A group of tourists were in the mountains of Kyrgyzstan when one of them captured the terrifying experience on film.
The terrifying incident was recorded by a Guinness world record holder for most backflips in a single skydive.
The post said that they had reached the highest point in the trek. I heard the sound of ice cracking while I was taking pictures.
A hiker filmed the terrifying moment he and nine others were caught in an avalanche in Kyrgyzstan. Astoundingly, everyone survived.
"If we had walked 5 minutes further on our trek, we would all be dead," the hiker wrote on Instagram. pic.twitter.com/dupAFCDL2w
— CBS News (@CBSNews) July 11, 2022
A group of people, including one American, were very lucky. The end may have been spelled by a few minutes.
The caption said that the group was happy to be alive. We would all be dead if we had gone further on our trek.
Recent travelers have not been treated fairly by fortune. Last week, a glacier collapse in the Italian Alps killed at least seven and left several others wounded or missing, and it was likely a result of glacier-depleting climate change.
President Zhaparov supports climate policy. Climate change presents a particular threat to glacier-laden mountain regions, and like Seychelles President Wavel Ramkalawan, he's urging top polluters to stop overlooking impending climate disaster.
Zhaparov said in a June interview with The Independent that the world is facing global climate change. Glaciers melting and natural water reserves decreasing, which can lead to imminent disaster, are more dynamic and specific for mountain countries.
Shimmin's video isn't really inspiring. It is a cautionary tale of environmental terror. It may be a good idea to rethink your mountain trek.
A video captures a moment when tourists are hit by a mountain slide.
The Supreme Court gave power plants green light topollute as much as they wanted.