>>1261991https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EQLt7YF84vMIts three days now since I returned from my last adventure, it was the hardest one of all I had so far. I've got caught in a trap, the range I've decended from was vertical, in hope to save myself I tried to decend along the creek, since it would lead me to the sea, but after 300m of climbing down the canyon I appeared in a gigantic pit, having huge rock walls behind me, and horrifying waterfall pits in front of me, the sides of the canyon were vertical, wet and completely unclimbable. if I would fall once, I would have crashed like a glass figure, since the ascent took me 20km on a bike and then 9 hour hike though the absolutely unpenetrabable jungles, with altitude going from 0 to 1200m, without food and water, I was exhausted, hoping the descend would be lifesaving, at least down in the valley I will find water, but I was wrong. The dangers I met going down were too serious and I wasn't filming the last hours. I the moonlight I climbed the walls and hanged above abiss by holding the branches that were hanging down the cliffs, it was the last hope, If i would stay, I wont be able to go in the morning, the body was exhausted, I was so tired and wanted to lay on the ground, but I knew if I will, the adrenalin rush, the shock chemicals, the only driving force that still stayed in the body, will fade, and I will be so scared to climb those walls. If I will stay no one will ever find me here. 2 km left years ago a plane crashed and the rescuers were barely able to work on this relief, vertical walls, covered with rope-like plant, when you step in it, your leg and body gets tied, you try to move and you get trapped even more, its phisically and mentally unbearable. In the night, when I thought everything is over, I made a sick traverse of another wall, came down to the water again and saw a path. In an hour the lights of the village, road, houses. Back to life.