People

Die angesagtesten Promis bei uns. Die neuesten EXKLUSIVEN Bilder nur für registrierte User!

News

Aktuelles Tagesgeschehen rund um den Globus.

Features

Skurriles, Spassiges und Absurdes aus aller Welt.

Styling

Trends aus Fashion und Design.

Portrait

Premium Portraitfotografie.

Reportage

Stories, Facts und Hintergrund, alles im Bild.

Creative

Auf der Suche nach mehr? Prisma by Dukas.

Dukas Bildagentur
request@dukas.ch
+41 44 298 50 00

Ihre Suche nach:

1378 Ergebnis(se) in 0.48 s

  • SCHICKSALE - hr Mann hat eine fünfprozentige Überlebenschance: Cami und Jake Bartel aus Arizona kämpfen gemeinsam gegen sein MELAS-Syndrom
    DUK10164037_006
    SCHICKSALE - hr Mann hat eine fünfprozentige Überlebenschance: Cami und Jake Bartel aus Arizona kämpfen gemeinsam gegen sein MELAS-Syndrom
    SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
    WORDS BYLINE: Andrea Caknis
    They had only been married five months and were happily making plans together.
    And when Jake started complaining about a headache, Cami Bartel thought nothing of it.
    He went to bed and the couple hoped he’d be better in the morning.
    But at 4am on October 1 2019, Cami woke up to find Jake having a seizure next to her in bed.
    “I called 911 immediately. It was surreal, almost like watching someone else’s life unravel,” says Cami, now 28.
    “One moment we were planning our future, and the next I was rushing my 27-year-old husband to hospital without knowing if he’d survive.”
    What began as a simple headache turned into a full-blown medical emergency overnight. By the time Jake was admitted, doctors were completely baffled.
    “He didn’t just have a seizure,” says Cami.
    “There was also swelling on his brain, and that really scared everyone.”
    Doctors initially suspected a severe viral or bacterial infection and began testing for everything from meningitis to West Nile virus.
    “They told me they were checking for all kinds of infections,” she says.
    “But every single test came back negative. It was like watching them search in the dark while Jake got worse.”
    With no clear answers and Jake’s condition deteriorating rapidly, doctors prepared Cami for the worst.
    “That’s when they gave me the five per cent survival rate,” she says.
    “They assumed it had to be some virus they just couldn’t identify, but they weren’t even considering anything beyond that.
    “I was 22, sitting there, trying to process that my husband, who had been healthy just hours earlier, might not make it through the night.”
    But Jake, now 32, defied the odds. After two weeks in hospital, he was discharged. However the nightmare was far from over. No one could explain what had happened or why.
    “We went home with no diagnosis, just this overwhelming sense of fear mixed with relief,” says Cami.
    During the hospit *** Local Caption *** 48040915

    (c) Dukas

     

  • SCHICKSALE - hr Mann hat eine fünfprozentige Überlebenschance: Cami und Jake Bartel aus Arizona kämpfen gemeinsam gegen sein MELAS-Syndrom
    DUK10163996_006
    SCHICKSALE - hr Mann hat eine fünfprozentige Überlebenschance: Cami und Jake Bartel aus Arizona kämpfen gemeinsam gegen sein MELAS-Syndrom
    SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
    WORDS BYLINE: Andrea Caknis
    They had only been married five months and were happily making plans together.
    And when Jake started complaining about a headache, Cami Bartel thought nothing of it.
    He went to bed and the couple hoped he’d be better in the morning.
    But at 4am on October 1 2019, Cami woke up to find Jake having a seizure next to her in bed.
    “I called 911 immediately. It was surreal, almost like watching someone else’s life unravel,” says Cami, now 28.
    “One moment we were planning our future, and the next I was rushing my 27-year-old husband to hospital without knowing if he’d survive.”
    What began as a simple headache turned into a full-blown medical emergency overnight. By the time Jake was admitted, doctors were completely baffled.
    “He didn’t just have a seizure,” says Cami.
    “There was also swelling on his brain, and that really scared everyone.”
    Doctors initially suspected a severe viral or bacterial infection and began testing for everything from meningitis to West Nile virus.
    “They told me they were checking for all kinds of infections,” she says.
    “But every single test came back negative. It was like watching them search in the dark while Jake got worse.”
    With no clear answers and Jake’s condition deteriorating rapidly, doctors prepared Cami for the worst.
    “That’s when they gave me the five per cent survival rate,” she says.
    “They assumed it had to be some virus they just couldn’t identify, but they weren’t even considering anything beyond that.
    “I was 22, sitting there, trying to process that my husband, who had been healthy just hours earlier, might not make it through the night.”
    But Jake, now 32, defied the odds. After two weeks in hospital, he was discharged. However the nightmare was far from over. No one could explain what had happened or why.
    “We went home with no diagnosis, just this overwhelming sense of fear mixed with relief,” says Cami.
    During the hospit *** Local Caption *** 48040915

    (c) Dukas - Double Fee !

     

  • SCHICKSALE - hr Mann hat eine fünfprozentige Überlebenschance: Cami und Jake Bartel aus Arizona kämpfen gemeinsam gegen sein MELAS-Syndrom
    DUK10164037_001
    SCHICKSALE - hr Mann hat eine fünfprozentige Überlebenschance: Cami und Jake Bartel aus Arizona kämpfen gemeinsam gegen sein MELAS-Syndrom
    SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
    WORDS BYLINE: Andrea Caknis
    They had only been married five months and were happily making plans together.
    And when Jake started complaining about a headache, Cami Bartel thought nothing of it.
    He went to bed and the couple hoped he’d be better in the morning.
    But at 4am on October 1 2019, Cami woke up to find Jake having a seizure next to her in bed.
    “I called 911 immediately. It was surreal, almost like watching someone else’s life unravel,” says Cami, now 28.
    “One moment we were planning our future, and the next I was rushing my 27-year-old husband to hospital without knowing if he’d survive.”
    What began as a simple headache turned into a full-blown medical emergency overnight. By the time Jake was admitted, doctors were completely baffled.
    “He didn’t just have a seizure,” says Cami.
    “There was also swelling on his brain, and that really scared everyone.”
    Doctors initially suspected a severe viral or bacterial infection and began testing for everything from meningitis to West Nile virus.
    “They told me they were checking for all kinds of infections,” she says.
    “But every single test came back negative. It was like watching them search in the dark while Jake got worse.”
    With no clear answers and Jake’s condition deteriorating rapidly, doctors prepared Cami for the worst.
    “That’s when they gave me the five per cent survival rate,” she says.
    “They assumed it had to be some virus they just couldn’t identify, but they weren’t even considering anything beyond that.
    “I was 22, sitting there, trying to process that my husband, who had been healthy just hours earlier, might not make it through the night.”
    But Jake, now 32, defied the odds. After two weeks in hospital, he was discharged. However the nightmare was far from over. No one could explain what had happened or why.
    “We went home with no diagnosis, just this overwhelming sense of fear mixed with relief,” says Cami.
    During the hospit *** Local Caption *** 48040909

    (c) Dukas

     

  • SCHICKSALE - hr Mann hat eine fünfprozentige Überlebenschance: Cami und Jake Bartel aus Arizona kämpfen gemeinsam gegen sein MELAS-Syndrom
    DUK10163996_001
    SCHICKSALE - hr Mann hat eine fünfprozentige Überlebenschance: Cami und Jake Bartel aus Arizona kämpfen gemeinsam gegen sein MELAS-Syndrom
    SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
    WORDS BYLINE: Andrea Caknis
    They had only been married five months and were happily making plans together.
    And when Jake started complaining about a headache, Cami Bartel thought nothing of it.
    He went to bed and the couple hoped he’d be better in the morning.
    But at 4am on October 1 2019, Cami woke up to find Jake having a seizure next to her in bed.
    “I called 911 immediately. It was surreal, almost like watching someone else’s life unravel,” says Cami, now 28.
    “One moment we were planning our future, and the next I was rushing my 27-year-old husband to hospital without knowing if he’d survive.”
    What began as a simple headache turned into a full-blown medical emergency overnight. By the time Jake was admitted, doctors were completely baffled.
    “He didn’t just have a seizure,” says Cami.
    “There was also swelling on his brain, and that really scared everyone.”
    Doctors initially suspected a severe viral or bacterial infection and began testing for everything from meningitis to West Nile virus.
    “They told me they were checking for all kinds of infections,” she says.
    “But every single test came back negative. It was like watching them search in the dark while Jake got worse.”
    With no clear answers and Jake’s condition deteriorating rapidly, doctors prepared Cami for the worst.
    “That’s when they gave me the five per cent survival rate,” she says.
    “They assumed it had to be some virus they just couldn’t identify, but they weren’t even considering anything beyond that.
    “I was 22, sitting there, trying to process that my husband, who had been healthy just hours earlier, might not make it through the night.”
    But Jake, now 32, defied the odds. After two weeks in hospital, he was discharged. However the nightmare was far from over. No one could explain what had happened or why.
    “We went home with no diagnosis, just this overwhelming sense of fear mixed with relief,” says Cami.
    During the hospit *** Local Caption *** 48040909

    (c) Dukas - Double Fee !

     

  • SCHICKSALE - hr Mann hat eine fünfprozentige Überlebenschance: Cami und Jake Bartel aus Arizona kämpfen gemeinsam gegen sein MELAS-Syndrom
    DUK10164037_016
    SCHICKSALE - hr Mann hat eine fünfprozentige Überlebenschance: Cami und Jake Bartel aus Arizona kämpfen gemeinsam gegen sein MELAS-Syndrom
    SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
    WORDS BYLINE: Andrea Caknis
    They had only been married five months and were happily making plans together.
    And when Jake started complaining about a headache, Cami Bartel thought nothing of it.
    He went to bed and the couple hoped he’d be better in the morning.
    But at 4am on October 1 2019, Cami woke up to find Jake having a seizure next to her in bed.
    “I called 911 immediately. It was surreal, almost like watching someone else’s life unravel,” says Cami, now 28.
    “One moment we were planning our future, and the next I was rushing my 27-year-old husband to hospital without knowing if he’d survive.”
    What began as a simple headache turned into a full-blown medical emergency overnight. By the time Jake was admitted, doctors were completely baffled.
    “He didn’t just have a seizure,” says Cami.
    “There was also swelling on his brain, and that really scared everyone.”
    Doctors initially suspected a severe viral or bacterial infection and began testing for everything from meningitis to West Nile virus.
    “They told me they were checking for all kinds of infections,” she says.
    “But every single test came back negative. It was like watching them search in the dark while Jake got worse.”
    With no clear answers and Jake’s condition deteriorating rapidly, doctors prepared Cami for the worst.
    “That’s when they gave me the five per cent survival rate,” she says.
    “They assumed it had to be some virus they just couldn’t identify, but they weren’t even considering anything beyond that.
    “I was 22, sitting there, trying to process that my husband, who had been healthy just hours earlier, might not make it through the night.”
    But Jake, now 32, defied the odds. After two weeks in hospital, he was discharged. However the nightmare was far from over. No one could explain what had happened or why.
    “We went home with no diagnosis, just this overwhelming sense of fear mixed with relief,” says Cami.
    During the hospit *** Local Caption *** 48040916

    (c) Dukas

     

  • SCHICKSALE - hr Mann hat eine fünfprozentige Überlebenschance: Cami und Jake Bartel aus Arizona kämpfen gemeinsam gegen sein MELAS-Syndrom
    DUK10163996_016
    SCHICKSALE - hr Mann hat eine fünfprozentige Überlebenschance: Cami und Jake Bartel aus Arizona kämpfen gemeinsam gegen sein MELAS-Syndrom
    SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
    WORDS BYLINE: Andrea Caknis
    They had only been married five months and were happily making plans together.
    And when Jake started complaining about a headache, Cami Bartel thought nothing of it.
    He went to bed and the couple hoped he’d be better in the morning.
    But at 4am on October 1 2019, Cami woke up to find Jake having a seizure next to her in bed.
    “I called 911 immediately. It was surreal, almost like watching someone else’s life unravel,” says Cami, now 28.
    “One moment we were planning our future, and the next I was rushing my 27-year-old husband to hospital without knowing if he’d survive.”
    What began as a simple headache turned into a full-blown medical emergency overnight. By the time Jake was admitted, doctors were completely baffled.
    “He didn’t just have a seizure,” says Cami.
    “There was also swelling on his brain, and that really scared everyone.”
    Doctors initially suspected a severe viral or bacterial infection and began testing for everything from meningitis to West Nile virus.
    “They told me they were checking for all kinds of infections,” she says.
    “But every single test came back negative. It was like watching them search in the dark while Jake got worse.”
    With no clear answers and Jake’s condition deteriorating rapidly, doctors prepared Cami for the worst.
    “That’s when they gave me the five per cent survival rate,” she says.
    “They assumed it had to be some virus they just couldn’t identify, but they weren’t even considering anything beyond that.
    “I was 22, sitting there, trying to process that my husband, who had been healthy just hours earlier, might not make it through the night.”
    But Jake, now 32, defied the odds. After two weeks in hospital, he was discharged. However the nightmare was far from over. No one could explain what had happened or why.
    “We went home with no diagnosis, just this overwhelming sense of fear mixed with relief,” says Cami.
    During the hospit *** Local Caption *** 48040916

    (c) Dukas - Double Fee !

     

  • SCHICKSALE - hr Mann hat eine fünfprozentige Überlebenschance: Cami und Jake Bartel aus Arizona kämpfen gemeinsam gegen sein MELAS-Syndrom
    DUK10164037_008
    SCHICKSALE - hr Mann hat eine fünfprozentige Überlebenschance: Cami und Jake Bartel aus Arizona kämpfen gemeinsam gegen sein MELAS-Syndrom
    SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
    WORDS BYLINE: Andrea Caknis
    They had only been married five months and were happily making plans together.
    And when Jake started complaining about a headache, Cami Bartel thought nothing of it.
    He went to bed and the couple hoped he’d be better in the morning.
    But at 4am on October 1 2019, Cami woke up to find Jake having a seizure next to her in bed.
    “I called 911 immediately. It was surreal, almost like watching someone else’s life unravel,” says Cami, now 28.
    “One moment we were planning our future, and the next I was rushing my 27-year-old husband to hospital without knowing if he’d survive.”
    What began as a simple headache turned into a full-blown medical emergency overnight. By the time Jake was admitted, doctors were completely baffled.
    “He didn’t just have a seizure,” says Cami.
    “There was also swelling on his brain, and that really scared everyone.”
    Doctors initially suspected a severe viral or bacterial infection and began testing for everything from meningitis to West Nile virus.
    “They told me they were checking for all kinds of infections,” she says.
    “But every single test came back negative. It was like watching them search in the dark while Jake got worse.”
    With no clear answers and Jake’s condition deteriorating rapidly, doctors prepared Cami for the worst.
    “That’s when they gave me the five per cent survival rate,” she says.
    “They assumed it had to be some virus they just couldn’t identify, but they weren’t even considering anything beyond that.
    “I was 22, sitting there, trying to process that my husband, who had been healthy just hours earlier, might not make it through the night.”
    But Jake, now 32, defied the odds. After two weeks in hospital, he was discharged. However the nightmare was far from over. No one could explain what had happened or why.
    “We went home with no diagnosis, just this overwhelming sense of fear mixed with relief,” says Cami.
    During the hospit *** Local Caption *** 48040918

    (c) Dukas

     

  • SCHICKSALE - hr Mann hat eine fünfprozentige Überlebenschance: Cami und Jake Bartel aus Arizona kämpfen gemeinsam gegen sein MELAS-Syndrom
    DUK10163996_008
    SCHICKSALE - hr Mann hat eine fünfprozentige Überlebenschance: Cami und Jake Bartel aus Arizona kämpfen gemeinsam gegen sein MELAS-Syndrom
    SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
    WORDS BYLINE: Andrea Caknis
    They had only been married five months and were happily making plans together.
    And when Jake started complaining about a headache, Cami Bartel thought nothing of it.
    He went to bed and the couple hoped he’d be better in the morning.
    But at 4am on October 1 2019, Cami woke up to find Jake having a seizure next to her in bed.
    “I called 911 immediately. It was surreal, almost like watching someone else’s life unravel,” says Cami, now 28.
    “One moment we were planning our future, and the next I was rushing my 27-year-old husband to hospital without knowing if he’d survive.”
    What began as a simple headache turned into a full-blown medical emergency overnight. By the time Jake was admitted, doctors were completely baffled.
    “He didn’t just have a seizure,” says Cami.
    “There was also swelling on his brain, and that really scared everyone.”
    Doctors initially suspected a severe viral or bacterial infection and began testing for everything from meningitis to West Nile virus.
    “They told me they were checking for all kinds of infections,” she says.
    “But every single test came back negative. It was like watching them search in the dark while Jake got worse.”
    With no clear answers and Jake’s condition deteriorating rapidly, doctors prepared Cami for the worst.
    “That’s when they gave me the five per cent survival rate,” she says.
    “They assumed it had to be some virus they just couldn’t identify, but they weren’t even considering anything beyond that.
    “I was 22, sitting there, trying to process that my husband, who had been healthy just hours earlier, might not make it through the night.”
    But Jake, now 32, defied the odds. After two weeks in hospital, he was discharged. However the nightmare was far from over. No one could explain what had happened or why.
    “We went home with no diagnosis, just this overwhelming sense of fear mixed with relief,” says Cami.
    During the hospit *** Local Caption *** 48040918

    (c) Dukas - Double Fee !

     

  • SCHICKSALE - hr Mann hat eine fünfprozentige Überlebenschance: Cami und Jake Bartel aus Arizona kämpfen gemeinsam gegen sein MELAS-Syndrom
    DUK10164037_002
    SCHICKSALE - hr Mann hat eine fünfprozentige Überlebenschance: Cami und Jake Bartel aus Arizona kämpfen gemeinsam gegen sein MELAS-Syndrom
    SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
    WORDS BYLINE: Andrea Caknis
    They had only been married five months and were happily making plans together.
    And when Jake started complaining about a headache, Cami Bartel thought nothing of it.
    He went to bed and the couple hoped he’d be better in the morning.
    But at 4am on October 1 2019, Cami woke up to find Jake having a seizure next to her in bed.
    “I called 911 immediately. It was surreal, almost like watching someone else’s life unravel,” says Cami, now 28.
    “One moment we were planning our future, and the next I was rushing my 27-year-old husband to hospital without knowing if he’d survive.”
    What began as a simple headache turned into a full-blown medical emergency overnight. By the time Jake was admitted, doctors were completely baffled.
    “He didn’t just have a seizure,” says Cami.
    “There was also swelling on his brain, and that really scared everyone.”
    Doctors initially suspected a severe viral or bacterial infection and began testing for everything from meningitis to West Nile virus.
    “They told me they were checking for all kinds of infections,” she says.
    “But every single test came back negative. It was like watching them search in the dark while Jake got worse.”
    With no clear answers and Jake’s condition deteriorating rapidly, doctors prepared Cami for the worst.
    “That’s when they gave me the five per cent survival rate,” she says.
    “They assumed it had to be some virus they just couldn’t identify, but they weren’t even considering anything beyond that.
    “I was 22, sitting there, trying to process that my husband, who had been healthy just hours earlier, might not make it through the night.”
    But Jake, now 32, defied the odds. After two weeks in hospital, he was discharged. However the nightmare was far from over. No one could explain what had happened or why.
    “We went home with no diagnosis, just this overwhelming sense of fear mixed with relief,” says Cami.
    During the hospit *** Local Caption *** 48040904

    (c) Dukas

     

  • SCHICKSALE - hr Mann hat eine fünfprozentige Überlebenschance: Cami und Jake Bartel aus Arizona kämpfen gemeinsam gegen sein MELAS-Syndrom
    DUK10163996_002
    SCHICKSALE - hr Mann hat eine fünfprozentige Überlebenschance: Cami und Jake Bartel aus Arizona kämpfen gemeinsam gegen sein MELAS-Syndrom
    SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
    WORDS BYLINE: Andrea Caknis
    They had only been married five months and were happily making plans together.
    And when Jake started complaining about a headache, Cami Bartel thought nothing of it.
    He went to bed and the couple hoped he’d be better in the morning.
    But at 4am on October 1 2019, Cami woke up to find Jake having a seizure next to her in bed.
    “I called 911 immediately. It was surreal, almost like watching someone else’s life unravel,” says Cami, now 28.
    “One moment we were planning our future, and the next I was rushing my 27-year-old husband to hospital without knowing if he’d survive.”
    What began as a simple headache turned into a full-blown medical emergency overnight. By the time Jake was admitted, doctors were completely baffled.
    “He didn’t just have a seizure,” says Cami.
    “There was also swelling on his brain, and that really scared everyone.”
    Doctors initially suspected a severe viral or bacterial infection and began testing for everything from meningitis to West Nile virus.
    “They told me they were checking for all kinds of infections,” she says.
    “But every single test came back negative. It was like watching them search in the dark while Jake got worse.”
    With no clear answers and Jake’s condition deteriorating rapidly, doctors prepared Cami for the worst.
    “That’s when they gave me the five per cent survival rate,” she says.
    “They assumed it had to be some virus they just couldn’t identify, but they weren’t even considering anything beyond that.
    “I was 22, sitting there, trying to process that my husband, who had been healthy just hours earlier, might not make it through the night.”
    But Jake, now 32, defied the odds. After two weeks in hospital, he was discharged. However the nightmare was far from over. No one could explain what had happened or why.
    “We went home with no diagnosis, just this overwhelming sense of fear mixed with relief,” says Cami.
    During the hospit *** Local Caption *** 48040904

    (c) Dukas - Double Fee !

     

  • SCHICKSALE - hr Mann hat eine fünfprozentige Überlebenschance: Cami und Jake Bartel aus Arizona kämpfen gemeinsam gegen sein MELAS-Syndrom
    DUK10164037_007
    SCHICKSALE - hr Mann hat eine fünfprozentige Überlebenschance: Cami und Jake Bartel aus Arizona kämpfen gemeinsam gegen sein MELAS-Syndrom
    SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
    WORDS BYLINE: Andrea Caknis
    They had only been married five months and were happily making plans together.
    And when Jake started complaining about a headache, Cami Bartel thought nothing of it.
    He went to bed and the couple hoped he’d be better in the morning.
    But at 4am on October 1 2019, Cami woke up to find Jake having a seizure next to her in bed.
    “I called 911 immediately. It was surreal, almost like watching someone else’s life unravel,” says Cami, now 28.
    “One moment we were planning our future, and the next I was rushing my 27-year-old husband to hospital without knowing if he’d survive.”
    What began as a simple headache turned into a full-blown medical emergency overnight. By the time Jake was admitted, doctors were completely baffled.
    “He didn’t just have a seizure,” says Cami.
    “There was also swelling on his brain, and that really scared everyone.”
    Doctors initially suspected a severe viral or bacterial infection and began testing for everything from meningitis to West Nile virus.
    “They told me they were checking for all kinds of infections,” she says.
    “But every single test came back negative. It was like watching them search in the dark while Jake got worse.”
    With no clear answers and Jake’s condition deteriorating rapidly, doctors prepared Cami for the worst.
    “That’s when they gave me the five per cent survival rate,” she says.
    “They assumed it had to be some virus they just couldn’t identify, but they weren’t even considering anything beyond that.
    “I was 22, sitting there, trying to process that my husband, who had been healthy just hours earlier, might not make it through the night.”
    But Jake, now 32, defied the odds. After two weeks in hospital, he was discharged. However the nightmare was far from over. No one could explain what had happened or why.
    “We went home with no diagnosis, just this overwhelming sense of fear mixed with relief,” says Cami.
    During the hospit *** Local Caption *** 48040917

    (c) Dukas

     

  • SCHICKSALE - hr Mann hat eine fünfprozentige Überlebenschance: Cami und Jake Bartel aus Arizona kämpfen gemeinsam gegen sein MELAS-Syndrom
    DUK10163996_007
    SCHICKSALE - hr Mann hat eine fünfprozentige Überlebenschance: Cami und Jake Bartel aus Arizona kämpfen gemeinsam gegen sein MELAS-Syndrom
    SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
    WORDS BYLINE: Andrea Caknis
    They had only been married five months and were happily making plans together.
    And when Jake started complaining about a headache, Cami Bartel thought nothing of it.
    He went to bed and the couple hoped he’d be better in the morning.
    But at 4am on October 1 2019, Cami woke up to find Jake having a seizure next to her in bed.
    “I called 911 immediately. It was surreal, almost like watching someone else’s life unravel,” says Cami, now 28.
    “One moment we were planning our future, and the next I was rushing my 27-year-old husband to hospital without knowing if he’d survive.”
    What began as a simple headache turned into a full-blown medical emergency overnight. By the time Jake was admitted, doctors were completely baffled.
    “He didn’t just have a seizure,” says Cami.
    “There was also swelling on his brain, and that really scared everyone.”
    Doctors initially suspected a severe viral or bacterial infection and began testing for everything from meningitis to West Nile virus.
    “They told me they were checking for all kinds of infections,” she says.
    “But every single test came back negative. It was like watching them search in the dark while Jake got worse.”
    With no clear answers and Jake’s condition deteriorating rapidly, doctors prepared Cami for the worst.
    “That’s when they gave me the five per cent survival rate,” she says.
    “They assumed it had to be some virus they just couldn’t identify, but they weren’t even considering anything beyond that.
    “I was 22, sitting there, trying to process that my husband, who had been healthy just hours earlier, might not make it through the night.”
    But Jake, now 32, defied the odds. After two weeks in hospital, he was discharged. However the nightmare was far from over. No one could explain what had happened or why.
    “We went home with no diagnosis, just this overwhelming sense of fear mixed with relief,” says Cami.
    During the hospit *** Local Caption *** 48040917

    (c) Dukas - Double Fee !

     

  • SCHICKSALE - hr Mann hat eine fünfprozentige Überlebenschance: Cami und Jake Bartel aus Arizona kämpfen gemeinsam gegen sein MELAS-Syndrom
    DUK10164037_004
    SCHICKSALE - hr Mann hat eine fünfprozentige Überlebenschance: Cami und Jake Bartel aus Arizona kämpfen gemeinsam gegen sein MELAS-Syndrom
    SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
    WORDS BYLINE: Andrea Caknis
    They had only been married five months and were happily making plans together.
    And when Jake started complaining about a headache, Cami Bartel thought nothing of it.
    He went to bed and the couple hoped he’d be better in the morning.
    But at 4am on October 1 2019, Cami woke up to find Jake having a seizure next to her in bed.
    “I called 911 immediately. It was surreal, almost like watching someone else’s life unravel,” says Cami, now 28.
    “One moment we were planning our future, and the next I was rushing my 27-year-old husband to hospital without knowing if he’d survive.”
    What began as a simple headache turned into a full-blown medical emergency overnight. By the time Jake was admitted, doctors were completely baffled.
    “He didn’t just have a seizure,” says Cami.
    “There was also swelling on his brain, and that really scared everyone.”
    Doctors initially suspected a severe viral or bacterial infection and began testing for everything from meningitis to West Nile virus.
    “They told me they were checking for all kinds of infections,” she says.
    “But every single test came back negative. It was like watching them search in the dark while Jake got worse.”
    With no clear answers and Jake’s condition deteriorating rapidly, doctors prepared Cami for the worst.
    “That’s when they gave me the five per cent survival rate,” she says.
    “They assumed it had to be some virus they just couldn’t identify, but they weren’t even considering anything beyond that.
    “I was 22, sitting there, trying to process that my husband, who had been healthy just hours earlier, might not make it through the night.”
    But Jake, now 32, defied the odds. After two weeks in hospital, he was discharged. However the nightmare was far from over. No one could explain what had happened or why.
    “We went home with no diagnosis, just this overwhelming sense of fear mixed with relief,” says Cami.
    During the hospit *** Local Caption *** 48040912

    (c) Dukas

     

  • SCHICKSALE - hr Mann hat eine fünfprozentige Überlebenschance: Cami und Jake Bartel aus Arizona kämpfen gemeinsam gegen sein MELAS-Syndrom
    DUK10163996_004
    SCHICKSALE - hr Mann hat eine fünfprozentige Überlebenschance: Cami und Jake Bartel aus Arizona kämpfen gemeinsam gegen sein MELAS-Syndrom
    SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
    WORDS BYLINE: Andrea Caknis
    They had only been married five months and were happily making plans together.
    And when Jake started complaining about a headache, Cami Bartel thought nothing of it.
    He went to bed and the couple hoped he’d be better in the morning.
    But at 4am on October 1 2019, Cami woke up to find Jake having a seizure next to her in bed.
    “I called 911 immediately. It was surreal, almost like watching someone else’s life unravel,” says Cami, now 28.
    “One moment we were planning our future, and the next I was rushing my 27-year-old husband to hospital without knowing if he’d survive.”
    What began as a simple headache turned into a full-blown medical emergency overnight. By the time Jake was admitted, doctors were completely baffled.
    “He didn’t just have a seizure,” says Cami.
    “There was also swelling on his brain, and that really scared everyone.”
    Doctors initially suspected a severe viral or bacterial infection and began testing for everything from meningitis to West Nile virus.
    “They told me they were checking for all kinds of infections,” she says.
    “But every single test came back negative. It was like watching them search in the dark while Jake got worse.”
    With no clear answers and Jake’s condition deteriorating rapidly, doctors prepared Cami for the worst.
    “That’s when they gave me the five per cent survival rate,” she says.
    “They assumed it had to be some virus they just couldn’t identify, but they weren’t even considering anything beyond that.
    “I was 22, sitting there, trying to process that my husband, who had been healthy just hours earlier, might not make it through the night.”
    But Jake, now 32, defied the odds. After two weeks in hospital, he was discharged. However the nightmare was far from over. No one could explain what had happened or why.
    “We went home with no diagnosis, just this overwhelming sense of fear mixed with relief,” says Cami.
    During the hospit *** Local Caption *** 48040912

    (c) Dukas - Double Fee !

     

  • SCHICKSALE - hr Mann hat eine fünfprozentige Überlebenschance: Cami und Jake Bartel aus Arizona kämpfen gemeinsam gegen sein MELAS-Syndrom
    DUK10164037_014
    SCHICKSALE - hr Mann hat eine fünfprozentige Überlebenschance: Cami und Jake Bartel aus Arizona kämpfen gemeinsam gegen sein MELAS-Syndrom
    SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
    WORDS BYLINE: Andrea Caknis
    They had only been married five months and were happily making plans together.
    And when Jake started complaining about a headache, Cami Bartel thought nothing of it.
    He went to bed and the couple hoped he’d be better in the morning.
    But at 4am on October 1 2019, Cami woke up to find Jake having a seizure next to her in bed.
    “I called 911 immediately. It was surreal, almost like watching someone else’s life unravel,” says Cami, now 28.
    “One moment we were planning our future, and the next I was rushing my 27-year-old husband to hospital without knowing if he’d survive.”
    What began as a simple headache turned into a full-blown medical emergency overnight. By the time Jake was admitted, doctors were completely baffled.
    “He didn’t just have a seizure,” says Cami.
    “There was also swelling on his brain, and that really scared everyone.”
    Doctors initially suspected a severe viral or bacterial infection and began testing for everything from meningitis to West Nile virus.
    “They told me they were checking for all kinds of infections,” she says.
    “But every single test came back negative. It was like watching them search in the dark while Jake got worse.”
    With no clear answers and Jake’s condition deteriorating rapidly, doctors prepared Cami for the worst.
    “That’s when they gave me the five per cent survival rate,” she says.
    “They assumed it had to be some virus they just couldn’t identify, but they weren’t even considering anything beyond that.
    “I was 22, sitting there, trying to process that my husband, who had been healthy just hours earlier, might not make it through the night.”
    But Jake, now 32, defied the odds. After two weeks in hospital, he was discharged. However the nightmare was far from over. No one could explain what had happened or why.
    “We went home with no diagnosis, just this overwhelming sense of fear mixed with relief,” says Cami.
    During the hospit *** Local Caption *** 48040911

    (c) Dukas

     

  • SCHICKSALE - hr Mann hat eine fünfprozentige Überlebenschance: Cami und Jake Bartel aus Arizona kämpfen gemeinsam gegen sein MELAS-Syndrom
    DUK10163996_014
    SCHICKSALE - hr Mann hat eine fünfprozentige Überlebenschance: Cami und Jake Bartel aus Arizona kämpfen gemeinsam gegen sein MELAS-Syndrom
    SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
    WORDS BYLINE: Andrea Caknis
    They had only been married five months and were happily making plans together.
    And when Jake started complaining about a headache, Cami Bartel thought nothing of it.
    He went to bed and the couple hoped he’d be better in the morning.
    But at 4am on October 1 2019, Cami woke up to find Jake having a seizure next to her in bed.
    “I called 911 immediately. It was surreal, almost like watching someone else’s life unravel,” says Cami, now 28.
    “One moment we were planning our future, and the next I was rushing my 27-year-old husband to hospital without knowing if he’d survive.”
    What began as a simple headache turned into a full-blown medical emergency overnight. By the time Jake was admitted, doctors were completely baffled.
    “He didn’t just have a seizure,” says Cami.
    “There was also swelling on his brain, and that really scared everyone.”
    Doctors initially suspected a severe viral or bacterial infection and began testing for everything from meningitis to West Nile virus.
    “They told me they were checking for all kinds of infections,” she says.
    “But every single test came back negative. It was like watching them search in the dark while Jake got worse.”
    With no clear answers and Jake’s condition deteriorating rapidly, doctors prepared Cami for the worst.
    “That’s when they gave me the five per cent survival rate,” she says.
    “They assumed it had to be some virus they just couldn’t identify, but they weren’t even considering anything beyond that.
    “I was 22, sitting there, trying to process that my husband, who had been healthy just hours earlier, might not make it through the night.”
    But Jake, now 32, defied the odds. After two weeks in hospital, he was discharged. However the nightmare was far from over. No one could explain what had happened or why.
    “We went home with no diagnosis, just this overwhelming sense of fear mixed with relief,” says Cami.
    During the hospit *** Local Caption *** 48040911

    (c) Dukas - Double Fee !

     

  • SCHICKSALE - hr Mann hat eine fünfprozentige Überlebenschance: Cami und Jake Bartel aus Arizona kämpfen gemeinsam gegen sein MELAS-Syndrom
    DUK10164037_015
    SCHICKSALE - hr Mann hat eine fünfprozentige Überlebenschance: Cami und Jake Bartel aus Arizona kämpfen gemeinsam gegen sein MELAS-Syndrom
    SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
    WORDS BYLINE: Andrea Caknis
    They had only been married five months and were happily making plans together.
    And when Jake started complaining about a headache, Cami Bartel thought nothing of it.
    He went to bed and the couple hoped he’d be better in the morning.
    But at 4am on October 1 2019, Cami woke up to find Jake having a seizure next to her in bed.
    “I called 911 immediately. It was surreal, almost like watching someone else’s life unravel,” says Cami, now 28.
    “One moment we were planning our future, and the next I was rushing my 27-year-old husband to hospital without knowing if he’d survive.”
    What began as a simple headache turned into a full-blown medical emergency overnight. By the time Jake was admitted, doctors were completely baffled.
    “He didn’t just have a seizure,” says Cami.
    “There was also swelling on his brain, and that really scared everyone.”
    Doctors initially suspected a severe viral or bacterial infection and began testing for everything from meningitis to West Nile virus.
    “They told me they were checking for all kinds of infections,” she says.
    “But every single test came back negative. It was like watching them search in the dark while Jake got worse.”
    With no clear answers and Jake’s condition deteriorating rapidly, doctors prepared Cami for the worst.
    “That’s when they gave me the five per cent survival rate,” she says.
    “They assumed it had to be some virus they just couldn’t identify, but they weren’t even considering anything beyond that.
    “I was 22, sitting there, trying to process that my husband, who had been healthy just hours earlier, might not make it through the night.”
    But Jake, now 32, defied the odds. After two weeks in hospital, he was discharged. However the nightmare was far from over. No one could explain what had happened or why.
    “We went home with no diagnosis, just this overwhelming sense of fear mixed with relief,” says Cami.
    During the hospit *** Local Caption *** 48040913

    (c) Dukas

     

  • SCHICKSALE - hr Mann hat eine fünfprozentige Überlebenschance: Cami und Jake Bartel aus Arizona kämpfen gemeinsam gegen sein MELAS-Syndrom
    DUK10163996_015
    SCHICKSALE - hr Mann hat eine fünfprozentige Überlebenschance: Cami und Jake Bartel aus Arizona kämpfen gemeinsam gegen sein MELAS-Syndrom
    SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
    WORDS BYLINE: Andrea Caknis
    They had only been married five months and were happily making plans together.
    And when Jake started complaining about a headache, Cami Bartel thought nothing of it.
    He went to bed and the couple hoped he’d be better in the morning.
    But at 4am on October 1 2019, Cami woke up to find Jake having a seizure next to her in bed.
    “I called 911 immediately. It was surreal, almost like watching someone else’s life unravel,” says Cami, now 28.
    “One moment we were planning our future, and the next I was rushing my 27-year-old husband to hospital without knowing if he’d survive.”
    What began as a simple headache turned into a full-blown medical emergency overnight. By the time Jake was admitted, doctors were completely baffled.
    “He didn’t just have a seizure,” says Cami.
    “There was also swelling on his brain, and that really scared everyone.”
    Doctors initially suspected a severe viral or bacterial infection and began testing for everything from meningitis to West Nile virus.
    “They told me they were checking for all kinds of infections,” she says.
    “But every single test came back negative. It was like watching them search in the dark while Jake got worse.”
    With no clear answers and Jake’s condition deteriorating rapidly, doctors prepared Cami for the worst.
    “That’s when they gave me the five per cent survival rate,” she says.
    “They assumed it had to be some virus they just couldn’t identify, but they weren’t even considering anything beyond that.
    “I was 22, sitting there, trying to process that my husband, who had been healthy just hours earlier, might not make it through the night.”
    But Jake, now 32, defied the odds. After two weeks in hospital, he was discharged. However the nightmare was far from over. No one could explain what had happened or why.
    “We went home with no diagnosis, just this overwhelming sense of fear mixed with relief,” says Cami.
    During the hospit *** Local Caption *** 48040913

    (c) Dukas - Double Fee !

     

  • SCHICKSALE - hr Mann hat eine fünfprozentige Überlebenschance: Cami und Jake Bartel aus Arizona kämpfen gemeinsam gegen sein MELAS-Syndrom
    DUK10164037_013
    SCHICKSALE - hr Mann hat eine fünfprozentige Überlebenschance: Cami und Jake Bartel aus Arizona kämpfen gemeinsam gegen sein MELAS-Syndrom
    SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
    WORDS BYLINE: Andrea Caknis
    They had only been married five months and were happily making plans together.
    And when Jake started complaining about a headache, Cami Bartel thought nothing of it.
    He went to bed and the couple hoped he’d be better in the morning.
    But at 4am on October 1 2019, Cami woke up to find Jake having a seizure next to her in bed.
    “I called 911 immediately. It was surreal, almost like watching someone else’s life unravel,” says Cami, now 28.
    “One moment we were planning our future, and the next I was rushing my 27-year-old husband to hospital without knowing if he’d survive.”
    What began as a simple headache turned into a full-blown medical emergency overnight. By the time Jake was admitted, doctors were completely baffled.
    “He didn’t just have a seizure,” says Cami.
    “There was also swelling on his brain, and that really scared everyone.”
    Doctors initially suspected a severe viral or bacterial infection and began testing for everything from meningitis to West Nile virus.
    “They told me they were checking for all kinds of infections,” she says.
    “But every single test came back negative. It was like watching them search in the dark while Jake got worse.”
    With no clear answers and Jake’s condition deteriorating rapidly, doctors prepared Cami for the worst.
    “That’s when they gave me the five per cent survival rate,” she says.
    “They assumed it had to be some virus they just couldn’t identify, but they weren’t even considering anything beyond that.
    “I was 22, sitting there, trying to process that my husband, who had been healthy just hours earlier, might not make it through the night.”
    But Jake, now 32, defied the odds. After two weeks in hospital, he was discharged. However the nightmare was far from over. No one could explain what had happened or why.
    “We went home with no diagnosis, just this overwhelming sense of fear mixed with relief,” says Cami.
    During the hospit *** Local Caption *** 48040910

    (c) Dukas

     

  • SCHICKSALE - hr Mann hat eine fünfprozentige Überlebenschance: Cami und Jake Bartel aus Arizona kämpfen gemeinsam gegen sein MELAS-Syndrom
    DUK10163996_013
    SCHICKSALE - hr Mann hat eine fünfprozentige Überlebenschance: Cami und Jake Bartel aus Arizona kämpfen gemeinsam gegen sein MELAS-Syndrom
    SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
    WORDS BYLINE: Andrea Caknis
    They had only been married five months and were happily making plans together.
    And when Jake started complaining about a headache, Cami Bartel thought nothing of it.
    He went to bed and the couple hoped he’d be better in the morning.
    But at 4am on October 1 2019, Cami woke up to find Jake having a seizure next to her in bed.
    “I called 911 immediately. It was surreal, almost like watching someone else’s life unravel,” says Cami, now 28.
    “One moment we were planning our future, and the next I was rushing my 27-year-old husband to hospital without knowing if he’d survive.”
    What began as a simple headache turned into a full-blown medical emergency overnight. By the time Jake was admitted, doctors were completely baffled.
    “He didn’t just have a seizure,” says Cami.
    “There was also swelling on his brain, and that really scared everyone.”
    Doctors initially suspected a severe viral or bacterial infection and began testing for everything from meningitis to West Nile virus.
    “They told me they were checking for all kinds of infections,” she says.
    “But every single test came back negative. It was like watching them search in the dark while Jake got worse.”
    With no clear answers and Jake’s condition deteriorating rapidly, doctors prepared Cami for the worst.
    “That’s when they gave me the five per cent survival rate,” she says.
    “They assumed it had to be some virus they just couldn’t identify, but they weren’t even considering anything beyond that.
    “I was 22, sitting there, trying to process that my husband, who had been healthy just hours earlier, might not make it through the night.”
    But Jake, now 32, defied the odds. After two weeks in hospital, he was discharged. However the nightmare was far from over. No one could explain what had happened or why.
    “We went home with no diagnosis, just this overwhelming sense of fear mixed with relief,” says Cami.
    During the hospit *** Local Caption *** 48040910

    (c) Dukas - Double Fee !

     

  • SCHICKSALE - hr Mann hat eine fünfprozentige Überlebenschance: Cami und Jake Bartel aus Arizona kämpfen gemeinsam gegen sein MELAS-Syndrom
    DUK10164037_011
    SCHICKSALE - hr Mann hat eine fünfprozentige Überlebenschance: Cami und Jake Bartel aus Arizona kämpfen gemeinsam gegen sein MELAS-Syndrom
    SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
    WORDS BYLINE: Andrea Caknis
    They had only been married five months and were happily making plans together.
    And when Jake started complaining about a headache, Cami Bartel thought nothing of it.
    He went to bed and the couple hoped he’d be better in the morning.
    But at 4am on October 1 2019, Cami woke up to find Jake having a seizure next to her in bed.
    “I called 911 immediately. It was surreal, almost like watching someone else’s life unravel,” says Cami, now 28.
    “One moment we were planning our future, and the next I was rushing my 27-year-old husband to hospital without knowing if he’d survive.”
    What began as a simple headache turned into a full-blown medical emergency overnight. By the time Jake was admitted, doctors were completely baffled.
    “He didn’t just have a seizure,” says Cami.
    “There was also swelling on his brain, and that really scared everyone.”
    Doctors initially suspected a severe viral or bacterial infection and began testing for everything from meningitis to West Nile virus.
    “They told me they were checking for all kinds of infections,” she says.
    “But every single test came back negative. It was like watching them search in the dark while Jake got worse.”
    With no clear answers and Jake’s condition deteriorating rapidly, doctors prepared Cami for the worst.
    “That’s when they gave me the five per cent survival rate,” she says.
    “They assumed it had to be some virus they just couldn’t identify, but they weren’t even considering anything beyond that.
    “I was 22, sitting there, trying to process that my husband, who had been healthy just hours earlier, might not make it through the night.”
    But Jake, now 32, defied the odds. After two weeks in hospital, he was discharged. However the nightmare was far from over. No one could explain what had happened or why.
    “We went home with no diagnosis, just this overwhelming sense of fear mixed with relief,” says Cami.
    During the hospit *** Local Caption *** 48040907

    (c) Dukas

     

  • SCHICKSALE - hr Mann hat eine fünfprozentige Überlebenschance: Cami und Jake Bartel aus Arizona kämpfen gemeinsam gegen sein MELAS-Syndrom
    DUK10163996_011
    SCHICKSALE - hr Mann hat eine fünfprozentige Überlebenschance: Cami und Jake Bartel aus Arizona kämpfen gemeinsam gegen sein MELAS-Syndrom
    SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
    WORDS BYLINE: Andrea Caknis
    They had only been married five months and were happily making plans together.
    And when Jake started complaining about a headache, Cami Bartel thought nothing of it.
    He went to bed and the couple hoped he’d be better in the morning.
    But at 4am on October 1 2019, Cami woke up to find Jake having a seizure next to her in bed.
    “I called 911 immediately. It was surreal, almost like watching someone else’s life unravel,” says Cami, now 28.
    “One moment we were planning our future, and the next I was rushing my 27-year-old husband to hospital without knowing if he’d survive.”
    What began as a simple headache turned into a full-blown medical emergency overnight. By the time Jake was admitted, doctors were completely baffled.
    “He didn’t just have a seizure,” says Cami.
    “There was also swelling on his brain, and that really scared everyone.”
    Doctors initially suspected a severe viral or bacterial infection and began testing for everything from meningitis to West Nile virus.
    “They told me they were checking for all kinds of infections,” she says.
    “But every single test came back negative. It was like watching them search in the dark while Jake got worse.”
    With no clear answers and Jake’s condition deteriorating rapidly, doctors prepared Cami for the worst.
    “That’s when they gave me the five per cent survival rate,” she says.
    “They assumed it had to be some virus they just couldn’t identify, but they weren’t even considering anything beyond that.
    “I was 22, sitting there, trying to process that my husband, who had been healthy just hours earlier, might not make it through the night.”
    But Jake, now 32, defied the odds. After two weeks in hospital, he was discharged. However the nightmare was far from over. No one could explain what had happened or why.
    “We went home with no diagnosis, just this overwhelming sense of fear mixed with relief,” says Cami.
    During the hospit *** Local Caption *** 48040907

    (c) Dukas - Double Fee !

     

  • SCHICKSALE - hr Mann hat eine fünfprozentige Überlebenschance: Cami und Jake Bartel aus Arizona kämpfen gemeinsam gegen sein MELAS-Syndrom
    DUK10164037_005
    SCHICKSALE - hr Mann hat eine fünfprozentige Überlebenschance: Cami und Jake Bartel aus Arizona kämpfen gemeinsam gegen sein MELAS-Syndrom
    SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
    WORDS BYLINE: Andrea Caknis
    They had only been married five months and were happily making plans together.
    And when Jake started complaining about a headache, Cami Bartel thought nothing of it.
    He went to bed and the couple hoped he’d be better in the morning.
    But at 4am on October 1 2019, Cami woke up to find Jake having a seizure next to her in bed.
    “I called 911 immediately. It was surreal, almost like watching someone else’s life unravel,” says Cami, now 28.
    “One moment we were planning our future, and the next I was rushing my 27-year-old husband to hospital without knowing if he’d survive.”
    What began as a simple headache turned into a full-blown medical emergency overnight. By the time Jake was admitted, doctors were completely baffled.
    “He didn’t just have a seizure,” says Cami.
    “There was also swelling on his brain, and that really scared everyone.”
    Doctors initially suspected a severe viral or bacterial infection and began testing for everything from meningitis to West Nile virus.
    “They told me they were checking for all kinds of infections,” she says.
    “But every single test came back negative. It was like watching them search in the dark while Jake got worse.”
    With no clear answers and Jake’s condition deteriorating rapidly, doctors prepared Cami for the worst.
    “That’s when they gave me the five per cent survival rate,” she says.
    “They assumed it had to be some virus they just couldn’t identify, but they weren’t even considering anything beyond that.
    “I was 22, sitting there, trying to process that my husband, who had been healthy just hours earlier, might not make it through the night.”
    But Jake, now 32, defied the odds. After two weeks in hospital, he was discharged. However the nightmare was far from over. No one could explain what had happened or why.
    “We went home with no diagnosis, just this overwhelming sense of fear mixed with relief,” says Cami.
    During the hospit *** Local Caption *** 48040914

    (c) Dukas

     

  • SCHICKSALE - hr Mann hat eine fünfprozentige Überlebenschance: Cami und Jake Bartel aus Arizona kämpfen gemeinsam gegen sein MELAS-Syndrom
    DUK10163996_005
    SCHICKSALE - hr Mann hat eine fünfprozentige Überlebenschance: Cami und Jake Bartel aus Arizona kämpfen gemeinsam gegen sein MELAS-Syndrom
    SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
    WORDS BYLINE: Andrea Caknis
    They had only been married five months and were happily making plans together.
    And when Jake started complaining about a headache, Cami Bartel thought nothing of it.
    He went to bed and the couple hoped he’d be better in the morning.
    But at 4am on October 1 2019, Cami woke up to find Jake having a seizure next to her in bed.
    “I called 911 immediately. It was surreal, almost like watching someone else’s life unravel,” says Cami, now 28.
    “One moment we were planning our future, and the next I was rushing my 27-year-old husband to hospital without knowing if he’d survive.”
    What began as a simple headache turned into a full-blown medical emergency overnight. By the time Jake was admitted, doctors were completely baffled.
    “He didn’t just have a seizure,” says Cami.
    “There was also swelling on his brain, and that really scared everyone.”
    Doctors initially suspected a severe viral or bacterial infection and began testing for everything from meningitis to West Nile virus.
    “They told me they were checking for all kinds of infections,” she says.
    “But every single test came back negative. It was like watching them search in the dark while Jake got worse.”
    With no clear answers and Jake’s condition deteriorating rapidly, doctors prepared Cami for the worst.
    “That’s when they gave me the five per cent survival rate,” she says.
    “They assumed it had to be some virus they just couldn’t identify, but they weren’t even considering anything beyond that.
    “I was 22, sitting there, trying to process that my husband, who had been healthy just hours earlier, might not make it through the night.”
    But Jake, now 32, defied the odds. After two weeks in hospital, he was discharged. However the nightmare was far from over. No one could explain what had happened or why.
    “We went home with no diagnosis, just this overwhelming sense of fear mixed with relief,” says Cami.
    During the hospit *** Local Caption *** 48040914

    (c) Dukas - Double Fee !

     

  • SCHICKSALE - hr Mann hat eine fünfprozentige Überlebenschance: Cami und Jake Bartel aus Arizona kämpfen gemeinsam gegen sein MELAS-Syndrom
    DUK10164037_010
    SCHICKSALE - hr Mann hat eine fünfprozentige Überlebenschance: Cami und Jake Bartel aus Arizona kämpfen gemeinsam gegen sein MELAS-Syndrom
    SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
    WORDS BYLINE: Andrea Caknis
    They had only been married five months and were happily making plans together.
    And when Jake started complaining about a headache, Cami Bartel thought nothing of it.
    He went to bed and the couple hoped he’d be better in the morning.
    But at 4am on October 1 2019, Cami woke up to find Jake having a seizure next to her in bed.
    “I called 911 immediately. It was surreal, almost like watching someone else’s life unravel,” says Cami, now 28.
    “One moment we were planning our future, and the next I was rushing my 27-year-old husband to hospital without knowing if he’d survive.”
    What began as a simple headache turned into a full-blown medical emergency overnight. By the time Jake was admitted, doctors were completely baffled.
    “He didn’t just have a seizure,” says Cami.
    “There was also swelling on his brain, and that really scared everyone.”
    Doctors initially suspected a severe viral or bacterial infection and began testing for everything from meningitis to West Nile virus.
    “They told me they were checking for all kinds of infections,” she says.
    “But every single test came back negative. It was like watching them search in the dark while Jake got worse.”
    With no clear answers and Jake’s condition deteriorating rapidly, doctors prepared Cami for the worst.
    “That’s when they gave me the five per cent survival rate,” she says.
    “They assumed it had to be some virus they just couldn’t identify, but they weren’t even considering anything beyond that.
    “I was 22, sitting there, trying to process that my husband, who had been healthy just hours earlier, might not make it through the night.”
    But Jake, now 32, defied the odds. After two weeks in hospital, he was discharged. However the nightmare was far from over. No one could explain what had happened or why.
    “We went home with no diagnosis, just this overwhelming sense of fear mixed with relief,” says Cami.
    During the hospit *** Local Caption *** 48040906

    (c) Dukas

     

  • SCHICKSALE - hr Mann hat eine fünfprozentige Überlebenschance: Cami und Jake Bartel aus Arizona kämpfen gemeinsam gegen sein MELAS-Syndrom
    DUK10163996_010
    SCHICKSALE - hr Mann hat eine fünfprozentige Überlebenschance: Cami und Jake Bartel aus Arizona kämpfen gemeinsam gegen sein MELAS-Syndrom
    SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
    WORDS BYLINE: Andrea Caknis
    They had only been married five months and were happily making plans together.
    And when Jake started complaining about a headache, Cami Bartel thought nothing of it.
    He went to bed and the couple hoped he’d be better in the morning.
    But at 4am on October 1 2019, Cami woke up to find Jake having a seizure next to her in bed.
    “I called 911 immediately. It was surreal, almost like watching someone else’s life unravel,” says Cami, now 28.
    “One moment we were planning our future, and the next I was rushing my 27-year-old husband to hospital without knowing if he’d survive.”
    What began as a simple headache turned into a full-blown medical emergency overnight. By the time Jake was admitted, doctors were completely baffled.
    “He didn’t just have a seizure,” says Cami.
    “There was also swelling on his brain, and that really scared everyone.”
    Doctors initially suspected a severe viral or bacterial infection and began testing for everything from meningitis to West Nile virus.
    “They told me they were checking for all kinds of infections,” she says.
    “But every single test came back negative. It was like watching them search in the dark while Jake got worse.”
    With no clear answers and Jake’s condition deteriorating rapidly, doctors prepared Cami for the worst.
    “That’s when they gave me the five per cent survival rate,” she says.
    “They assumed it had to be some virus they just couldn’t identify, but they weren’t even considering anything beyond that.
    “I was 22, sitting there, trying to process that my husband, who had been healthy just hours earlier, might not make it through the night.”
    But Jake, now 32, defied the odds. After two weeks in hospital, he was discharged. However the nightmare was far from over. No one could explain what had happened or why.
    “We went home with no diagnosis, just this overwhelming sense of fear mixed with relief,” says Cami.
    During the hospit *** Local Caption *** 48040906

    (c) Dukas - Double Fee !

     

  • SCHICKSALE - hr Mann hat eine fünfprozentige Überlebenschance: Cami und Jake Bartel aus Arizona kämpfen gemeinsam gegen sein MELAS-Syndrom
    DUK10164037_012
    SCHICKSALE - hr Mann hat eine fünfprozentige Überlebenschance: Cami und Jake Bartel aus Arizona kämpfen gemeinsam gegen sein MELAS-Syndrom
    SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
    WORDS BYLINE: Andrea Caknis
    They had only been married five months and were happily making plans together.
    And when Jake started complaining about a headache, Cami Bartel thought nothing of it.
    He went to bed and the couple hoped he’d be better in the morning.
    But at 4am on October 1 2019, Cami woke up to find Jake having a seizure next to her in bed.
    “I called 911 immediately. It was surreal, almost like watching someone else’s life unravel,” says Cami, now 28.
    “One moment we were planning our future, and the next I was rushing my 27-year-old husband to hospital without knowing if he’d survive.”
    What began as a simple headache turned into a full-blown medical emergency overnight. By the time Jake was admitted, doctors were completely baffled.
    “He didn’t just have a seizure,” says Cami.
    “There was also swelling on his brain, and that really scared everyone.”
    Doctors initially suspected a severe viral or bacterial infection and began testing for everything from meningitis to West Nile virus.
    “They told me they were checking for all kinds of infections,” she says.
    “But every single test came back negative. It was like watching them search in the dark while Jake got worse.”
    With no clear answers and Jake’s condition deteriorating rapidly, doctors prepared Cami for the worst.
    “That’s when they gave me the five per cent survival rate,” she says.
    “They assumed it had to be some virus they just couldn’t identify, but they weren’t even considering anything beyond that.
    “I was 22, sitting there, trying to process that my husband, who had been healthy just hours earlier, might not make it through the night.”
    But Jake, now 32, defied the odds. After two weeks in hospital, he was discharged. However the nightmare was far from over. No one could explain what had happened or why.
    “We went home with no diagnosis, just this overwhelming sense of fear mixed with relief,” says Cami.
    During the hospit *** Local Caption *** 48040908

    (c) Dukas

     

  • SCHICKSALE - hr Mann hat eine fünfprozentige Überlebenschance: Cami und Jake Bartel aus Arizona kämpfen gemeinsam gegen sein MELAS-Syndrom
    DUK10163996_012
    SCHICKSALE - hr Mann hat eine fünfprozentige Überlebenschance: Cami und Jake Bartel aus Arizona kämpfen gemeinsam gegen sein MELAS-Syndrom
    SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
    WORDS BYLINE: Andrea Caknis
    They had only been married five months and were happily making plans together.
    And when Jake started complaining about a headache, Cami Bartel thought nothing of it.
    He went to bed and the couple hoped he’d be better in the morning.
    But at 4am on October 1 2019, Cami woke up to find Jake having a seizure next to her in bed.
    “I called 911 immediately. It was surreal, almost like watching someone else’s life unravel,” says Cami, now 28.
    “One moment we were planning our future, and the next I was rushing my 27-year-old husband to hospital without knowing if he’d survive.”
    What began as a simple headache turned into a full-blown medical emergency overnight. By the time Jake was admitted, doctors were completely baffled.
    “He didn’t just have a seizure,” says Cami.
    “There was also swelling on his brain, and that really scared everyone.”
    Doctors initially suspected a severe viral or bacterial infection and began testing for everything from meningitis to West Nile virus.
    “They told me they were checking for all kinds of infections,” she says.
    “But every single test came back negative. It was like watching them search in the dark while Jake got worse.”
    With no clear answers and Jake’s condition deteriorating rapidly, doctors prepared Cami for the worst.
    “That’s when they gave me the five per cent survival rate,” she says.
    “They assumed it had to be some virus they just couldn’t identify, but they weren’t even considering anything beyond that.
    “I was 22, sitting there, trying to process that my husband, who had been healthy just hours earlier, might not make it through the night.”
    But Jake, now 32, defied the odds. After two weeks in hospital, he was discharged. However the nightmare was far from over. No one could explain what had happened or why.
    “We went home with no diagnosis, just this overwhelming sense of fear mixed with relief,” says Cami.
    During the hospit *** Local Caption *** 48040908

    (c) Dukas - Double Fee !

     

  • SCHICKSALE - hr Mann hat eine fünfprozentige Überlebenschance: Cami und Jake Bartel aus Arizona kämpfen gemeinsam gegen sein MELAS-Syndrom
    DUK10164037_003
    SCHICKSALE - hr Mann hat eine fünfprozentige Überlebenschance: Cami und Jake Bartel aus Arizona kämpfen gemeinsam gegen sein MELAS-Syndrom
    SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
    WORDS BYLINE: Andrea Caknis
    They had only been married five months and were happily making plans together.
    And when Jake started complaining about a headache, Cami Bartel thought nothing of it.
    He went to bed and the couple hoped he’d be better in the morning.
    But at 4am on October 1 2019, Cami woke up to find Jake having a seizure next to her in bed.
    “I called 911 immediately. It was surreal, almost like watching someone else’s life unravel,” says Cami, now 28.
    “One moment we were planning our future, and the next I was rushing my 27-year-old husband to hospital without knowing if he’d survive.”
    What began as a simple headache turned into a full-blown medical emergency overnight. By the time Jake was admitted, doctors were completely baffled.
    “He didn’t just have a seizure,” says Cami.
    “There was also swelling on his brain, and that really scared everyone.”
    Doctors initially suspected a severe viral or bacterial infection and began testing for everything from meningitis to West Nile virus.
    “They told me they were checking for all kinds of infections,” she says.
    “But every single test came back negative. It was like watching them search in the dark while Jake got worse.”
    With no clear answers and Jake’s condition deteriorating rapidly, doctors prepared Cami for the worst.
    “That’s when they gave me the five per cent survival rate,” she says.
    “They assumed it had to be some virus they just couldn’t identify, but they weren’t even considering anything beyond that.
    “I was 22, sitting there, trying to process that my husband, who had been healthy just hours earlier, might not make it through the night.”
    But Jake, now 32, defied the odds. After two weeks in hospital, he was discharged. However the nightmare was far from over. No one could explain what had happened or why.
    “We went home with no diagnosis, just this overwhelming sense of fear mixed with relief,” says Cami.
    During the hospit *** Local Caption *** 48040905

    (c) Dukas

     

  • SCHICKSALE - hr Mann hat eine fünfprozentige Überlebenschance: Cami und Jake Bartel aus Arizona kämpfen gemeinsam gegen sein MELAS-Syndrom
    DUK10163996_003
    SCHICKSALE - hr Mann hat eine fünfprozentige Überlebenschance: Cami und Jake Bartel aus Arizona kämpfen gemeinsam gegen sein MELAS-Syndrom
    SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
    WORDS BYLINE: Andrea Caknis
    They had only been married five months and were happily making plans together.
    And when Jake started complaining about a headache, Cami Bartel thought nothing of it.
    He went to bed and the couple hoped he’d be better in the morning.
    But at 4am on October 1 2019, Cami woke up to find Jake having a seizure next to her in bed.
    “I called 911 immediately. It was surreal, almost like watching someone else’s life unravel,” says Cami, now 28.
    “One moment we were planning our future, and the next I was rushing my 27-year-old husband to hospital without knowing if he’d survive.”
    What began as a simple headache turned into a full-blown medical emergency overnight. By the time Jake was admitted, doctors were completely baffled.
    “He didn’t just have a seizure,” says Cami.
    “There was also swelling on his brain, and that really scared everyone.”
    Doctors initially suspected a severe viral or bacterial infection and began testing for everything from meningitis to West Nile virus.
    “They told me they were checking for all kinds of infections,” she says.
    “But every single test came back negative. It was like watching them search in the dark while Jake got worse.”
    With no clear answers and Jake’s condition deteriorating rapidly, doctors prepared Cami for the worst.
    “That’s when they gave me the five per cent survival rate,” she says.
    “They assumed it had to be some virus they just couldn’t identify, but they weren’t even considering anything beyond that.
    “I was 22, sitting there, trying to process that my husband, who had been healthy just hours earlier, might not make it through the night.”
    But Jake, now 32, defied the odds. After two weeks in hospital, he was discharged. However the nightmare was far from over. No one could explain what had happened or why.
    “We went home with no diagnosis, just this overwhelming sense of fear mixed with relief,” says Cami.
    During the hospit *** Local Caption *** 48040905

    (c) Dukas - Double Fee !

     

  • SCHICKSALE - hr Mann hat eine fünfprozentige Überlebenschance: Cami und Jake Bartel aus Arizona kämpfen gemeinsam gegen sein MELAS-Syndrom
    DUK10164037_009
    SCHICKSALE - hr Mann hat eine fünfprozentige Überlebenschance: Cami und Jake Bartel aus Arizona kämpfen gemeinsam gegen sein MELAS-Syndrom
    SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
    WORDS BYLINE: Andrea Caknis
    They had only been married five months and were happily making plans together.
    And when Jake started complaining about a headache, Cami Bartel thought nothing of it.
    He went to bed and the couple hoped he’d be better in the morning.
    But at 4am on October 1 2019, Cami woke up to find Jake having a seizure next to her in bed.
    “I called 911 immediately. It was surreal, almost like watching someone else’s life unravel,” says Cami, now 28.
    “One moment we were planning our future, and the next I was rushing my 27-year-old husband to hospital without knowing if he’d survive.”
    What began as a simple headache turned into a full-blown medical emergency overnight. By the time Jake was admitted, doctors were completely baffled.
    “He didn’t just have a seizure,” says Cami.
    “There was also swelling on his brain, and that really scared everyone.”
    Doctors initially suspected a severe viral or bacterial infection and began testing for everything from meningitis to West Nile virus.
    “They told me they were checking for all kinds of infections,” she says.
    “But every single test came back negative. It was like watching them search in the dark while Jake got worse.”
    With no clear answers and Jake’s condition deteriorating rapidly, doctors prepared Cami for the worst.
    “That’s when they gave me the five per cent survival rate,” she says.
    “They assumed it had to be some virus they just couldn’t identify, but they weren’t even considering anything beyond that.
    “I was 22, sitting there, trying to process that my husband, who had been healthy just hours earlier, might not make it through the night.”
    But Jake, now 32, defied the odds. After two weeks in hospital, he was discharged. However the nightmare was far from over. No one could explain what had happened or why.
    “We went home with no diagnosis, just this overwhelming sense of fear mixed with relief,” says Cami.
    During the hospit *** Local Caption *** 48040900

    (c) Dukas

     

  • SCHICKSALE - hr Mann hat eine fünfprozentige Überlebenschance: Cami und Jake Bartel aus Arizona kämpfen gemeinsam gegen sein MELAS-Syndrom
    DUK10163996_009
    SCHICKSALE - hr Mann hat eine fünfprozentige Überlebenschance: Cami und Jake Bartel aus Arizona kämpfen gemeinsam gegen sein MELAS-Syndrom
    SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
    WORDS BYLINE: Andrea Caknis
    They had only been married five months and were happily making plans together.
    And when Jake started complaining about a headache, Cami Bartel thought nothing of it.
    He went to bed and the couple hoped he’d be better in the morning.
    But at 4am on October 1 2019, Cami woke up to find Jake having a seizure next to her in bed.
    “I called 911 immediately. It was surreal, almost like watching someone else’s life unravel,” says Cami, now 28.
    “One moment we were planning our future, and the next I was rushing my 27-year-old husband to hospital without knowing if he’d survive.”
    What began as a simple headache turned into a full-blown medical emergency overnight. By the time Jake was admitted, doctors were completely baffled.
    “He didn’t just have a seizure,” says Cami.
    “There was also swelling on his brain, and that really scared everyone.”
    Doctors initially suspected a severe viral or bacterial infection and began testing for everything from meningitis to West Nile virus.
    “They told me they were checking for all kinds of infections,” she says.
    “But every single test came back negative. It was like watching them search in the dark while Jake got worse.”
    With no clear answers and Jake’s condition deteriorating rapidly, doctors prepared Cami for the worst.
    “That’s when they gave me the five per cent survival rate,” she says.
    “They assumed it had to be some virus they just couldn’t identify, but they weren’t even considering anything beyond that.
    “I was 22, sitting there, trying to process that my husband, who had been healthy just hours earlier, might not make it through the night.”
    But Jake, now 32, defied the odds. After two weeks in hospital, he was discharged. However the nightmare was far from over. No one could explain what had happened or why.
    “We went home with no diagnosis, just this overwhelming sense of fear mixed with relief,” says Cami.
    During the hospit *** Local Caption *** 48040900

    (c) Dukas - Double Fee !

     

  • A Fairytale Home In The Woods: Das Aussteigerpaar Kai und Ben lebt in ihrem umgebauten Truck in den Wäldern von British Columbia
    DUK10163586_002
    A Fairytale Home In The Woods: Das Aussteigerpaar Kai und Ben lebt in ihrem umgebauten Truck in den Wäldern von British Columbia
    SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
    WORDS BYLINE: Andrea Caknis
    **EDITORS NOTE: We cannot use her surname**
    If you go into the woods of British Columbia today you could be in for a big surprise.
    You might just find parked up for the night a truly magical truck with a handcrafted house built on to its back.
    The International 4800, a beast of a vehicle originally made for off-road utility work, has been reborn as a whimsical, wood-fired, off-grid sanctuary.
    It took five years to create after it was bought in 2013 by a woman who made the project her labour of love.
    “I called it The Ugly Truckling because I always loved the story of the ugly duckling,” says the creator of the fantasy mobile home who likes to be known simply as Kai.
    “I was an awkward, weird kid. Honestly, I’m an awkward, weird adult. But like the duckling, the truck started off ugly, and it grew into something I think is secretly beautiful.”
    From the outside, the house truck looks like something out of a Disney dream.
    Cedar shake siding wraps the entire frame, salvaged century-old windows add soul and light, and a hand-built Dutch door with curved stained glass makes the entryway look like it belongs on a woodland fairy tale set.
    “When I first moved in, it didn’t have electricity, running water, or plumbing. It was just a box on wheels. I slowly built everything around me,’ says Kai, who is in her thirties.
    “Now, it has most modern amenities. It’s not finished, but it’s comfortable, and its mine.
    “I made that door myself. I used old glass with air bubbles in it to mimic historic pub windows. I wanted it to feel alive, like a house that evolved over time, not just something an architect plonked down.”
    Inside, every inch of the 200-square-foot interior is bursting with detail and character. There’s a round window that Kai also made by hand, after discovering that buying one would cost her a whopping £3 700 ($5 000).
    “I thought, ‘No way,’ so I just taught myself how to build on *** Local Caption *

    (c) Dukas

     

  • A Fairytale Home In The Woods: Das Aussteigerpaar Kai und Ben lebt in ihrem umgebauten Truck in den Wäldern von British Columbia
    DUK10163586_001
    A Fairytale Home In The Woods: Das Aussteigerpaar Kai und Ben lebt in ihrem umgebauten Truck in den Wäldern von British Columbia
    SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
    WORDS BYLINE: Andrea Caknis
    **EDITORS NOTE: We cannot use her surname**
    If you go into the woods of British Columbia today you could be in for a big surprise.
    You might just find parked up for the night a truly magical truck with a handcrafted house built on to its back.
    The International 4800, a beast of a vehicle originally made for off-road utility work, has been reborn as a whimsical, wood-fired, off-grid sanctuary.
    It took five years to create after it was bought in 2013 by a woman who made the project her labour of love.
    “I called it The Ugly Truckling because I always loved the story of the ugly duckling,” says the creator of the fantasy mobile home who likes to be known simply as Kai.
    “I was an awkward, weird kid. Honestly, I’m an awkward, weird adult. But like the duckling, the truck started off ugly, and it grew into something I think is secretly beautiful.”
    From the outside, the house truck looks like something out of a Disney dream.
    Cedar shake siding wraps the entire frame, salvaged century-old windows add soul and light, and a hand-built Dutch door with curved stained glass makes the entryway look like it belongs on a woodland fairy tale set.
    “When I first moved in, it didn’t have electricity, running water, or plumbing. It was just a box on wheels. I slowly built everything around me,’ says Kai, who is in her thirties.
    “Now, it has most modern amenities. It’s not finished, but it’s comfortable, and its mine.
    “I made that door myself. I used old glass with air bubbles in it to mimic historic pub windows. I wanted it to feel alive, like a house that evolved over time, not just something an architect plonked down.”
    Inside, every inch of the 200-square-foot interior is bursting with detail and character. There’s a round window that Kai also made by hand, after discovering that buying one would cost her a whopping £3 700 ($5 000).
    “I thought, ‘No way,’ so I just taught myself how to build on *** Local Caption *

    (c) Dukas

     

  • A Fairytale Home In The Woods: Das Aussteigerpaar Kai und Ben lebt in ihrem umgebauten Truck in den Wäldern von British Columbia
    DUK10163586_007
    A Fairytale Home In The Woods: Das Aussteigerpaar Kai und Ben lebt in ihrem umgebauten Truck in den Wäldern von British Columbia
    SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
    WORDS BYLINE: Andrea Caknis
    **EDITORS NOTE: We cannot use her surname**
    If you go into the woods of British Columbia today you could be in for a big surprise.
    You might just find parked up for the night a truly magical truck with a handcrafted house built on to its back.
    The International 4800, a beast of a vehicle originally made for off-road utility work, has been reborn as a whimsical, wood-fired, off-grid sanctuary.
    It took five years to create after it was bought in 2013 by a woman who made the project her labour of love.
    “I called it The Ugly Truckling because I always loved the story of the ugly duckling,” says the creator of the fantasy mobile home who likes to be known simply as Kai.
    “I was an awkward, weird kid. Honestly, I’m an awkward, weird adult. But like the duckling, the truck started off ugly, and it grew into something I think is secretly beautiful.”
    From the outside, the house truck looks like something out of a Disney dream.
    Cedar shake siding wraps the entire frame, salvaged century-old windows add soul and light, and a hand-built Dutch door with curved stained glass makes the entryway look like it belongs on a woodland fairy tale set.
    “When I first moved in, it didn’t have electricity, running water, or plumbing. It was just a box on wheels. I slowly built everything around me,’ says Kai, who is in her thirties.
    “Now, it has most modern amenities. It’s not finished, but it’s comfortable, and its mine.
    “I made that door myself. I used old glass with air bubbles in it to mimic historic pub windows. I wanted it to feel alive, like a house that evolved over time, not just something an architect plonked down.”
    Inside, every inch of the 200-square-foot interior is bursting with detail and character. There’s a round window that Kai also made by hand, after discovering that buying one would cost her a whopping £3 700 ($5 000).
    “I thought, ‘No way,’ so I just taught myself how to build on *** Local Caption *

    (c) Dukas

     

  • A Fairytale Home In The Woods: Das Aussteigerpaar Kai und Ben lebt in ihrem umgebauten Truck in den Wäldern von British Columbia
    DUK10163586_010
    A Fairytale Home In The Woods: Das Aussteigerpaar Kai und Ben lebt in ihrem umgebauten Truck in den Wäldern von British Columbia
    SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
    WORDS BYLINE: Andrea Caknis
    **EDITORS NOTE: We cannot use her surname**
    If you go into the woods of British Columbia today you could be in for a big surprise.
    You might just find parked up for the night a truly magical truck with a handcrafted house built on to its back.
    The International 4800, a beast of a vehicle originally made for off-road utility work, has been reborn as a whimsical, wood-fired, off-grid sanctuary.
    It took five years to create after it was bought in 2013 by a woman who made the project her labour of love.
    “I called it The Ugly Truckling because I always loved the story of the ugly duckling,” says the creator of the fantasy mobile home who likes to be known simply as Kai.
    “I was an awkward, weird kid. Honestly, I’m an awkward, weird adult. But like the duckling, the truck started off ugly, and it grew into something I think is secretly beautiful.”
    From the outside, the house truck looks like something out of a Disney dream.
    Cedar shake siding wraps the entire frame, salvaged century-old windows add soul and light, and a hand-built Dutch door with curved stained glass makes the entryway look like it belongs on a woodland fairy tale set.
    “When I first moved in, it didn’t have electricity, running water, or plumbing. It was just a box on wheels. I slowly built everything around me,’ says Kai, who is in her thirties.
    “Now, it has most modern amenities. It’s not finished, but it’s comfortable, and its mine.
    “I made that door myself. I used old glass with air bubbles in it to mimic historic pub windows. I wanted it to feel alive, like a house that evolved over time, not just something an architect plonked down.”
    Inside, every inch of the 200-square-foot interior is bursting with detail and character. There’s a round window that Kai also made by hand, after discovering that buying one would cost her a whopping £3 700 ($5 000).
    “I thought, ‘No way,’ so I just taught myself how to build on *** Local Caption *

    (c) Dukas

     

  • A Fairytale Home In The Woods: Das Aussteigerpaar Kai und Ben lebt in ihrem umgebauten Truck in den Wäldern von British Columbia
    DUK10163586_011
    A Fairytale Home In The Woods: Das Aussteigerpaar Kai und Ben lebt in ihrem umgebauten Truck in den Wäldern von British Columbia
    SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
    WORDS BYLINE: Andrea Caknis
    **EDITORS NOTE: We cannot use her surname**
    If you go into the woods of British Columbia today you could be in for a big surprise.
    You might just find parked up for the night a truly magical truck with a handcrafted house built on to its back.
    The International 4800, a beast of a vehicle originally made for off-road utility work, has been reborn as a whimsical, wood-fired, off-grid sanctuary.
    It took five years to create after it was bought in 2013 by a woman who made the project her labour of love.
    “I called it The Ugly Truckling because I always loved the story of the ugly duckling,” says the creator of the fantasy mobile home who likes to be known simply as Kai.
    “I was an awkward, weird kid. Honestly, I’m an awkward, weird adult. But like the duckling, the truck started off ugly, and it grew into something I think is secretly beautiful.”
    From the outside, the house truck looks like something out of a Disney dream.
    Cedar shake siding wraps the entire frame, salvaged century-old windows add soul and light, and a hand-built Dutch door with curved stained glass makes the entryway look like it belongs on a woodland fairy tale set.
    “When I first moved in, it didn’t have electricity, running water, or plumbing. It was just a box on wheels. I slowly built everything around me,’ says Kai, who is in her thirties.
    “Now, it has most modern amenities. It’s not finished, but it’s comfortable, and its mine.
    “I made that door myself. I used old glass with air bubbles in it to mimic historic pub windows. I wanted it to feel alive, like a house that evolved over time, not just something an architect plonked down.”
    Inside, every inch of the 200-square-foot interior is bursting with detail and character. There’s a round window that Kai also made by hand, after discovering that buying one would cost her a whopping £3 700 ($5 000).
    “I thought, ‘No way,’ so I just taught myself how to build on *** Local Caption *

    (c) Dukas

     

  • A Fairytale Home In The Woods: Das Aussteigerpaar Kai und Ben lebt in ihrem umgebauten Truck in den Wäldern von British Columbia
    DUK10163586_003
    A Fairytale Home In The Woods: Das Aussteigerpaar Kai und Ben lebt in ihrem umgebauten Truck in den Wäldern von British Columbia
    SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
    WORDS BYLINE: Andrea Caknis
    **EDITORS NOTE: We cannot use her surname**
    If you go into the woods of British Columbia today you could be in for a big surprise.
    You might just find parked up for the night a truly magical truck with a handcrafted house built on to its back.
    The International 4800, a beast of a vehicle originally made for off-road utility work, has been reborn as a whimsical, wood-fired, off-grid sanctuary.
    It took five years to create after it was bought in 2013 by a woman who made the project her labour of love.
    “I called it The Ugly Truckling because I always loved the story of the ugly duckling,” says the creator of the fantasy mobile home who likes to be known simply as Kai.
    “I was an awkward, weird kid. Honestly, I’m an awkward, weird adult. But like the duckling, the truck started off ugly, and it grew into something I think is secretly beautiful.”
    From the outside, the house truck looks like something out of a Disney dream.
    Cedar shake siding wraps the entire frame, salvaged century-old windows add soul and light, and a hand-built Dutch door with curved stained glass makes the entryway look like it belongs on a woodland fairy tale set.
    “When I first moved in, it didn’t have electricity, running water, or plumbing. It was just a box on wheels. I slowly built everything around me,’ says Kai, who is in her thirties.
    “Now, it has most modern amenities. It’s not finished, but it’s comfortable, and its mine.
    “I made that door myself. I used old glass with air bubbles in it to mimic historic pub windows. I wanted it to feel alive, like a house that evolved over time, not just something an architect plonked down.”
    Inside, every inch of the 200-square-foot interior is bursting with detail and character. There’s a round window that Kai also made by hand, after discovering that buying one would cost her a whopping £3 700 ($5 000).
    “I thought, ‘No way,’ so I just taught myself how to build on *** Local Caption *

    (c) Dukas

     

  • A Fairytale Home In The Woods: Das Aussteigerpaar Kai und Ben lebt in ihrem umgebauten Truck in den Wäldern von British Columbia
    DUK10163586_006
    A Fairytale Home In The Woods: Das Aussteigerpaar Kai und Ben lebt in ihrem umgebauten Truck in den Wäldern von British Columbia
    SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
    WORDS BYLINE: Andrea Caknis
    **EDITORS NOTE: We cannot use her surname**
    If you go into the woods of British Columbia today you could be in for a big surprise.
    You might just find parked up for the night a truly magical truck with a handcrafted house built on to its back.
    The International 4800, a beast of a vehicle originally made for off-road utility work, has been reborn as a whimsical, wood-fired, off-grid sanctuary.
    It took five years to create after it was bought in 2013 by a woman who made the project her labour of love.
    “I called it The Ugly Truckling because I always loved the story of the ugly duckling,” says the creator of the fantasy mobile home who likes to be known simply as Kai.
    “I was an awkward, weird kid. Honestly, I’m an awkward, weird adult. But like the duckling, the truck started off ugly, and it grew into something I think is secretly beautiful.”
    From the outside, the house truck looks like something out of a Disney dream.
    Cedar shake siding wraps the entire frame, salvaged century-old windows add soul and light, and a hand-built Dutch door with curved stained glass makes the entryway look like it belongs on a woodland fairy tale set.
    “When I first moved in, it didn’t have electricity, running water, or plumbing. It was just a box on wheels. I slowly built everything around me,’ says Kai, who is in her thirties.
    “Now, it has most modern amenities. It’s not finished, but it’s comfortable, and its mine.
    “I made that door myself. I used old glass with air bubbles in it to mimic historic pub windows. I wanted it to feel alive, like a house that evolved over time, not just something an architect plonked down.”
    Inside, every inch of the 200-square-foot interior is bursting with detail and character. There’s a round window that Kai also made by hand, after discovering that buying one would cost her a whopping £3 700 ($5 000).
    “I thought, ‘No way,’ so I just taught myself how to build on *** Local Caption *

    (c) Dukas

     

  • A Fairytale Home In The Woods: Das Aussteigerpaar Kai und Ben lebt in ihrem umgebauten Truck in den Wäldern von British Columbia
    DUK10163586_009
    A Fairytale Home In The Woods: Das Aussteigerpaar Kai und Ben lebt in ihrem umgebauten Truck in den Wäldern von British Columbia
    SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
    WORDS BYLINE: Andrea Caknis
    **EDITORS NOTE: We cannot use her surname**
    If you go into the woods of British Columbia today you could be in for a big surprise.
    You might just find parked up for the night a truly magical truck with a handcrafted house built on to its back.
    The International 4800, a beast of a vehicle originally made for off-road utility work, has been reborn as a whimsical, wood-fired, off-grid sanctuary.
    It took five years to create after it was bought in 2013 by a woman who made the project her labour of love.
    “I called it The Ugly Truckling because I always loved the story of the ugly duckling,” says the creator of the fantasy mobile home who likes to be known simply as Kai.
    “I was an awkward, weird kid. Honestly, I’m an awkward, weird adult. But like the duckling, the truck started off ugly, and it grew into something I think is secretly beautiful.”
    From the outside, the house truck looks like something out of a Disney dream.
    Cedar shake siding wraps the entire frame, salvaged century-old windows add soul and light, and a hand-built Dutch door with curved stained glass makes the entryway look like it belongs on a woodland fairy tale set.
    “When I first moved in, it didn’t have electricity, running water, or plumbing. It was just a box on wheels. I slowly built everything around me,’ says Kai, who is in her thirties.
    “Now, it has most modern amenities. It’s not finished, but it’s comfortable, and its mine.
    “I made that door myself. I used old glass with air bubbles in it to mimic historic pub windows. I wanted it to feel alive, like a house that evolved over time, not just something an architect plonked down.”
    Inside, every inch of the 200-square-foot interior is bursting with detail and character. There’s a round window that Kai also made by hand, after discovering that buying one would cost her a whopping £3 700 ($5 000).
    “I thought, ‘No way,’ so I just taught myself how to build on *** Local Caption *

    (c) Dukas

     

  • A Fairytale Home In The Woods: Das Aussteigerpaar Kai und Ben lebt in ihrem umgebauten Truck in den Wäldern von British Columbia
    DUK10163586_012
    A Fairytale Home In The Woods: Das Aussteigerpaar Kai und Ben lebt in ihrem umgebauten Truck in den Wäldern von British Columbia
    SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
    WORDS BYLINE: Andrea Caknis
    **EDITORS NOTE: We cannot use her surname**
    If you go into the woods of British Columbia today you could be in for a big surprise.
    You might just find parked up for the night a truly magical truck with a handcrafted house built on to its back.
    The International 4800, a beast of a vehicle originally made for off-road utility work, has been reborn as a whimsical, wood-fired, off-grid sanctuary.
    It took five years to create after it was bought in 2013 by a woman who made the project her labour of love.
    “I called it The Ugly Truckling because I always loved the story of the ugly duckling,” says the creator of the fantasy mobile home who likes to be known simply as Kai.
    “I was an awkward, weird kid. Honestly, I’m an awkward, weird adult. But like the duckling, the truck started off ugly, and it grew into something I think is secretly beautiful.”
    From the outside, the house truck looks like something out of a Disney dream.
    Cedar shake siding wraps the entire frame, salvaged century-old windows add soul and light, and a hand-built Dutch door with curved stained glass makes the entryway look like it belongs on a woodland fairy tale set.
    “When I first moved in, it didn’t have electricity, running water, or plumbing. It was just a box on wheels. I slowly built everything around me,’ says Kai, who is in her thirties.
    “Now, it has most modern amenities. It’s not finished, but it’s comfortable, and its mine.
    “I made that door myself. I used old glass with air bubbles in it to mimic historic pub windows. I wanted it to feel alive, like a house that evolved over time, not just something an architect plonked down.”
    Inside, every inch of the 200-square-foot interior is bursting with detail and character. There’s a round window that Kai also made by hand, after discovering that buying one would cost her a whopping £3 700 ($5 000).
    “I thought, ‘No way,’ so I just taught myself how to build on *** Local Caption *

    (c) Dukas

     

  • A Fairytale Home In The Woods: Das Aussteigerpaar Kai und Ben lebt in ihrem umgebauten Truck in den Wäldern von British Columbia
    DUK10163586_014
    A Fairytale Home In The Woods: Das Aussteigerpaar Kai und Ben lebt in ihrem umgebauten Truck in den Wäldern von British Columbia
    SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
    WORDS BYLINE: Andrea Caknis
    **EDITORS NOTE: We cannot use her surname**
    If you go into the woods of British Columbia today you could be in for a big surprise.
    You might just find parked up for the night a truly magical truck with a handcrafted house built on to its back.
    The International 4800, a beast of a vehicle originally made for off-road utility work, has been reborn as a whimsical, wood-fired, off-grid sanctuary.
    It took five years to create after it was bought in 2013 by a woman who made the project her labour of love.
    “I called it The Ugly Truckling because I always loved the story of the ugly duckling,” says the creator of the fantasy mobile home who likes to be known simply as Kai.
    “I was an awkward, weird kid. Honestly, I’m an awkward, weird adult. But like the duckling, the truck started off ugly, and it grew into something I think is secretly beautiful.”
    From the outside, the house truck looks like something out of a Disney dream.
    Cedar shake siding wraps the entire frame, salvaged century-old windows add soul and light, and a hand-built Dutch door with curved stained glass makes the entryway look like it belongs on a woodland fairy tale set.
    “When I first moved in, it didn’t have electricity, running water, or plumbing. It was just a box on wheels. I slowly built everything around me,’ says Kai, who is in her thirties.
    “Now, it has most modern amenities. It’s not finished, but it’s comfortable, and its mine.
    “I made that door myself. I used old glass with air bubbles in it to mimic historic pub windows. I wanted it to feel alive, like a house that evolved over time, not just something an architect plonked down.”
    Inside, every inch of the 200-square-foot interior is bursting with detail and character. There’s a round window that Kai also made by hand, after discovering that buying one would cost her a whopping £3 700 ($5 000).
    “I thought, ‘No way,’ so I just taught myself how to build on *** Local Caption *

    (c) Dukas

     

  • A Fairytale Home In The Woods: Das Aussteigerpaar Kai und Ben lebt in ihrem umgebauten Truck in den Wäldern von British Columbia
    DUK10163586_008
    A Fairytale Home In The Woods: Das Aussteigerpaar Kai und Ben lebt in ihrem umgebauten Truck in den Wäldern von British Columbia
    SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
    WORDS BYLINE: Andrea Caknis
    **EDITORS NOTE: We cannot use her surname**
    If you go into the woods of British Columbia today you could be in for a big surprise.
    You might just find parked up for the night a truly magical truck with a handcrafted house built on to its back.
    The International 4800, a beast of a vehicle originally made for off-road utility work, has been reborn as a whimsical, wood-fired, off-grid sanctuary.
    It took five years to create after it was bought in 2013 by a woman who made the project her labour of love.
    “I called it The Ugly Truckling because I always loved the story of the ugly duckling,” says the creator of the fantasy mobile home who likes to be known simply as Kai.
    “I was an awkward, weird kid. Honestly, I’m an awkward, weird adult. But like the duckling, the truck started off ugly, and it grew into something I think is secretly beautiful.”
    From the outside, the house truck looks like something out of a Disney dream.
    Cedar shake siding wraps the entire frame, salvaged century-old windows add soul and light, and a hand-built Dutch door with curved stained glass makes the entryway look like it belongs on a woodland fairy tale set.
    “When I first moved in, it didn’t have electricity, running water, or plumbing. It was just a box on wheels. I slowly built everything around me,’ says Kai, who is in her thirties.
    “Now, it has most modern amenities. It’s not finished, but it’s comfortable, and its mine.
    “I made that door myself. I used old glass with air bubbles in it to mimic historic pub windows. I wanted it to feel alive, like a house that evolved over time, not just something an architect plonked down.”
    Inside, every inch of the 200-square-foot interior is bursting with detail and character. There’s a round window that Kai also made by hand, after discovering that buying one would cost her a whopping £3 700 ($5 000).
    “I thought, ‘No way,’ so I just taught myself how to build on *** Local Caption *

    (c) Dukas

     

  • A Fairytale Home In The Woods: Das Aussteigerpaar Kai und Ben lebt in ihrem umgebauten Truck in den Wäldern von British Columbia
    DUK10163586_005
    A Fairytale Home In The Woods: Das Aussteigerpaar Kai und Ben lebt in ihrem umgebauten Truck in den Wäldern von British Columbia
    SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
    WORDS BYLINE: Andrea Caknis
    **EDITORS NOTE: We cannot use her surname**
    If you go into the woods of British Columbia today you could be in for a big surprise.
    You might just find parked up for the night a truly magical truck with a handcrafted house built on to its back.
    The International 4800, a beast of a vehicle originally made for off-road utility work, has been reborn as a whimsical, wood-fired, off-grid sanctuary.
    It took five years to create after it was bought in 2013 by a woman who made the project her labour of love.
    “I called it The Ugly Truckling because I always loved the story of the ugly duckling,” says the creator of the fantasy mobile home who likes to be known simply as Kai.
    “I was an awkward, weird kid. Honestly, I’m an awkward, weird adult. But like the duckling, the truck started off ugly, and it grew into something I think is secretly beautiful.”
    From the outside, the house truck looks like something out of a Disney dream.
    Cedar shake siding wraps the entire frame, salvaged century-old windows add soul and light, and a hand-built Dutch door with curved stained glass makes the entryway look like it belongs on a woodland fairy tale set.
    “When I first moved in, it didn’t have electricity, running water, or plumbing. It was just a box on wheels. I slowly built everything around me,’ says Kai, who is in her thirties.
    “Now, it has most modern amenities. It’s not finished, but it’s comfortable, and its mine.
    “I made that door myself. I used old glass with air bubbles in it to mimic historic pub windows. I wanted it to feel alive, like a house that evolved over time, not just something an architect plonked down.”
    Inside, every inch of the 200-square-foot interior is bursting with detail and character. There’s a round window that Kai also made by hand, after discovering that buying one would cost her a whopping £3 700 ($5 000).
    “I thought, ‘No way,’ so I just taught myself how to build on *** Local Caption *

    (c) Dukas

     

  • A Fairytale Home In The Woods: Das Aussteigerpaar Kai und Ben lebt in ihrem umgebauten Truck in den Wäldern von British Columbia
    DUK10163586_004
    A Fairytale Home In The Woods: Das Aussteigerpaar Kai und Ben lebt in ihrem umgebauten Truck in den Wäldern von British Columbia
    SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
    WORDS BYLINE: Andrea Caknis
    **EDITORS NOTE: We cannot use her surname**
    If you go into the woods of British Columbia today you could be in for a big surprise.
    You might just find parked up for the night a truly magical truck with a handcrafted house built on to its back.
    The International 4800, a beast of a vehicle originally made for off-road utility work, has been reborn as a whimsical, wood-fired, off-grid sanctuary.
    It took five years to create after it was bought in 2013 by a woman who made the project her labour of love.
    “I called it The Ugly Truckling because I always loved the story of the ugly duckling,” says the creator of the fantasy mobile home who likes to be known simply as Kai.
    “I was an awkward, weird kid. Honestly, I’m an awkward, weird adult. But like the duckling, the truck started off ugly, and it grew into something I think is secretly beautiful.”
    From the outside, the house truck looks like something out of a Disney dream.
    Cedar shake siding wraps the entire frame, salvaged century-old windows add soul and light, and a hand-built Dutch door with curved stained glass makes the entryway look like it belongs on a woodland fairy tale set.
    “When I first moved in, it didn’t have electricity, running water, or plumbing. It was just a box on wheels. I slowly built everything around me,’ says Kai, who is in her thirties.
    “Now, it has most modern amenities. It’s not finished, but it’s comfortable, and its mine.
    “I made that door myself. I used old glass with air bubbles in it to mimic historic pub windows. I wanted it to feel alive, like a house that evolved over time, not just something an architect plonked down.”
    Inside, every inch of the 200-square-foot interior is bursting with detail and character. There’s a round window that Kai also made by hand, after discovering that buying one would cost her a whopping £3 700 ($5 000).
    “I thought, ‘No way,’ so I just taught myself how to build on *** Local Caption *

    (c) Dukas

     

  • A Fairytale Home In The Woods: Das Aussteigerpaar Kai und Ben lebt in ihrem umgebauten Truck in den Wäldern von British Columbia
    DUK10163586_013
    A Fairytale Home In The Woods: Das Aussteigerpaar Kai und Ben lebt in ihrem umgebauten Truck in den Wäldern von British Columbia
    SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
    WORDS BYLINE: Andrea Caknis
    **EDITORS NOTE: We cannot use her surname**
    If you go into the woods of British Columbia today you could be in for a big surprise.
    You might just find parked up for the night a truly magical truck with a handcrafted house built on to its back.
    The International 4800, a beast of a vehicle originally made for off-road utility work, has been reborn as a whimsical, wood-fired, off-grid sanctuary.
    It took five years to create after it was bought in 2013 by a woman who made the project her labour of love.
    “I called it The Ugly Truckling because I always loved the story of the ugly duckling,” says the creator of the fantasy mobile home who likes to be known simply as Kai.
    “I was an awkward, weird kid. Honestly, I’m an awkward, weird adult. But like the duckling, the truck started off ugly, and it grew into something I think is secretly beautiful.”
    From the outside, the house truck looks like something out of a Disney dream.
    Cedar shake siding wraps the entire frame, salvaged century-old windows add soul and light, and a hand-built Dutch door with curved stained glass makes the entryway look like it belongs on a woodland fairy tale set.
    “When I first moved in, it didn’t have electricity, running water, or plumbing. It was just a box on wheels. I slowly built everything around me,’ says Kai, who is in her thirties.
    “Now, it has most modern amenities. It’s not finished, but it’s comfortable, and its mine.
    “I made that door myself. I used old glass with air bubbles in it to mimic historic pub windows. I wanted it to feel alive, like a house that evolved over time, not just something an architect plonked down.”
    Inside, every inch of the 200-square-foot interior is bursting with detail and character. There’s a round window that Kai also made by hand, after discovering that buying one would cost her a whopping £3 700 ($5 000).
    “I thought, ‘No way,’ so I just taught myself how to build on *** Local Caption *

    (c) Dukas

     

  • ROYALS -  Staatsdinner in Oslo zu Ehren des Besuchs des Königs und der Königin der Niederlande
    DUK10146269_011
    ROYALS - Staatsdinner in Oslo zu Ehren des Besuchs des Königs und der Königin der Niederlande
    La reine Sonja de Norvège, le roi Willem Alexander des Pays-Bas, la reine Maxima, le roi Harald - Dîner d'état au palais royal à Oslo en l'honneur de la visite du roi et de la reine des Pays-Bas en Norvège le 9 novembre 2021. Oslo, 09-11-2021 State Visit of King Willem-Alexander and Queen Maxima to Norway, day 1 Stae Banquet Foto: Copyright Royalportraits Europe/Bernard Ruebsamen/ RdeWaal
    (c) Dukas

     

  • ROYALS -  Staatsdinner in Oslo zu Ehren des Besuchs des Königs und der Königin der Niederlande
    DUK10146269_009
    ROYALS - Staatsdinner in Oslo zu Ehren des Besuchs des Königs und der Königin der Niederlande
    La reine Maxima des Pays-Bas, le roi Willem Alexander - Dîner d'état au palais royal à Oslo en l'honneur de la visite du roi et de la reine des Pays-Bas en Norvège le 9 novembre 2021. Oslo, 09-11-2021 State Visit of King Willem-Alexander and Queen Maxima to Norway, day 1 Stae Banquet Foto: Copyright Royalportraits Europe/Bernard Ruebsamen/ RdeWaal
    (c) Dukas

     

  • ROYALS -  Staatsdinner in Oslo zu Ehren des Besuchs des Königs und der Königin der Niederlande
    DUK10146269_008
    ROYALS - Staatsdinner in Oslo zu Ehren des Besuchs des Königs und der Königin der Niederlande
    Le roi Willem Alexander des Pays-Bas, la reine Maxima - Dîner d'état au palais royal à Oslo en l'honneur de la visite du roi et de la reine des Pays-Bas en Norvège le 9 novembre 2021. Oslo, 09-11-2021 State Visit of King Willem-Alexander and Queen Maxima to Norway, day 1 Stae Banquet Foto: Copyright Royalportraits Europe/Bernard Ruebsamen/ RdeWaal
    (c) Dukas

     

  • ROYALS -  Staatsdinner in Oslo zu Ehren des Besuchs des Königs und der Königin der Niederlande
    DUK10146269_007
    ROYALS - Staatsdinner in Oslo zu Ehren des Besuchs des Königs und der Königin der Niederlande
    La reine Maxima des Pays-Bas, le roi Willem Alexander - Dîner d'état au palais royal à Oslo en l'honneur de la visite du roi et de la reine des Pays-Bas en Norvège le 9 novembre 2021. Oslo, 09-11-2021 State Visit of King Willem-Alexander and Queen Maxima to Norway, day 1 Stae Banquet Foto: Copyright Royalportraits Europe/Bernard Ruebsamen/ RdeWaal
    (c) Dukas

     

  • Nächste Seite