The winners of the 2021 ENnies Awards include a silent RPG geeknative.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from geeknative.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Rock Climbing Master Scales Steep Cliffs Without Using His Hands
Johnny Dawes, one of the influential rock climbers in history, and a true living legend in certain circles, has been getting a lot of attention in recent years for his no-handed climbing feats.
Dawes, aka the Stone Monkey, the Leaping Boy, the Dawes, has always been famous for his dynamic rock climbing style and bold ascents, but his most recent endeavors are probably the most impressive, at least to the untrained eye. Now in his late 50s, the English rock climber has dedicated himself to the esoteric discipline known as no-handed climbing, which as the name suggests, is all about climbing steep rock faces without using your hands. It sounds crazy, but it looks even more so.
COVID on Everest, Fatal CO Bear Attack: Adventure News of the Week
May 3, 2021 | By Sean McCoy & Mary Murphy
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Home » News » COVID on Everest, Fatal CO Bear Attack: Adventure News of the Week
From the inspiring to the tragic, ‘Adventure News of the Week’ presents a wrap-up of top news in the world of exploration and adventure.
MOUNTAINEERING: Doctor Speaks Out About COVID on Everest. Reports of COVID-19 at the Mount Everest Base Camp first swept the news on April 23.
But now Dr. Iñigo Soteras, a doctor with the International Society of Mountain Medicine who is in communication with colleagues at Everest Base Camp, has further raised the alarm. He claims officials have evacuated many people from the camp who later tested positive. Read the
Bomb Snow is Back, Baby! tetongravity.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from tetongravity.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Special to the Daily
After catching the coronavirus last March, Dana Gosnell figured she’d be feeling better by now, not worse. Instead, she said she finds herself still facing a confusing and scary array of symptoms.
Gosnell, who lives in Vail, said she was in bed for about 10 days with her initial COVID-19 infection. She had headaches and body aches and “felt crappy,” but started to recover. That changed in early June, when a host of strange symptoms and health problems surfaced and have persisted to this day.
Gosnell, hoping to help others by sharing her story, said she has had difficulty breathing, fatigue, dizziness, a thick mental fog, headaches, neck and shoulder pain, even sight problems, mouth ulcers and heart troubles, and is “starting to freak out a bit.”