Life Below Zero’s Sue Aikens describes herself as a “loner,” but that doesn’t mean she’s not enthralled! The iconic National Geographic star has been appearing on our televisions for over a decade and even at sixty years old he shows no signs of slowing down.
Sue from Life Below Zero spends her days at Camp Kavic living in total isolation. It hunts for food and has had to fight predators to maintain its territory. The TV star may live in nature and be totally suited to her unique lifestyle, but even she wants some old-fashioned romance from time to time.
Life Below Zero’s Sue Aikens lives super remote
Anyone who has seen even a clip of Life Below Zero will realize that the cast has extremely remote lifestyles.
Speaking to Melissa McCarthy on The Ellen Show five years ago, Sue said: “To give you an idea, Kavic is 500 miles from the nearest town, 100 miles from any road. “I have my own court and that’s how anyone gets in.”
“The last person I see in any year is around September and the next person I see is the following June. “I’m the only person in 500 square miles.”
The Life Below Zero star got a boyfriend
Sitting down to chat on The Ellen Show, Sue explains that she’s been married before. She jokes about her late husbands: “I survived two of them, it’s not like I’m a black widow.”
He jokes that “unless someone gets lost, it’s very difficult to meet people” in Kavic.
Nat Geo star Sue says she “discovered the Internet” and “through that medium I met a man.”
However, it was not a whirlwind romance. Sue explains how 10 years ago a union electrician “sent her a friend request” and at the time he was married.
On first impression, Sue thought he was a “handsome guy,” but the “married man” and his wife were “just fans of his.”
After remaining friends for nine years and starting a book club together, Sue explains that her marriage “didn’t last” and expressed that she was “interested in moving forward” with him.
Sue’s boyfriend lives “4,000 miles away” in New York and “had nine years before he could retire,” which he said were “obstacles.”
However, the self-proclaimed “loner” said that was not a problem for her.
WATCH LIFE BELOW ZERO TUESDAYS AT 9 PM ON NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC
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