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By Spaghetti on the Wall Productions
The podcast currently has 14 episodes available.
Jon learns he is a lousy traveler in the spirit world but a great one in this world. He discusses the native Siberian attitude toward the relationship between mind, body, nature, and the spirituality. And he describes how he has incorporated this worldview into his own life and a seminar he is conducting this summer on the subject.
As winter comes in, Jon defends the much-maligned cold. It's important to human health, important to ecology. There is no bad weather, he insists, only insufficient clothing.
Jon and his son-in-law decide to traverse the endless Bitterroot ridge that separates Montana from Idaho. It's like hiking the Appalachian Trail--only very high up and with no path and with one foot in one state and another in a different one.
Jon tells two stories in which adventurers did not die because of some combination of luck and skill and analyzes which played what role.
After Misha's death (see Episode #9), Jon returns to the Village of Vyvenka on the frozen tundra of the Kamchatka Peninsula, having decided to go on a solo walk-about in 20-below-zero temperatures.
Jon and Misha head off to Kamchatka. Only one of them makes it back. Misha wasn't killed on an expedition. He died, rather, in a hospital in the Russian Far East before the adventure even started. Jon talks about how he and Misha met, their long collaboration, Misha's recent decline, and his tragic death on the eve of their return to the Siberian tundra.
While Jon is away in Kamchatka, we bring you this interview he did earlier this year with Jim Banks's Hemispheres show on KGNU public radio in Boulder CO. Jon talks about his spiritual journeys to Kamchatka over the past fifteen years, his explorations there of native Koryak religiosity, and his relationship with the ancient shaman woman named Moulynaut.
Jon and his wife, Nina, hiking in the Bitterroot forest near their home in Montana, find some strange tracks in the snow: some human, and some canine. And they discover a person who seems to have teleported into the woods in the midst of a snowstorm.
Jon heads off to a remote village in the Kamchatka peninsula in fear eastern Russia, where an old shaman woman once invoked the spirit raven to heal him. Follow @deepwilderness on Twitter for updates on a journey on skis across the tundra to find reindeer herders and who knows what else.
Barry Blanchard has known fear. The legendary big wall climber is the author of the new book, The Calling: A Life Rocked By Mountains. He talks to Jon Turk about a bad day on the world's highest vertical-distance wall climb: the Rupal Face of Nanga Parbat, an escarpment that rises at an average of 50 degrees for more than three miles. If you've never braced against an avalanche for fully 27 minutes amidst 70 mile per hour winds and three-foot an hour snowfall, if you've never dropped your ropes 10,000 feet because of miscommunication with your climbing partner, we have a whole new definition of fear for you.
Oh, and there's no air up there either.
The podcast currently has 14 episodes available.