Survival instructor and wilderness guide Hazen Audel travels to some of the most remote tribal communities in the world to learn how they have survived for thousands of years in the planet?s toughest environments. Hazen joins tribes in the rainforests of Ecuador, the Kalahari Desert of Namibia, a remote island in the Pacific Ocean, the mountains of western Mongolia, the frozen Arctic of Canada, and in equatorial Kenya to learn firsthand the skills of these masters of survival.
Hazen finds a tarantula by his bed in the Amazon. Native to the rainforest, tarantulas also call other parts of South America, as well as Central America, Africa and the southern part of North America their home.
Abenteurer Hazen Audel geht stets an die Grenzen seiner Leistungsfähigkeit. Der Biologe und Survivaltrainer reist an die gefährlichsten Orte der Erde und stellt sich im Alleingang den Herausforderungen der Natur - Aufgaben, die sein Wissen, seine Ausdauer und seine körperlichen Fähigkeiten auf die ultimative Probe stellen. Um den außergewöhnlichen Anforderungen von EXTREM SURVIVAL MIT HAZEN AUDEL standzuhalten, verlässt sich der furchtlose Einzelkämpfer größtenteils auf die Techniken jener Völker, die seit Jahrtausenden unter den gegebenen Umweltbedingungen leben.
Hazen also joins the Huaorani people in the Ecuadorian Amazon and takes some tips on drinking from a succulent vine. Hydration is arguably more crucial to survival than food--you can make it three weeks without food (though it won't be fun!) but you'll perish after three days without water, less in a harsh environment.
Palm weevil larvae, a delicacy of the Amazons Huaorani people, can grow up to the length of a mans finger and are packed full of amino acids and essential fats.
Hazen gets his sea legs as he joins the men out on the water. Once out on the reef, the men feed a giant length of vine into the water to create a giant circle.