-climbing-death-miller-1.7650097 Gafni, Matthias. "Witness describes horror of streaming climber Balin Miller's fatal fall in Yosemite." San Francisco Chronicle, October 4, 2025. https://www.sfchronicle.com/outdoors/article/witness-climber-balin-miller-fall-21083821.php Early, Wesley. "Alaska climber Balin Miller dies during El Capitan summit." Alaska Public Media, October 3, 2025. https://alaskapublic.org/news/2025-10-03/alaska-climber-balin-miller-dies-during-el-capitan-summit Gripped Magazine. "Balin Miller Solos the Slovak Direct on Denali." June 16, 2025. https://gripped.com/news/balin-miller-solos-the-slovak-direct-on-denali/ Gripped Magazine. "The Reality Bath in the Rockies Repeated Solo." January 11, 2025. https://gripped.com/profiles/the-reality-bath-in-the-rockies-repeated-solo/ Gripped Magazine. "Alpinist Balin Miller Dies in a Rappel Accident in Yosemite." October 2025. https://gripped.com/news/alpinist-balin-miller-dies-in-a-rappel-accident-in-yosemite/ Walsh, Anthony. "Bold Young Alpinist Balin Miller Dies in Yosemite Fall." Climbing Magazine, October 2025. https://www.climbing.com/news/alpinist-balin-miller-dies-in-yosemite/ American Alpine Club. "A Tribute to Balin Miller." October 15, 2025. https://americanalpineclub.org/news/2025/10/15/a-tribute-to-balin-miller Twight, Mark. "The Reality Bath re-Redux." Substack, January 17, 2025. https://marktwight.substack.com/p/the-reality-bath-re-redux Explorersweb. "Denali: Slovak Direct Soloed, Season in Full Swing." June 20, 2025. https://explorersweb.com/denali-slovak-direct-soloed-season-in-full-swing/ Wikipedia contributors. "Balin Miller." Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia. Accessed October 2025. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Balin_Miller NBC News. "Noted climber falls to his death at Yosemite National Park's El Capitan rock formation." October 4, 2025. https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/noted-climber-falls-death-yosemite-national-parks-el-capitan-rock-form-rcna235570

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  • On December 22nd, 1991, a 22-year-old medical student from Brisbane crawled under a rock overhang in the Nepalese Himalayas and waited for help. He had a sleeping bag, two chocolate bars, four books, and no way to make fire.

    No one knew where he was.

    The record for survival at that elevation in Himalayan winter — without food, without shelter beyond a sleeping bag, without fire — was ten days. Every expert, every search coordinator, every official who looked at the timeline said the same thing. It had been too long. The mountain didn't give people back after this many days.

    James Scott lasted forty-three.

    In this episode, Kaycee McIntosh and Julie Henningsen trace every decision that put him under that rock, what his body went through in the weeks that followed, and the two parallel stories running at the same time — a young man alone in the dark doing whatever it took to stay alive, and a sister in Kathmandu who refused, day after day, to accept what everyone around her was saying.

    This one will stay with you.

    00:00 Podcast Intro
    00:39 Storm on the Pass
    02:35 Alone in the Whiteout
    04:19 Shelter Under the Rock
    05:16 43 Days Survival Setup
    07:04 Backstory and Trek Plan
    09:12 Winter Hazards and Bad Gear
    12:15 Split Decision at the Pass
    14:33 Creek Descent Goes Wrong
    16:44 Rationing and Staying Alive
    18:26 UV Damage and Darkness
    19:26 Search Begins and Family Arrives
    20:08 Joanne Refuses Defeat
    21:15 Search Limits at Altitude
    22:23 Life Under the Overhang
    24:16 Why He Stayed Put
    25:49 Helicopter Missed Signal
    26:28 Giving Up Then Reversing
    27:55 Collapse After 100 Meters
    29:10 Day 42 Final Flyover
    29:48 Blue Sleeping Bag Spotted
    31:39 Hospital Recovery and Aftermath
    33:30 Other Cases and Key Variables
    35:18 Book, Media, and Missing Answers
    37:05 Why He Survived
    38:31 Hosts Reflect and Wrap

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    Get schooled by Julie in outdoor wilderness medicine! https://www.headwatersfieldmedicine.com/

    SOURCES

    Primary

    Scott, J. and Robertson, J. (1993). Lost in the Himalayas. Melbourne: Lothian. Edinburgh edition 1994.

    Scott, J. (1992). 'James Scott: How I Survived.' Sun Herald, March 8, 1992. Republished at medicaltranslation.com.au

    Scott, J. and Bailey, E. (1993). 'Miracle in the Himalayas.' Reader's Digest, February 1993, pp. 31–38.

    UPI Archives (February 5, 1992). 'Man survives 43 days in mountains on snow and ice.' Includes direct quotes from Carl Harrison and Dr. F. Garlick. upi.com/Archives/1992/02/05/

    Secondary

    Farafoot Survival Stories (2014). 'Lost in the Himalayas — A Fight for Survival.' farafootsurvivalstories.wordpress.com. Contains extended first-person account from James's 1992 Sun Herald article.

    Academic thesis: 'Traumatic Event Without Loss of Life.' Chapter 6, pp. 202–223. University of Queensland. reporting4work.com.au. Contains interview with Joanne Robertson.

    Wellcome Collection (1993). Archival illustration and reference materials. wellcomecollection.org/works/z65xekgt

    Zimmerman, M.D. et al. (1997). 'On being a patient: survival.' Annals of Internal Medicine, 127: 405–409.

    Hilless, B. (December 1998). 'A vision of human survival.' AMAQ News, Journal of the Queensland Branch of the Australian Medical Association.

    Real Risk Podcast, S2 E7 (October 15, 2020). 'Lost in the Himalayas — The Impossible Tale of James Scott.' realriskpodcast.com

    Trail Context

    Going the Whole Hogg (2025). 'Gosainkunda Trek: The Essential Guide.' goingthewholehogg.com/gosainkunda-trek-guide/

    Note on Mark Fulton: Mark Fulton's account of events after he separated from James is not part of the public record. His absence from the book and from press coverage is documented in reader reviews of Lost in the Himalayas (Goodreads, 2020). This script reflects only what is verifiably documented.


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  • On the morning of May 5th, 1979, four residents of Estevan, Saskatchewan boarded a small Cessna bound for Boise, Idaho on what was supposed to be a day trip. By that afternoon, the plane was down in a remote canyon in the Salmon River Mountains, two of the four passengers were dead, and two badly injured survivors were completely alone. No gear. No supplies. No rescue coming. What Donna Johnson and Brent Dyer did over the next nineteen days to stay alive is one of the most remarkable — and least known — survival stories in North American history. This episode does not look away from any of it.

    Timestamps:

    01:07 Crash Begins In Idaho

    03:15 Meet The Passengers

    05:28 Weather Route Decision

    07:12 Impact And Injuries

    10:51 Losses And Isolation

    12:18 Search Misses Them

    12:58 Cold Hunger And Journaling

    15:25 Unthinkable Choice

    18:25 Decision To Walk Out

    21:53 Nineteen Day Escape

    23:24 Rescue And Home News

    24:30 Puppy And Lawsuit Fallout

    27:01 Faith Legacy And Closing

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    REFERENCES

    Johnson v. Pischke, 108 Idaho 397, 700 P.2d 19 (Idaho Supreme Court, 1985)

    Gzowski, Peter. The Sacrament. Atheneum Books, 1980.

    "We Had to Eat Him and We Did." Maclean's, June 11, 1979.

    Timson, Judith. "Survival on Faith and Human Flesh." Maclean's, October 6, 1980.

    "Father's Protective Instinct Led to Miracle in Idaho Mountains." Regina Leader-Post, May 26, 1979.

    "Pair Walk Away from Crash Site." Lawrence Journal-World, May 26, 1979.

    "Air Crash Survivor Recounts Ordeal." Brandon Sun, June 1, 1979.

    Penn, Alix and Carmella Lowkis. "ICE Part II — The Crash of the Skyhawk." Casting Lots: A Survival Cannibalism Podcast, December 2020.

    Emilson, K. When Memories Remain, 3rd ed. Perpetual Books, 2018.

    "Brent Dyer Survived a Plane Crash — Extraordinary Lives." YouTube, DoxNM, 2017.


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  • In this episode of the Crux podcast's Disaster Strikes segment, hosts Kaycee McIntosh and Julie Henningsen delve into the harrowing story of Dave Shaw, a technical diver who tragically perished while attempting to recover the body of a fellow diver, Deon Dreyer, from the depths of Bushman's Hole in South Africa. Listeners are taken through the extreme dangers of cave diving, the physiological and equipment challenges faced at extreme depths, and the sequence of events that led to Shaw's death. The narrative also touches on the ethical debate surrounding the attempted recovery, the impact on the diving community, and the lessons learned from this tragic incident.

    00:00 Introduction to Disaster Strikes

    01:04 The Fatal Dive of Dave Shaw

    01:46 Understanding the Dangers of Cave Diving

    06:19 Dave Shaw's Background and Diving Career

    10:14 The Discovery of Deon Dreyer's Body

    11:56 Planning the Recovery Dive

    14:37 The Final Dive

    19:01 The Fatal Spiral Begins

    19:10 Shaw's Descent and Initial Struggles

    19:59 The Unexpected Buoyancy Challenge

    20:46 The Entanglement and Panic

    22:51 Shaw's Final Moments

    25:01 The Aftermath and Recovery

    26:58 Debates and Controversies

    34:23 Changes in Diving Practices

    36:28 Unresolved Questions and Legacy

    38:01 Conclusion and Reflections

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    Primary Sources: Zimmermann, Tim. "Raising the Dead." Outside Magazine, August 1, 2005. Main investigative article, extensive detail on Shaw and the incident Finch, Phillip. Diving Into Darkness: A True Story of Death and Survival. New York: St. Martin's Press, 2008. Book-length treatment of the incident with detailed accounts Mitchell, SJ; Cronjé, FJ; Meintjes, WA; Britz, HC. "Fatal respiratory failure during a 'technical' rebreather dive at extreme pressure." Aviation, Space, and Environmental Medicine, February 2007; 78(2): 81-6. Medical/forensic analysis of Shaw's death Dave Not Coming Back (2020). Documentary film. Features Don Shirley's firsthand account and helmet camera footageSecondary Sources: Wikipedia: Dave Shaw - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dave_Shaw Verified biographical details, dates, equipment specifications Wikipedia: Deon Dreyer - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deon_Dreyer Verified details about Dreyer's death and recovery Wikipedia: Boesmansgat - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boesmansgat Geographic and depth record information All That's Interesting. "The Tragic Story Of Dave Shaw" https://allthatsinteresting.com/dave-shaw Dive-Scuba.com. "Dave Shaw: The Full Story of the Bushman's Hole Diving Incident" https://www.dive-scuba.com/dave-shaw-incident/ South China Morning Post. "Dead diver fulfills his last mission," January 13, 2005 Contemporary news coverage from Shaw's home base News24 (South Africa). "Divers' bodies 'unexpected,'" January 12, 2005 https://www.news24.com/divers-bodies-unexpected-20050112 Divernet. "Dave Shaw died from carbon dioxide black-out" https://divernet.com/scuba-news/dave-shaw-died-from-carbon-dioxide-black-out/ InDEPTH Magazine. "The Aftermath Of Love: Don Shirley and Dave Shaw" https://indepthmag.com/the-consequence-of-love-don-shirley-and-dave-shaw/ Technical Diving Forums (ScubaBoard, Yorkshire Divers) Contemporary discussions and firsthand accounts from support divers

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  • Quicksand isn't a movie prop. It's real, it looks completely normal, and it happened to two men in the past three months — one in a frozen Utah canyon, one in a Florida mud pit. Austin Dirks is an experienced thru-hiker with thousands of backcountry miles. He stepped into what looked like an inch of water in Arches National Park and couldn't move for two hours. Andrew Giddens disappeared on Valentine's Day and wasn't found for days — shoulder-deep in saturated clay at an industrial site, invisible from 20 feet away. We cover the science of why quicksand traps people, why fighting back makes it worse, and what actually works — plus a 2026 NPS safety alert for Glen Canyon that's worth hearing before spring break. If you ever find yourself sinking, stop. Just stop.

    00:00 Podcast Introduction

    00:30 Quicksand Nightmare Setup

    02:29 Utah Canyon Incident

    06:06 Rescue In Courthouse Wash

    08:00 Quicksand Myths Explained

    08:44 How Quicksand Works

    12:18 Rescue Tactics And Physics

    14:17 Self Rescue Tips

    15:17 Zion Subway Survival

    18:20 Florida Mud Pit Case

    21:40 Entrapment Survival Mindset

    22:20 How Long Was He Stuck

    23:27 Deputy Spots The Truck

    24:49 A Face In The Mud

    25:57 Two Hour Extraction

    27:31 Aftermath And Medical Risks

    29:15 Is Quicksand A Real Risk

    30:55 Where Quicksand Forms

    31:48 Warning Signs And Probing

    32:53 Smart Moves If You Sink

    34:43 Calling For Help Fast

    37:32 Why Stillness Wins

    41:34 New NPS Quicksand Alert

    43:07 Final Takeaways And Resources

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    Resources Austin Dirks / Grand County Search and Rescue — local Utah news coverage, December 2025 Andrew Giddens / Putnam County Sheriff's Office — Palatka Fire Department statement, February 2026 Ryan Osmond / Zion National Park — Utah DPS rescue records, February 2019Science Daniel Bonn et al., Nature — "Granular media: how to pull out a foot" (2005)Safety & Alerts National Park Service — Glen Canyon National Recreation Area quicksand safety alert, March 2026 — nps.govThe Broomway Wikipedia — en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Broomway BBC Travel — "This desolate English path has killed more than 100 people" — bbc.com/travel Robert Macfarlane, The Old Ways (2012)Crisis Resource 988 Suicide and Crisis Lifeline — call or text 988 — 988lifeline.org

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  • When a 2.3 magnitude earthquake struck the Beaconsfield Gold Mine in Tasmania on ANZAC Day 2006, seventeen miners were underground. Fourteen walked out. One didn't survive. And two men — Todd Russell and Brant Webb — simply disappeared into the rock. In this episode, Julie and Kaycee go deep into the fourteen days that followed: the silence, the injuries, the moment rescuers heard something unexpected, and the painstaking engineering effort to bring them home — plus the part of the story that rarely gets told, what survival cost them long after they walked back into the light.

    00:00 Patreon

    00:34 Podcast Intro And Setup

    01:09 Mine Collapse Strikes

    03:46 Meet Todd And Brant

    05:42 Trapped In Darkness

    08:44 Rescue Plan And Bad Ground

    11:07 Singing Confirms Life

    12:28 Borehole Lifeline Supplies

    14:00 Injuries And Long Wait

    16:05 Grief And Gallows Humor

    17:57 Music And Foo Fighters Note

    19:57 Drilling The Escape Tunnel

    21:58 World Watches The Rescue

    22:46 Day 14 Breakthrough

    24:50 Aftermath PTSD And Community Cost

    28:05 Why They Survived

    30:22 Legacy And Closing Thanks

    32:19 Reviews And Listener Outreach

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    REFERENCES: Beaconsfield Mine Collapse, Wikipedia Bad Ground: Inside the Beaconsfield Mine Rescue — Tony Wright, Todd Russell & Brant Webb The Examiner, Launceston — "Rescuers Real Heroes," April 2016 Australian Geographic — "On This Day: Beaconsfield Miners Rescued," November 2013 SBS News — "Beaconsfield Miners Speak of Lasting Scars," April 2016 Raisebore Australia — Beaconsfield Rescue Case Study, raisebore.com.au Monument Australia — Beaconsfield Mine Rescue Plaque Record Celebrity Speakers Australia — Todd Russell Speaker Profile World Socialist Web Site — "The Australian Media and the Beaconsfield Mine Rescue," May 2006 Geoscience Australia — Seismic Event Records, April 2006 Channel 9 — Todd Russell and Brant Webb exclusive interview, May 21, 2006 60 Minutes Australia — Todd Russell interview on PTSD The Sydney Morning Herald — Beaconsfield Mine rescue coverage, May 2006 Prime Minister John Howard — Parliamentary Reception Statement, May 29, 2006

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  • Silver Plume, Colorado — population 130 — became the setting for one of the strangest unsolved disappearances in Rocky Mountain history. In the summer of 1988, sportswriter-turned-novelist Keith Reinhard rented a storefront on Main Street, began writing a fictional character based on the building's previous tenant — a reclusive man who'd walked into the mountains and never returned — and slowly lost the boundary between the story he was writing and the life he was living. On August 7th, hungover and wearing tennis shoes, Keith announced to multiple townspeople that he was going to summit 12,275-foot Pendleton Mountain alone, starting at 4:30 in the afternoon — then walked away and was never seen again. What followed was one of the largest search and rescue operations in Colorado history, a fatal plane crash, and a cold case that's now over 35 years old. Was it an accident? A suicide? A staged disappearance? Or did Keith Reinhard stumble onto something about his predecessor's death that someone didn't want known?

    00:00 Introduction to Disaster Strikes

    00:42 Keith Reinhardt's Mysterious Disappearance

    03:01 The Life of Keith Reinhardt

    05:20 The Eerie Connection to Tom Young

    08:06 Keith's Obsession and Final Days

    16:31 The Search and Theories

    23:25 Unsolved Mysteries and Ongoing Questions

    26:59 Conclusion and Dedication

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    References Colorado Cold Case Files - Keith Reinhard Case #307 - Clear Creek County Sheriff's Office (Contact: 303-679-2376) - https://apps.colorado.gov/apps/coldcase/casedetail.html?id=307 Chicago Tribune: "Search for Reporter Halted in Colorado" (August 15, 1988) Chicago Tribune: "A Chicago-area sportswriter disappeared 31 years ago in Colorado" (January 9, 2020) Daily Herald: "The anniversary of Keith Reinhard's disappearance sparks fresh perspectives" by Jim O'Donnell (August 8, 2023) CBS Colorado: "Still No Clues In Cold Case Of Man Who Went Missing 30 Years Ago" (August 7, 2018) Eric Walter Blog: "Mountain, Murder, or Mexico?" and "The Needle in the Haystack" - https://www.ericwalterdocs.com/ Travel Channel: "Lost in the Wild" - Keith Reinhard episode (January 2020) - Investigators: J.J. Kelley and Kinga Philipps Unsolved Mysteries: Original broadcast January 31, 1990 (Season 2, Episode 15 with Robert Stack); Rebroadcast Season 6, Episode 20 (with Dennis Farina) The Charley Project: Keith R. Reinhard case file - https://charleyproject.org/case/keith-r-reinhard StrangeOutdoors.com: "The bizarre disappearance of Keith Reinhard and death of Tom Young in the Rocky Mountains" - https://www.strangeoutdoors.com/mysterious-stories-blog/keith-reinhard Missing NPF: Keith R. Reinhard case listing - https://missingnpf.com/listing/keith-r-reinhard/ Historic Mysteries: "The Bizarre Disappearance of Keith Reinhard in Silver Plume, Colorado" (April 17, 2020) Locations Unknown: Keith Reinhard case profile (November 28, 2021) Unsolved Mysteries Wiki: Keith Reinhard and Tom Young case pages Our Community Now: "Cold Cases: The Disappearances of These 2 Colorado Men Are Eerily Similar and Creepy as Hell" Substack: "Twin Disappearances into the Peaks" by Thorne (July 22, 2021) Unsolved.com: Keith Reinhard case discussion forum The Curious Case of Keith Reinhard and Tom Young blog (February 24, 2025) - https://www.asheycakes.com/post/the-curious-case-of-keith-reinhard-and-tom-young

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  • On May 20, 2016, ICU nurse Amber Kornhorst set out on a solo late-afternoon hike near Cane Beds, Arizona, and climbed a deceptively "sticky" sandstone wall she couldn't safely descend. With no cell service and no way out, she fell about 100 feet into a narrow rock "dungeon," suffering three spinal fractures, a crushed pelvis, head and facial injuries, severe dehydration, and hypothermia — and typed goodbye messages to her family on her phone. Refusing to give up, she crawled and climbed to a more visible ledge and blew her whistle three blasts every half hour until search-and-rescue teams and a helicopter located her nearly 24 hours later, executing a technical rope raise and hover-load evacuation to a Utah hospital. Her story drives home survival essentials: always tell someone your plan, never hike alone, start early, carry extra water and a whistle, consider a satellite communicator, and never climb anything you can't safely descend.

    00:46 Show Intro And Setup

    01:40 Amber Hits The Trail

    03:02 Climbing The Sandstone Wave

    04:10 No Way Down Desert Trap

    05:32 The Hundred Foot Fall

    06:20 Shock And Goodbye Texts

    08:27 Painful Climb And Whistle

    11:03 Search Effort Mobilizes

    12:41 Helicopter Spots Her

    14:16 Technical Rope Rescue

    16:10 Hover Pickup Extraction

    17:02 Helicopter Evacuation

    17:43 Hospital Recovery Journey

    19:06 Why She Survived

    19:43 Whistle and Visibility

    21:55 Search Mobilized Fast

    22:50 Wilderness Safety Takeaways

    25:03 Desert Hiking Mistakes

    27:08 Survival Mindset Lessons

    29:47 Final Wrap and Credits

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    Primary/First-Person Account Kohnhorst, Amber. "Surviving Alone After a 100-Foot Fall in the Arizona Wilderness." Backpacker Magazine, February 28, 2017. https://www.backpacker.com/survival/surviving-a-100-foot-fall-in-arizona/News Coverage "Rochester Woman Survives 100-Foot Tumble On Hike In Arizona." WCCO/CBS Minnesota, May 24, 2016. https://minnesota.cbslocal.com/2016/05/24/rochester-woman-100-foot-fall-arizona "Hiker Recovering After Northwest Arizona Fall." KTNV, May 25, 2016. https://www.ktnv.com/news/hiker-rescued-in-rural-northwest-arizona "Hiker Who Fell Is Mending at Home." Post Bulletin, 2016. https://www.postbulletin.com/newsmd/hiker-who-fell-is-mending-at-home "The 100-Foot Fall. The Long Climb Back." Post Bulletin. https://www.postbulletin.com/news/the-100-foot-fall-the-long-climb-backInstitutional Coverage "Nurse Becomes Patient After Surviving 100-Foot Fall While Hiking." Mayo Clinic In the Loop, June 9, 2016. https://intheloop.mayoclinic.org/2016/06/09/nurse-becomes-patient-after-surviving-100-foot-fall-while-hiking/ "Amber Kohnhorst's Trip to the Sanctuary." Best Friends Animal Society. https://bestfriends.org/stories/features/mayo-clinic-nurse-who-survived-100-foot-fall-returns-best-friendsBackground "Cane Beds, Arizona." Wikipedia. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cane_Beds,_Arizona

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