
Episode 2
Erik Vogel was the 24-year-old pilot of the Piper Navajo plane and he was not at all comfortable with the idea of flying north on the evening of 19 October 1984.
Read by Barbara Barnes.
The astonishing true life adventure story of a plane crash in the wilds of northern Canada and the four men who survived to tell the tale.
On a wintry October night in 1984, nine passengers boarded a Piper Navajo commuter plane bound for remote communities in the far north of Canada. Only four people - strangers from wildly different backgrounds - survived the night that followed: the pilot, a prominent politician, an accused criminal and the rookie policeman escorting him.
The title is taken from the American mythologist Joseph Campbell who explored mankind's quest for meaning and adventure: 'It is by going down into the abyss that we recover the treasures of life'.
The author, Carol Shaben, is the daughter of Larry Shaben a politician in the Alberta Legislature who survived the crash. Using extensive interviews with all the remaining survivors and their families, as well as investigation reports and court records, she reconstructs the events leading up to the fatal crash and unravels the enduring impact it had on the four survivors and the bonds they formed that night on the mountain.
Episode 2:
Erik Vogel was the 24 year old pilot of the Piper Navajo plane and he was not at all comfortable with the idea of flying north on the evening of 19th October 1984. The small airline had been repeatedly cited for safety violations and visibility on that snowy night was dangerously poor.
Abridged and Produced by Jill Waters
A Waters Company production for BBC Radio 4.
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- Tue 23 Oct 201209:45BBC Radio 4 FM
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