Kellie Nightlinger, Wildlife Survivalist and Adventurist
Disclaimer: The information within the Wild Woman Oudoors website has been provided to its viewers with the understanding that viewers will exercise caution and care in performing any of the survival techniques or activities within this site. Some of the activities can be dangerous. I am a trained wilderness and survival expert. Please do not engage in these survival techniques or activities without taking proper precautions because these activities may cause serious injury or death.
Wild Woman Outdoors Kellie Nightlinger, Wilderness Survivalist & Adventurist Kellie's Bucket List Life is so short; all too quickly it is gone. Every day is a precious gift from the heavens. There is the date you are born, the date you die and in the middle there is the dash. "Live for the Dash" I have so many wild dreams that I would have to be cloned to accomplish them all. I "Carpe Diem" every day. | ![]() |
I run "high-speed, low drag" from the time I get up until the time I go to sleep with a purposeful time set aside each day to smell and admire whatever wild roses I encounter along my journey and to thank the Creator for this beautiful world in which I am blessed to explore. Personal Challenge: Live in the Wilds for 365 days 24-7 subsisting legally off of the land and water. |
![]() | Places: to go on a photo safari to national parks in various countries in Africa and to improve water quality in remote villages by teaching water purification methods. Dominican Republic to visit my cousins' (Rosemary and Dawlin)'s mission and Avacodo Farm. To Nunuvut-Canada's Newest and remote province to film a Inuit Polar Bear, Whale,and Seal Hunt and how they utilize the meat and animal parts to sustain themselves and their villages. Hunting Trips: to harvest a free-ranging wild Red Stag in New Zealand, and a Rocky Mountain Elk with my bow, and a Musk-Ox with my bow, and another Alligator with a harpoon Cultural Expeditions: to travel the shores of James and Hudson Bays in the Aleutian Bidarka kayak I made while learning, photographing, videoing, and documenting the Inuit culture. Paddle in Ojibwe Master Craftsman Ron Paquin's Birch Bark canoe re-tracing the Fur Trade Route. |