True And Verified Story Of Survival

By Pamela Richardson


Creative narrators have weaved the most amazing stories and even made movies on imaginary survival. But it is always easy to know whether a story of survival is genuine or not. The presence of witnesses to verify lends credibility to stories. Coverage by major media outlets and alignment to natural disasters like floods, earthquakes, etc confirms such stories. Consider these true yet unbelievable stories.

The Robertson family rescue from the sea. The family wanted a tour from one port to the other. However, they were attacked by whales that damaged their boat severely. They only had food to last them six days. The loss of their boat saw them remain stranded for 38 days. They were rescued by Japanese fishermen.

Jackson-4 was a boat that capsized off the coast of Nigeria in 2013. At the time of the incident, the cook, Harrison Okene was in the toilet. He was trapped in a four squire feet air bubble. He was rescued three days later by divers when he heard their knock on the surface. He understandably vowed never to return to the sea.

The Endurance Expedition gathered 28 men headed to the Antarctica in 1914. They got stuck in ice with their ship, christened Endurance. It took them 14 days to find the next island on life boats after which they trekked 1000 miles to the nearest inhabited village in Georgia. They had to turn to their dogs for food when their rations were depleted. All the 28 men survived.

Juliane Koepcke has two stories of survival to tell. First was as a lone survivor when LANSA Flight 508 was brought down by lightening on Christmas Eve in 1971. She landed on the flow of the Peruvian rain forest with a fractured collar bone over a buttered and bruised body. No one found her for nine days until maggots attacked her wounds and she had to keep them off using gasoline. She would be found by lumber workers nine days later.

The Apollo 13 Mission of 1970 remains among the most dramatic. The craft was to land at the moon but was damaged during launch. The astronauts had to circle the moon for three days before making a delicate reentry back to earth. They survived on a ration that would have lasted two people only a day and a half. Hayse was the only severely dehydrate crew member.

2003 was the year Ralston caught the eye of the world after amputating his hand in order to save his life. He was hanging off the cliff after climbing went wrong for three days. He decided to cut off his arm but all methods failed. He eventually used a pocketknife after trying other methods for two days. This led to excessive loss of blood but rescue came in the form of a European couple, six hours later. He was nearing death.

Ada Blackjack was a native Inupiat. She was to serve as a cook on an expedition to Wrangle Islands by Allan Crawford and Vilhjamur Stephenson. The two left five members of this expedition in the island to mark and claim it in 1921. When their supplies ran low, three left her with an ailing crew member. They never returned. The ailing man eventually died. Ada was rescued two years later.




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