Cave exploring gone horrifyingly wrong. This is the story of Jill Heinerth and the B-15 Iceberg Cave Dive. Extreme hobbies require extreme caution and can have extreme consequences if they are not performed by professionals with the proper training and equipment. Attributions/Special Thanks for Photographs Giuseppe Milo, Robert McClellan Podcast ➡️ https://www.spreaker.com/show/scary-interesting-podcast Contact ➡️ [email protected] Discord ➡️ https://discord.com/invite/6bFs3muTxK Instagram ➡️ https://www.instagram.com/scaryinterestingstories/?hl=en Image(s) and/or video used under license from Shutterstock.com DISCLAIMER: The pictures, audio, and video used in the videos on this channel are a mix of paid stock, by attribution, royalty-free, public domain, or otherwise fall under the guidelines of fair use. No copyright infringement is intended. All rights belong to their respective owners. If you are or represent the copyright owner of materials used in this video and have an issue with the use of said material, please send an email to [email protected]. I will respond immediately.
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Never thought I would discover an activity that made regular cave diving seem reasonable.
Their amount of combined luck is utterly astounding. They had multiple second chances. Every single dive resulted in a near death experience yet they continued on.
They almost died in that ice cave 3 times. Wanting to go back the fourth time was pure madness.
Its hard to feel sorry for them when they decided to go in again after 2 almost deadly trips.
They literally asked for something bad to happen.... three separate times, and wanted a fourth life and death situation. Quite frankly, for a bunch of "pros" they sure did behave like complete idiots. "My suit is leaking and im antarctic waters ? Better to continue diving further". They clearly had more luck than common sense.
I cannot believe nobody died in this. They tempted fate so badly.
I feel like the iceberg collapsing when it did was some divine being's way of saying "for heaven's sake STOP IT!"
Imagine going through all of that to film a documentary that no one can find anymore lol
Ah yes my weekly dose of claustrophobia
They really nearly died 3 times and were like "nah let's get even more pictures and go for a 4th time" like that's INSANE lmao
frankly there is a fine line between courage and stupidity
Don't know how many close calls these people need before they understand just how recklessly they were behaving.
cave diving in an iceberg really does feel like a perfect mix of all of the worst things
This is the equivalent of burning your hand on the stove and then touching it 2 more times to see if it's still hot.
"They knew more than they did the day before" Knew what?! That at any given point a massive chunk of ice could capsize their ship and leave them to drown?! I'll never get where cave explorers get their courage from
When I heard "after that close call..." I had REALLY hoped that it was going to be a "they decided to call off the dive" so I absolutely grimaced when they decided to go for ONE MORE!!! AAA
First dive: brave Second dive: reckless Third dive: brain-dead Thank god the iceberg fell apart before they had a chance to consider a fourth
"that was the type of mistake that put everyone in danger" -- the member of the crew that decided to go back there again
Instead of admiration I only feel massive annoyance - they had several close calls in a row and survived by a miracle yet still decided to go one more time. They clearly neither deserved nor appreciated the luck they had - very few people would be given a second chance in this situation, but they did and it was still not enough to understand that it was time for them to wrap it up and leave especially since they have already filmed a lot of footage. Also this: "oh this current almost killed us and prevented us from getting back, what are we going to do to avoid it next time? Nothing! Oh it looks like the same current is trying to kill us again!" No shit, geniuses
Not sure why anybody would ever want to explore ice caves given how notoriously dangerous ice and snow can be