Podcasts about next everest

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Best podcasts about next everest

Latest podcast episodes about next everest

Head Game
Climbing Took Jim Davidson's Best Friend, But Taught Him Resilience

Head Game

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 5, 2023 49:02


Jim Davidson and Mike Price, two friends and experienced climbing partners, summited Mount Rainier on June 21, 1992. As they descended, a hidden snowbridge collapsed beneath Jim's feet and dropped him into a large glacial crevasse. Connected to Jim by the climbing rope, Mike tried to stop the fall but couldn't. In a heartbreaking conversation, Jim shares this painful memory with Ant - and how loss, resilience and the strength to survive has shaped not only that fateful day, but the rest of his life.  LINKS Find our more about Jim Davidson and his books,The Ledge and The Next Everest on his website https://www.speakingofadventure.com/  Want to see Ant live on stage? Click here for his current tour dates. Follow Ant on Instagram, X, and Facebook Learn more about Ant on his website https://www.antmiddleton.com/  Follow Nova Podcasts on Instagram for videos from the podcast and behind the scenes content – @novapodcastsofficial. CREDITSHost: Ant MiddletonEditor: Adrian WaltonExecutive Producers: Anna Henvest & Edwina StottManaging Producer: Elle Beattie Find more great podcasts like this at novapodcasts.com.au Nova Entertainment acknowledges the traditional custodians of the land on which we produced this podcast, the Gadigal People of the Eora Nation.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Snap Judgment
The Ledge

Snap Judgment

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 21, 2023 49:02


Strapped in a harness, on the edge of a mountain, the snow bridge lets out a hollow crack as it gives way. The story of two climbers whose fates are intertwined by a length of rope. Big thanks to Jim Davidson for sharing his story! Jim wrote a book with Kevin Vaughan about surviving the fall on Mt. Rainier, called The Ledge. He also wrote a book about his experiences during and after the Nepal earthquake called The Next Everest. Check them out! Original score by Renzo Gorrio, produced by Justin Kramon, artwork by Teo Ducot Season 14 - Episode 31

The Vision Lab Podcast
Ep. 181: Kimberly Spencer: What's Your Next Everest

The Vision Lab Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 14, 2023 47:28


Cuff and Mo open up the lab to the head of Crown Yourself Enterprises, Kimberly Spencer. The native of Los Angeles opens up about her background and the work she's put in as an individual to grow as a person and entrepreneur. Spencer dives into her perspective on what it means to have a growth mindset and how she uses aspects of personal development in her work on a daily basis. Spencer also gives the guys a run down on everything she offers under the umbrella of Crown Yourself Enterprises and some very interesting answers as to whom she would have at her imagined round table. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/ryan-cuffee4/message

All About Everest Podcast
Interview with Jim Davidson

All About Everest Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 26, 2022 34:30


Jim Davidson is the author of "The Ledge" and "The Next Everest". His perspective of the 2015 Everest Base Camp disaster is very unique because of his background in geology. We discuss his mountaineering background, tragedy in mountaineering, and lessons learned from mountaineering including resiliance. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/pauline-reynolds-nuttall/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/pauline-reynolds-nuttall/support

Constant Wonder
The Next Everest

Constant Wonder

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 1, 2021 52:30


Imagine being caught in an earthquake on Mount Everest!

mount everest next everest
Beyond the Mic with Sean Dillon
Author Of The Next Everest Jim Davidson Takes A Beyond The Mic Short Cut

Beyond the Mic with Sean Dillon

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 14, 2021 9:23


After a 7.8 earthquake stopped an attempt of climbing Mt. Everest he didn't quit. Two years later he summited. Author Jim Davidson of “The Next Everest” on this Beyond the Mic Short Cut. Beyond the Mic with Sean Dillon is the conversation series where actors, artists, authors, and more go deeper than a traditional interview. They go “Beyond the Mic”.

mt mount everest mic jim davidson sean dillon beyond the mic next everest
Whiskey and a Map: Stories of Adventure and Exploration as told by those who lived them.
Jim Davidson: Surviving Mount Everest's deadliest disaster and the pleasures of rancid yak butter tea.

Whiskey and a Map: Stories of Adventure and Exploration as told by those who lived them.

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 4, 2021 64:47


Jim Davidson is a high altitude climber who has spent a life-time climbing peaks around the world.Raised in Massachusetts, he worked in the family business as an industrial painter of high-voltage electrical towers. Early on, the mountains called him.He moved to Colorado to attend college and to climb its big mountains. Jim earned a bachelors and Master's degrees in environmental engineering and has worked cleaning up oil and gasoline spills.His climbing career has taken him to Alaska, Argentina, Bolivia and Tibet. He received commendations twice by the U.S. National Park Service for assisting on remote mountain rescues. Jim was on Mount Everest during the tragic earthquake in 2015, then returned in 2017 to reach the summit. He is an award-winning author and he has appeared on National Geographic, Smithsonian Channel and Discovery.Follow Jim on his website and blog at speakingofadventure.comCheck out his books The Next Everest and The Ledge.Hosted by MichaelJReinhartAdventure Photographer and WriterMichaelJReinhart.comStories of Adventure and Exploration.                          

Places I Remember with Lea Lane
Everest's Deadliest Day: Climbing In Avalanches, Earthquake -- And Eventually, Summit!

Places I Remember with Lea Lane

Play Episode Play 60 sec Highlight Listen Later Jun 22, 2021 17:59 Transcription Available


Jim Davidson is, to say the very least, resilient. The geologist/climber survived an avalanche and a fall into a crevasse, and later survived an earthquake while climbing Mt. Everest. He eventually summited the world's highest mountain! His best-selling book is The Next Everest.-- Jim shares a surprising story of what influenced him as  a child to become a climber,  his favorite places and climbs around the world, and the skills needed to be a good traveler. -- He then tells the tragic story of losing his friend in that avalanche, and taking time off in the Himalayas after, to recover.-- He suggests that "bucketlist climbers" be patient, and then extols Nepal, and its people.-- Jim goes into detail about his harrowing first climb on Everest: with a 7.8 earthquake at base camp, avalanches, and 18 dead on the mountain (8900 people lost their lives).-- He --  understandably --hesitated to climb again, spent time helping Nepal's recovery, trained again, climbed again -- and just below the summit, hit storms.  The weather finally cleared after many days, and then --  finally --  Jim summited Everest.-- In Jim's last memory, this man with guts and character speaks of resilience, life lessons, and how "the journey defines us."______Jim Davidson, who still climbs, ("It's hard to make me quit") is a motivational speaker and the author of  the memoir The Next Everest: Surviving The Mountain's Deadliest Day And Finding The Resilience To Climb Again._____Lea Lane blogs at forbes.com, has traveled to over 100 countries, written nine books, including Places I Remember, and contributed to guidebooks. She's @lealane on Twitter; Travelea on Insta; Places I Remember by Lea Lane on Facebook .  Her website: placesirememberlealane.com.  Please follow, rate and review this weekly travel podcast!

Motivational Mondays: Conversations with Leaders
How To Overcome Tragedy To Achieve Your Goals (Feat. Jim Davidson)

Motivational Mondays: Conversations with Leaders

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 7, 2021 14:36


Six years ago, Jim Davidson was climbing Mount Everest when the largest earthquake in 80 years hit Nepal, triggering an avalanche that would end up killing nearly 9,000 people. After this life-changing experience, Jim learned he would have to go beyond just physical perseverance. He also had to work through the emotional aftermath of post-traumatic stress and facing his traumas. In this week's episode, Jim shares his terrifying tale, how he survived, and how we can all prepare better for adversity through building a mindset of resiliency. You'll learn how to thrive and succeed through post-traumatic stress and how to lead with confidence in times of uncertainty and fear.   LEARN MORE:  >>> Order Jim's book, The Next Everest to read more about Jim's story and how he overcame his fears: https://amzn.to/3tEwGRC >>> Connect with Jim on Facebook (facebook.com/ResilienceWithClimberJim/) and Twitter (twitter.com/ClimberJim) NSLS MEMBERS ONLY: Listen to the bonus episode to learn how to be nimble when there are diversions from your plan.{https://thens.ls/2T75M87}

KGNU & Boulder Bookstore Radio Book Club
Afterhours at the Radio Bookclub: Jim Davidson – The Next Everest

KGNU & Boulder Bookstore Radio Book Club

Play Episode Listen Later May 27, 2021 15:00


Fort Collins author Jim Davidson joins us for this special podcast-only version of the Radio Bookclub to speak about the lessons in resilience that he learned while summiting Everest, lessons that he applies to the rest of his life. Listen […]

KGNU & Boulder Bookstore Radio Book Club
Radio Bookclub: The Next Everest

KGNU & Boulder Bookstore Radio Book Club

Play Episode Listen Later May 27, 2021 29:56


For May 2021 we’ve been reading The Next Everest by Colorado author Jim Davidson. The book chronicles his attempts to summit the world’s tallest mountain. His first summit attempt was thwarted by a natural disaster. On April 25, 2015, an […]

WorldatWork's Work in Progress
Episode 114: Rarefied Air with Repeat Everest Climber Jim Davidson

WorldatWork's Work in Progress

Play Episode Listen Later May 25, 2021 37:44


Jim Davidson discusses his book, "The Next Everest, Surviving the Mountain's Deadliest Day and Finding the Resilience to Climb Again," in which he tells about two climbs: one in 2015 where a 7.8 magnitude earthquake left him and his team stranded for two days at 20,000 feet…and a successful climb he did just two years later. An amazing story of grit, teamwork and unimaginable determination.

MBC Grand Broadcasting, Inc.
The Max Ryan Podcast: Jim Davidson

MBC Grand Broadcasting, Inc.

Play Episode Listen Later May 13, 2021 13:22


Max sits down with Jim Davidson, mountain climber, environmental geologist, and author to discuss some wild stuff, including surviving an earthquake, to digging out survivors, to ascending the peak...all concerning Mt. Everest. Grab the book titled "The Next Everest" wherever you grab books.

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Talk Radio Europe
Jim Davidson: Next Everest: Surviving the Mountain’s Deadliest Day and Finding the Resilience to Climb Again… with TRE´s Dave Hodgson

Talk Radio Europe

Play Episode Listen Later May 3, 2021 16:59


Jim Davidson: Next Everest: Surviving the Mountain's Deadliest Day and Finding the Resilience to Climb Again... with TRE´s Dave Hodgson

Arroe Collins
Jim Davidson The Book The Next Everest

Arroe Collins

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 29, 2021 7:57


April 25, 2015 would go down in history as the deadliest day on the world's tallest peak. Mt. Everest was slammed by a 7.8 magnitude earthquake. 18 people would die on the mountain; another 9,000 in the nation of Nepal itself. Jim Davidson, a veteran accomplished mountain climber, was on Everest that fateful day. Through his instincts and great fortune he managed to make it off the mountain alive. His account of that day, and the days that followed when he was struggling for survival, has resulted in one of the year's most riveting reads, THE NEXT EVEREST: Surviving the Mountain's Deadliest Day and Finding the Resilience to Climb Again(St. Martin's Publishing Group; on sale 4/20/21; $29.99). The largest earthquake in more than 80 years to hit Nepal altered a mountainside, a nation, and the global mountaineering community. For Jim Davidson, who was within a day of summiting Everest, it was equally life altering. After helping where he could in the disaster zone, Jim returned home to his family in Colorado to raise money for the Nepal recovery, and to further explore the ramifications of this growing threat to the community of climbers and residents in the Mt. Everest area. As Jim explains, "After surviving the massive earthquake and avalanches I felt driven to share this story. I was intrigued by so many inaccurate media reports about what conditions are like on Everest. So, as a climber and an environmental scientist, I wanted to provide the readers with a clear-eyed view of what climbing Mount Everest is like, as well as the story of the deadly quake. Returning to the mountain in 2017 deepened my understanding of how post-traumatic growth occurs and how it helps refine people over time." In Jim's mind, the quake and the conditions on Everest became an urgent call to scientists. "It was rewarding to apply my geology knowledge to examine how the deadly avalanches happened and why the seismic risk beneath Nepal keeps growing. As an environmental scientist, I became intrigued with conducting a data-driven review of the human waste problem on the mountain, even if that topic is a bit bizarre. That topic often gets wildly exaggerated and misrepresented in the media. The most fun part to write about was all the awe I felt during the nighttime summit push." Despite his thirty-three years of climbing experience and serving as an expedition leader, he wasn't sure he would ever go back. But two years after the disaster, in the face of risk and uncertainty, he returned for the 2017 climbing season on Everest to finally achieve his dream of reaching the summit. Suspenseful and engrossing, THE NEXT EVEREST portrays the experience of living through the biggest disaster to ever hit the world's tallest peak, and Davidson's background makes him uniquely qualified to explain the mysteries that make up Everest. But this story is not about just "conquering" the mountain. Instead it reveals how embracing change, challenge, and uncertainty prepares anyone to face their "next Everest" in life.

Arroe Collins
Jim Davidson The Book The Next Everest

Arroe Collins

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 29, 2021 7:57


April 25, 2015 would go down in history as the deadliest day on the world's tallest peak. Mt. Everest was slammed by a 7.8 magnitude earthquake. 18 people would die on the mountain; another 9,000 in the nation of Nepal itself. Jim Davidson, a veteran accomplished mountain climber, was on Everest that fateful day. Through his instincts and great fortune he managed to make it off the mountain alive. His account of that day, and the days that followed when he was struggling for survival, has resulted in one of the year's most riveting reads, THE NEXT EVEREST: Surviving the Mountain's Deadliest Day and Finding the Resilience to Climb Again(St. Martin's Publishing Group; on sale 4/20/21; $29.99). The largest earthquake in more than 80 years to hit Nepal altered a mountainside, a nation, and the global mountaineering community. For Jim Davidson, who was within a day of summiting Everest, it was equally life altering. After helping where he could in the disaster zone, Jim returned home to his family in Colorado to raise money for the Nepal recovery, and to further explore the ramifications of this growing threat to the community of climbers and residents in the Mt. Everest area. As Jim explains, "After surviving the massive earthquake and avalanches I felt driven to share this story. I was intrigued by so many inaccurate media reports about what conditions are like on Everest. So, as a climber and an environmental scientist, I wanted to provide the readers with a clear-eyed view of what climbing Mount Everest is like, as well as the story of the deadly quake. Returning to the mountain in 2017 deepened my understanding of how post-traumatic growth occurs and how it helps refine people over time." In Jim's mind, the quake and the conditions on Everest became an urgent call to scientists. "It was rewarding to apply my geology knowledge to examine how the deadly avalanches happened and why the seismic risk beneath Nepal keeps growing. As an environmental scientist, I became intrigued with conducting a data-driven review of the human waste problem on the mountain, even if that topic is a bit bizarre. That topic often gets wildly exaggerated and misrepresented in the media. The most fun part to write about was all the awe I felt during the nighttime summit push." Despite his thirty-three years of climbing experience and serving as an expedition leader, he wasn't sure he would ever go back. But two years after the disaster, in the face of risk and uncertainty, he returned for the 2017 climbing season on Everest to finally achieve his dream of reaching the summit. Suspenseful and engrossing, THE NEXT EVEREST portrays the experience of living through the biggest disaster to ever hit the world's tallest peak, and Davidson's background makes him uniquely qualified to explain the mysteries that make up Everest. But this story is not about just "conquering" the mountain. Instead it reveals how embracing change, challenge, and uncertainty prepares anyone to face their "next Everest" in life.

Arroe Collins
Jim Davidson The Book The Next Everest

Arroe Collins

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 29, 2021 7:57


April 25, 2015 would go down in history as the deadliest day on the world's tallest peak. Mt. Everest was slammed by a 7.8 magnitude earthquake. 18 people would die on the mountain; another 9,000 in the nation of Nepal itself. Jim Davidson, a veteran accomplished mountain climber, was on Everest that fateful day. Through his instincts and great fortune he managed to make it off the mountain alive. His account of that day, and the days that followed when he was struggling for survival, has resulted in one of the year's most riveting reads, THE NEXT EVEREST: Surviving the Mountain's Deadliest Day and Finding the Resilience to Climb Again(St. Martin's Publishing Group; on sale 4/20/21; $29.99). The largest earthquake in more than 80 years to hit Nepal altered a mountainside, a nation, and the global mountaineering community. For Jim Davidson, who was within a day of summiting Everest, it was equally life altering. After helping where he could in the disaster zone, Jim returned home to his family in Colorado to raise money for the Nepal recovery, and to further explore the ramifications of this growing threat to the community of climbers and residents in the Mt. Everest area. As Jim explains, "After surviving the massive earthquake and avalanches I felt driven to share this story. I was intrigued by so many inaccurate media reports about what conditions are like on Everest. So, as a climber and an environmental scientist, I wanted to provide the readers with a clear-eyed view of what climbing Mount Everest is like, as well as the story of the deadly quake. Returning to the mountain in 2017 deepened my understanding of how post-traumatic growth occurs and how it helps refine people over time." In Jim's mind, the quake and the conditions on Everest became an urgent call to scientists. "It was rewarding to apply my geology knowledge to examine how the deadly avalanches happened and why the seismic risk beneath Nepal keeps growing. As an environmental scientist, I became intrigued with conducting a data-driven review of the human waste problem on the mountain, even if that topic is a bit bizarre. That topic often gets wildly exaggerated and misrepresented in the media. The most fun part to write about was all the awe I felt during the nighttime summit push." Despite his thirty-three years of climbing experience and serving as an expedition leader, he wasn't sure he would ever go back. But two years after the disaster, in the face of risk and uncertainty, he returned for the 2017 climbing season on Everest to finally achieve his dream of reaching the summit. Suspenseful and engrossing, THE NEXT EVEREST portrays the experience of living through the biggest disaster to ever hit the world's tallest peak, and Davidson's background makes him uniquely qualified to explain the mysteries that make up Everest. But this story is not about just "conquering" the mountain. Instead it reveals how embracing change, challenge, and uncertainty prepares anyone to face their "next Everest" in life.

Arroe Collins
Jim Davidson The Book The Next Everest

Arroe Collins

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 29, 2021 7:57


April 25, 2015 would go down in history as the deadliest day on the world's tallest peak. Mt. Everest was slammed by a 7.8 magnitude earthquake. 18 people would die on the mountain; another 9,000 in the nation of Nepal itself. Jim Davidson, a veteran accomplished mountain climber, was on Everest that fateful day. Through his instincts and great fortune he managed to make it off the mountain alive. His account of that day, and the days that followed when he was struggling for survival, has resulted in one of the year's most riveting reads, THE NEXT EVEREST: Surviving the Mountain's Deadliest Day and Finding the Resilience to Climb Again(St. Martin's Publishing Group; on sale 4/20/21; $29.99). The largest earthquake in more than 80 years to hit Nepal altered a mountainside, a nation, and the global mountaineering community. For Jim Davidson, who was within a day of summiting Everest, it was equally life altering. After helping where he could in the disaster zone, Jim returned home to his family in Colorado to raise money for the Nepal recovery, and to further explore the ramifications of this growing threat to the community of climbers and residents in the Mt. Everest area. As Jim explains, "After surviving the massive earthquake and avalanches I felt driven to share this story. I was intrigued by so many inaccurate media reports about what conditions are like on Everest. So, as a climber and an environmental scientist, I wanted to provide the readers with a clear-eyed view of what climbing Mount Everest is like, as well as the story of the deadly quake. Returning to the mountain in 2017 deepened my understanding of how post-traumatic growth occurs and how it helps refine people over time." In Jim's mind, the quake and the conditions on Everest became an urgent call to scientists. "It was rewarding to apply my geology knowledge to examine how the deadly avalanches happened and why the seismic risk beneath Nepal keeps growing. As an environmental scientist, I became intrigued with conducting a data-driven review of the human waste problem on the mountain, even if that topic is a bit bizarre. That topic often gets wildly exaggerated and misrepresented in the media. The most fun part to write about was all the awe I felt during the nighttime summit push." Despite his thirty-three years of climbing experience and serving as an expedition leader, he wasn't sure he would ever go back. But two years after the disaster, in the face of risk and uncertainty, he returned for the 2017 climbing season on Everest to finally achieve his dream of reaching the summit. Suspenseful and engrossing, THE NEXT EVEREST portrays the experience of living through the biggest disaster to ever hit the world's tallest peak, and Davidson's background makes him uniquely qualified to explain the mysteries that make up Everest. But this story is not about just "conquering" the mountain. Instead it reveals how embracing change, challenge, and uncertainty prepares anyone to face their "next Everest" in life.

Fated Mates
S03.36: Whiteout by Adriana Anders: You and Me Against the World

Fated Mates

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 28, 2021 72:30


This week, we're tackling Romantic Suspense and reading one of our favorite books of 2020, Adriana Anders's Whiteout! We talk about all the things romantic suspense has to nail (ha!) to knock it out of the park, why we would literally never be characters in a book set in Antarctica, and the wild feeling of reading a romantic suspense about a virus during a pandemic. Also Sarah talks about how much she loves Adriana Anders's writing and recommends lots of backlist. Next week, we're back with an interstitial, and in two weeks, we're reading Sarah's favorite Sherry Thomas book —Ravishing the Heiress. Find it at Amazon, Barnes & Noble, Apple Books, or Kobo. Thank you, as always, for listening! Please follow us on your favorite podcasting app, and if you are up for leaving a rating or review there, we would be very grateful!Show NotesIt's tenterhooks, not tenderhooks. Apparently Jen needs more sleep, or else it's gonna be a real drag on future seasons of Fated Mates. Jen tweeted about Whiteout a lot, put it on our Best of 2020 list, and even made a meme about it last week. Reading a book about a virus during a pandemic is kind of wild! Jen and Sarah are not campers, but we support you. We do like reading books about people doing extremely cold outside things: Into Thin Air, Into the Wild, and a new book on Jen's TBR is The Next Everest by Jim Davidson.Let Sandra Brown explain romantic suspense to you, and maybe you'd like to read Jack Reacher if you're into that sort of thing.We learned some things about Antarctica and staying warm while reading this book: How cold did you say it was again?Why are frostbite and hypothermia so dangerous?How fast can you get hypothermia?What would really happen to a penis in super cold weather?What's the deal with the red puffy jacket?What was all that other gear Angel and Ford had?What are fat bombs?Do people really burn 6000 calories a day there?Can you really go 300 miles on foot?What is an ice core and why do scientists study them?Are ice tunnels real?Why is flying a plane in Antartica so dangerous?What about driving vehicles?Or swimming?There are mountain ranges in Antartica?What's the terrain like? Is that cravasee thing real?Can you really make a heater out of a tealight candle?Why are there seasons??What is Polar Night? Was it just a coincidence that you released this episode concurrently with the onset of Polar Night in Antartica?Outside of murdering people for their ice core samples, are people doing crimes in Antarctica?How accurate is the movie Arctic with Mads Mikkleson?How's Antartica doing in global climate change?Thanks to Amy, one of our listeners, we now know that Antarctica TikTok exists. The two ice stations in the book McMurdo and Vostok are real research stations, and actually there are way more of these stations than you'd think. Angel calls Ford the Iceman, but not that Iceman. If you want to read more about racism and greed in American pharmaceutical companies, you might be interested in Empire of Pain, Patrick Radden Keefe's new book about the Sackler family, about Pfizer and Moderna and the COVID vaccine, Henrietta Lacks, the Tuskegee experiments, medical colonialism, and the list goes on and on. Big Bad Wolf by Suleikha Snyder isn't a critique of big pharma, but it is a fierce critique of the American system of justice. Chekhov's Gun is an axiom by the playwright about how props on stage must come into the plot. You can still order the Fated Mates Best of 2020 pack from Old Town Books. MusicZager & Evans - In the Year 2525 (Exordium & Terminus), Duran Duran - My Antarctica, Deltron 3030 - Virus, ZZ Top - Sleeping BagListen to the full Fated Mates music collection.

Arroe Collins
Jim Davidson The Next Everest

Arroe Collins

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 23, 2021 8:15


Arroe Collins
Jim Davidson The Next Everest

Arroe Collins

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 23, 2021 8:15


Arroe Collins Like It's Live
Jim Davidson The Next Everest

Arroe Collins Like It's Live

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 23, 2021 8:15


The Tim DeMoss Show Podcast
Mountain climber Jim Davidson & PA Family Institute's Lexi Stefani

The Tim DeMoss Show Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 22, 2021 44:32


Author and mountain climber extraordinaire Jim Davidson joins the show today to share about his newest book, The Next Everest: Surviving The Mountain's Deadliest Day & Finding the Resilience to Climb Again. The book details his harrowing story of surviving an avalanche and being trapped. Davidson, who also wrote the New York Times bestseller The Ledge, discusses how that experience shaped him, and how he wants to inspire others to overcome their own ‘Mount Everests' in life. Lexi Stefani, Communications & Policy Officer from the Pennsylvania Family Institute joins us later in the program to discuss the "Fairness in Women's Sports Act" (House Bill 972), the issue of women's sports, and how women's rights are impacted when they are forced to compete against biological males.   Featured clips: Doc Rivers & Joel Embiid (76ers) + singer-songwriter Ginny Owens  See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Obsessed With the Weather
30: The Next Everest: NYT Bestselling Author and Mountaineering Expert Jim Davidson

Obsessed With the Weather

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 21, 2021 52:12


Join Steve for this interview with NYT Bestselling author and Mountaineering Expert Jim Davidson.  Jim tells his story of living through a 7.8 earthquake and the deadliest day on Mount Everest in 2015 and how he returned to the mountain only 2 years later to make it to the Summitt.  Jim's humility, incredible storytelling ability, and sense of humor all combine as he shares his amazing experiences about his newly released book, The Next Everest.  He's awesome!  Enjoy! 

Good Questions...with Cameron Dole
S2E66 - Dean Cain and Jim Davidson

Good Questions...with Cameron Dole

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 21, 2021 20:02


In this episode, I visit with Dean Cain and author Jim Davidson. Dean tells us about the upcoming 24th Family Film Awards that will air April 22 on the Reelz TV Network. We also talk about some special recognitions that will be made at the event. Dean even shares what his biggest tech challenge of 2020 was. Author/motivational speaker/mountain climber Jim Davidson talks about his new book "The Next Everest". He tells us about the challenges he faced, struggled through, and how those lessons guide him to this day. Please consider supporting this podcast at buymeacoffee.com/GQwithCam --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/camerondole/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/camerondole/support

School for Good Living Podcasts
142. Jim Davidson – The Next Everest

School for Good Living Podcasts

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 20, 2021 42:19


Jim Davidson is a lifetime climber and expedition leader, spending over thirty years of his life pursuing the tallest peaks this Earth has to offer. Jim has summited Mount Everest, where he survived earthquakes, avalanches, and he’s even escaped alone from an 80 foot deep glacial crevasse. He was hiking Everest in 2015, when a … Continue reading "142. Jim Davidson – The Next Everest" The post 142. Jim Davidson – The Next Everest first appeared on School for Good Living Podcasts.

The Evan Solomon Show
How does the 2021 federal budget impact you?

The Evan Solomon Show

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 20, 2021 78:17


Evan Solomon breaks down everything you need to know about the federal budget.  On today's show:   We play Evan's full interview with Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland.  Amanda Lang, BNN Bloomberg, discusses the federal budget.  Mountaineer Jim Davidson discusses his new book, The Next Everest, which details how he survived the deadliest day on the mountain in 2015.  Megan, a health care worker in Toronto, explains how she ended up in the ICU with COVID-19 just days before giving birth.  Michael Castner, morning national news anchor for NBC news radio, discusses Derek Chauvin's trial.  Louise Mitchell talks about the situation on-the-ground in Saint Vincent during the devastating volcanic eruptions. 

covid-19 toronto nbc derek chauvin icu federal budget saint vincent bnn bloomberg evan solomon next everest finance minister chrystia freeland
The Podcast on alanarnette.com
Author Interview with Jim Davidson - The Next Everest

The Podcast on alanarnette.com

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 20, 2021 37:33


Now, Jim takes us on another journey, this time to Mt. Everest. A life-long dream, Jim starts the book remembering being at Camp 1 in the Western Cwm at 19,700-feet on Mt Everest when the 7.8 magnitude earthquake struck the region. I was a bit higher in the Cwm that day at Camp 2. Reading Jim's description of the harrowing events, rescues, courage, and loss of life brought back vivid memories. But Jim does more than tell an earthquake story. He takes us inside his tent as he and his tentmate thought an avalanche would take their lives. He puts us in the helicopter to fly over the Khumbu Icefall and back to a decimated Everest Base Camp where almost 100 people were injured, and eventually 19 died. He deals with situations most of us will never face. With his 2015 effort over, Jim ponders if he'll ever return to Everest or move on with life. What I enjoyed most about his book was, clearly, the mountaineering stories, but also how Jim weaved life lessons he learned from his Dad, Joe, and his Uncle Bob as a teenager painting almost anything near Concord, Massachusetts. I won't spoil the ending of "The Next Everest," but I highly recommend buying "The Ledge" now and placing an advance order for "The Next Everest." "The Next Everest" will be widely available on April 20, 2021, but can be pre-order now from online sources Amazon, Barnes & Noble, Tattered Cover plus your local bookstore. If you preorder from the publisher, Macmillan, where you can get a limited-edition The Next Everest mini-carabiner.

The Gentlemen's Rant Podcast
The Next Everest

The Gentlemen's Rant Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 7, 2021 66:36


Colt and Robert chat about setting goals, bodybuilders, and other stuff...

mount everest next everest