The CRUX: True Survival Stories

Kaycee McIntosh, Julie Henningsen, Bleav

Are you drawn to thrilling survival stories where characters overcome impossible odds? The Crux: True Survival Stories is your podcast. Join us for gripping tales of resilience and invaluable insights into wilderness survival and the mindset needed to overcome adversity. Hosted by Kaycee McIntosh and Julie Henningsen, both passionate about wilderness and medicine, our podcast is fueled by real-life stories and the pivotal moments that determine life or death outcomes. Tune in for captivating narratives that entertain and educate. Airing every Monday!

  1. 42 Years in Siberia: The Family That Vanished From the World | E234

    6 HR AGO

    42 Years in Siberia: The Family That Vanished From the World | E234

    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 Listen AD FREE: Support our podcast at patreaon: http://patreon.com/TheCruxTrueSurvivalPodcast Email us! thecruxsurvival@gmail.com Instagram https://www.instagram.com/thecruxpodcast/ Get schooled by Julie in outdoor wilderness medicine! https://www.headwatersfieldmedicine.com/ 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       Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

    41 min
  2. 6 HR AGO ·  BONUS

    You Might Also Like: The Tamsen Show

    Introducing The ADHD Psychiatrist: How to Get Your Focus Back After 40 from The Tamsen Show. Follow the show: The Tamsen Show Dr. Tracey Marks is a board-certified psychiatrist. In today's episode of The Tamsen Show, she sits down with Tamsen Fadal to talk about ADHD in women: why it can go undiagnosed for so long, how to know if you have it, and what you can actually do about it. If you've ever felt frozen by your to-do list, struggled to finish a simple task, or wondered why your brain just won't cooperate, you need to listen to this conversation. Dr. Tracey Marks is sharing science-backed strategies to improve focus, memory, and executive function for women struggling with ADHD, brain fog, and cognitive changes at any age. In this episode, Tamsen and Dr. Marks discuss: - The #1 evidence-based activity that improves neuroplasticity and brain health - The difference between ADHD and perimenopause brain fog - Why so many women are diagnosed with ADHD in their 40s and 50s - ADHD treatment options - What happens to your brain when estrogen drops - Tools to improve focus, build better habits, and support brain health  - Evidence-based tactics to improve neuroplasticity, memory, and focus - What body doubling is and why it works for ADHD brains - How to reduce decision fatigue, build sustainable routines, and stop waiting for motivation to strike Plus, Tamsen shares her own experience with distraction, overwhelm, and hyperfixation. Take the ASRS (Adult ADHD Self-Report Scale) If you like this episode, then you will love: The Menopause Brain: Top Neuroscientist Shares New Data on Brain Fog and Alzheimer's and ADHD or Perimenopause? The Signs You’ve Been Missing Stay connected with Tamsen: ⁠⁠⁠⁠Get ⁠Tamsen's newsletter⁠⁠⁠⁠ filled with free tools⁠ to living better, feeling stronger, and knowing you’re never alone Get Tamsen’s NYT instant bestselling book, ⁠⁠⁠⁠How To Menopause⁠⁠⁠⁠ ⁠⁠⁠⁠Free Resources⁠⁠⁠⁠ from Tamsen  Watch all the episodes on ⁠⁠⁠⁠YouTube⁠⁠⁠⁠ Follow Tamsen on ⁠⁠⁠⁠Instagram⁠⁠⁠⁠  The Tamsen Show on ⁠⁠⁠⁠Instagram⁠⁠⁠⁠ Follow Tamsen on ⁠⁠⁠⁠TikTok⁠⁠⁠⁠  This show is sponsored by Midi Health. Visit https://joinmidi.com/TAMSEN today to book your personalized, insurance-covered virtual visit. Midi. The Care Women Deserve. Stop putting off those doctor's appointments! Go to https://www.zocdoc.com/TAMSEN to find and instantly book a doctor you love today! Medical Disclaimer: The information provided in this podcast is for educational and informational purposes only and is not intended as medical advice. Always consult with a qualified healthcare professional regarding any medical concerns or treatment options. The views expressed by guests are their own and do not necessarily reflect those of The Tamsen Show. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices DISCLAIMER: Please note, this is an independent podcast episode not affiliated with, endorsed by, or produced in conjunction with the host podcast feed or any of its media entities. The views and opinions expressed in this episode are solely those of the creators and guests. For any concerns, please reach out to team@podroll.fm.

  3. Frozen in Time: Solving the Dyatlov Pass Mystery with Science | Disaster Strikes E 233

    4 DAYS AGO

    Frozen in Time: Solving the Dyatlov Pass Mystery with Science | Disaster Strikes E 233

    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 Listen AD FREE: Support our podcast at patreaon: http://patreon.com/TheCruxTrueSurvivalPodcast Email us! thecruxsurvival@gmail.com Instagram https://www.instagram.com/thecruxpodcast/ Get schooled by Julie in outdoor wilderness medicine! https://www.headwatersfieldmedicine.com/ 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) Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

    42 min
  4. 3 Days Missing in a Ravine: The Boy No One Could Find | E 232

    4 MAY

    3 Days Missing in a Ravine: The Boy No One Could Find | E 232

    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 Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

    33 min
  5. 99 Days in the Dark; The Overland Relief Expedition | E 231

    27 APR

    99 Days in the Dark; The Overland Relief Expedition | E 231

    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 Listen AD FREE: Support our podcast at patreaon: http://patreon.com/TheCruxTrueSurvivalPodcast Email us! thecruxsurvival@gmail.com Instagram https://www.instagram.com/thecruxpodcast/ Get schooled by Julie in outdoor wilderness medicine! https://www.headwatersfieldmedicine.com/ 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. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

    44 min
  6. 80 Feet: A Via Ferrata Tragedy in Colorado | Disaster Strikes E 230

    23 APR

    80 Feet: A Via Ferrata Tragedy in Colorado | Disaster Strikes E 230

    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. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

    31 min
  7. 3 Nights Trapped in a Canyon With a Broken Pelvis | E229

    20 APR

    3 Nights Trapped in a Canyon With a Broken Pelvis | E229

    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   Listen AD FREE: Support our podcast at patreaon: http://patreon.com/TheCruxTrueSurvivalPodcast Email us! thecruxsurvival@gmail.com Instagram https://www.instagram.com/thecruxpodcast/ Get schooled by Julie in outdoor wilderness medicine! https://www.headwatersfieldmedicine.com/ 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/ Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

    33 min
  8. Sucked into the Sky at 33,000 Feet: The Ewa Wiśnierska Story | E228

    13 APR

    Sucked into the Sky at 33,000 Feet: The Ewa Wiśnierska Story | E228

    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 Listen AD FREE: Support our podcast at patreaon: http://patreon.com/TheCruxTrueSurvivalPodcast Email us! thecruxsurvival@gmail.com Instagram https://www.instagram.com/thecruxpodcast/ Get schooled by Julie in outdoor wilderness medicine! https://www.headwatersfieldmedicine.com/   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) Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

    35 min
4.2
out of 5
68 Ratings

About

Are you drawn to thrilling survival stories where characters overcome impossible odds? The Crux: True Survival Stories is your podcast. Join us for gripping tales of resilience and invaluable insights into wilderness survival and the mindset needed to overcome adversity. Hosted by Kaycee McIntosh and Julie Henningsen, both passionate about wilderness and medicine, our podcast is fueled by real-life stories and the pivotal moments that determine life or death outcomes. Tune in for captivating narratives that entertain and educate. Airing every Monday!

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