Category: Sky

  • Our Favorite (Illegal) BASE Jumping Locations

    Our Favorite (Illegal) BASE Jumping Locations

    The legality of BASE jumping is something that has been an issue for lovers of the sport since day one. While virtually any surface high enough off the ground for a safe jump can serve as a place to BASE jump, many jumpers often run into trouble with the law and end up with citations, permanent bans from certain areas, or even some time in jail.

    While there are certainly a lot of great places where BASE jumping is allowed, some of the best jump locations in the world are officially illegal to use, causing determined jumpers to conveniently ignore the law and go for their jumps anyway. We’ve listed a few of our favorite illegal places to BASE jump below.

    El Capitan

    El Capitan is arguably the most recognizable huge rock face in America, and is where the first BASE jumps ever took place in 1966. Located in the legendary Yosemite National Park in California, this giant monolith offers daring BASE jumpers are 3,000 foot vertical drop. BASE jumping is strictly prohibited in all U.S. national parks, but that doesn’t stop some athletes from taking a leap off the famed wall.

    Mount Thor

    Mount Thor is a seriously epic mountain located on Canada’s Baffin Island, within the limits of Auyuittuq National Park. The mountain features the greatest vertical drop on the planet at 4,101 feet.

    The Cave Of Swallows

    Featuring the largest cave shaft in the world, the Cave Of Swallows in Mexico is a popular place for tourists and adventure sports enthusiasts alike. BASE jumping is officially not allowed, but many jumps have taken place at the cave, which offers up a truly one-of-a-kind 1,092 foot freefall into the earth.

    Troll Wall

    The Troll Wall is the highest point on the imposing Troll Peaks, which are located along the Norwegian coast, and is the tallest face of vertical rock in Europe with a 3,600 foot drop.

    Trango Towers

    In 1992, BASE jumpers Glenn Singleman and Nic Feteris set a world record for the highest starting elevation for a BASE jump, and they did it from the top of the Trango Towers in Pakistan at a dizzying 19,537 feet. Their record stood for over a decade. The Trango peaks are some of the most sought after climbing and adventuring destinations in the world.

    Burj Khalifa

    Several permitted BASE jumps have taken place at Burj Khalifa, including the record setting 2,717 foot drop by Fred Fugen and Vince Reffet from the top of the tower in 2014, while a handful of other jumps have been completed outside the limits of the law. Some athletes have even entered the building in disguise in order to gain access!

    These are just a few of the best illegal BASE jumping locations in the world. As awareness about BASE jumping continues to grow and athletes forge ahead by pushing their limits and educating the public about the sport through their perpetual epicness, we can only hope that more and more legal jump locations continue to open up across the globe. Maybe even some of the locations above will be open to all BASE athletes someday!

  • BASE Jumping Locations: Where To Plan Your Jump

    BASE Jumping Locations: Where To Plan Your Jump

    While a BASE jumping location can be virtually any object that’s high enough for a jump, we’ve taken a look around and made a list of some of them more popular jump spots where the world’s best jumpers flock to.

    BASE Jump Locations In The United States

    Royal Gorge Bridge

    Location: Canon City, Colorado
    Jump height: 956 ft.
    Website: RoyalGorgeBridge.com
    Legality: Depends on many factors, but there have been BASE jumping events at the bridge in the past. Use contact page here.

    Perrine Bridge

    Location: Twin Falls, Idaho
    Jump height: 486 ft.
    Website: VisitIdaho.org
    Legality: Jumps allowed year-round without permit, only a verbal okay from the Twin Falls County Sheriff.

    New River Gorge Bridge

    Location: Fayetteville, West Virginia
    Jump height: 876 ft.
    Website: OfficialBridgeDay.com
    Legality: Jumping allowed the third Saturday of October each year for Bridge Day.

    BASE Jumping Locations In Venezuela

    Angel Falls

    Location: Canaima Natl. Park, Bolivar State
    Jump height: 3,200 ft.
    Website: Angel Falls
    Legality: Permit required.

    BASE Jumping Locations In South Africa

    Table Mountain

    Location: Cape Town, South Africa
    Jump height: Varies between jump points
    Website: Table Mountain
    Legality: Permit required, as well as 150 previous skydives.

    BASE Jumping Locations In Norway

    Kjerag Mountain

    Location: Lysefjorden, Norway
    Jump height: 3,228 at highest
    Website: Kjerag Mountain
    Legality: Allowed

    World BASE Race

    Location: Innfjorden, Norway
    Jump height: Unknown
    Website: WorldBASERace.com
    Legality: Open event every summer for wingsuit BASE jumpers with 80+ previous jumps

    BASE Jumping Locations In Switzerland

    The Eiger

    Location: Canton of Bern, Switzerland
    Jump height: Varies by jump location
    Website: The Eiger
    Legality: Allowed

    Jungfrau

    Location: Canton of Bern, Switzerland
    Jump height: Varies by jump location
    Website: The Jungfrau
    Legality: Allowed

    Lauterbrunnen (High Nose, Via Ferrata, High Ultimate Peaks)

    Location: Lauterbrunnen, Switzerland
    Jump height: Varies by jump location and peak chosen
    Website: Lauterbrunnen
    Legality: Allowed

    Walenstadt (The Crack, other area peaks and lines)

    Location: Walenstadt, Switzerland
    Jump height: Varies by jump location and peak chosen
    Website: Walenstadt
    Legality: Allowed

     

  • BASE Jumping First Jump Courses

    BASE Jumping First Jump Courses

    Taking a first jump course is a must if you want to get into BASE jumping of any kind. In order to help you find the right course for you, we’ve compiled a list of the top FJC courses in the world. Please note that each FJC has different requirements when it comes to previous experience. The best way to figure out if you’re a best fit for a first jump course is to look over the basic information provided by each company and then contact them directly to establish a relationship and see what they can do for you specifically.

    Have fun!

    FJCs in the United States

    Apex BASE

    Course Location: Perrine Bridge, Twin Falls, Idaho
    Date(s): Year round
    Course duration: 3-4 days
    Email: moab@apexbase.com
    Phone #: (951) 894-6000
    Website: ApexBASE.com
    Twitter: @ApexBASE
    Facebook: Apex BASE fan page

    Moab BASE Adventures

    Course Location: Perrine Bridge, Twin Falls, Idaho
    Date(s): Contact for more information
    Course duration: 3 days
    Email: info@moabbaseadventures.com
    Phone #: (970) 683-8982
    Website: MoabBASEAdventures.com
    FacebookMoab BASE Adventures fan page

    Asylum Design

    Course Location: Auburn, California
    Date(s): Contact for more information
    Course duration: Contact for more information
    Email: support@asylumbase.com
    Phone #: (530) 823-5222
    Website: AsylumBASE.com

    Snake River BASE

    Course Location: Perrine Bridge, Twin Falls, Idaho
    Date(s): See ‘Sign Up’ page on website for dates
    Course duration: 4 days
    Email: tom@snakeriverbase.com
    Phone #: (208) 420-2602
    Website: SnakeRiverBASE.com
    Facebook: Snake River BASE fan page

    Johnny Utah FJC

    Course Location: Perrine Bridge, Twin Falls, Idaho
    Date(s): Several times per year, see website for upcoming course dates
    Course duration: 5 days
    Email: johnny@johnnyutah.com
    Website: JohnnyUtah.com
    Twitter: @WingsuitPilot
    Facebook: Johnny Utah fan page

    Morpheus Technologies

    Course Location: Perrine Bridge, Twin Falls, Idaho
    Date(s): Year round, contact to set a date
    Course duration: Contact for more information
    Email: info@baserigs.com
    Phone #: (813) 780-8961
    Website: BASERigs.com
    FacebookMorpheus Technologies fan page

    Inter-Demented FJC with Sean Chuma

    Course Location: Perrine Bridge, Twin Falls, Idaho
    Date(s): Year round, contact to set a date
    Course duration: 4 days
    Email: werd2dawise@gmail.com
    Phone #: (619) 987-6990
    Website: SeanChuma.com
    Twitter: @ChumaSean
    Facebook: Sean Chuma FJC fan page

    BASE Dreams FJC with Chris McDougall

    Course Location: Perrine Bridge, Twin Falls, Idaho
    Date(s): Contact to set a date
    Course duration: 8-10 days
    EmailUse form here
    Website: BASEDreams.com
    Twitter: @Douggs_Basejump
    FacebookChris McDougall fan page

    Bad Seed BASE

    Course Location: Perrine Bridge, Twin Falls, Idaho
    Date(s): Year round, contact to set a sate
    Email: FJCInfo@BadSeedBASE.com
    Phone #: (808) 780-2056
    Website: BadSeedBASE.com
    Facebook: Bad Seed BASE fan page

    BASE Dynamics

    Course Location: Perrine Bridge, Twin Falls, Idaho
    Date(s): Year round, email to set a date
    Course duration: 4 days
    Email: jon@base-dynamics.com
    Phone #: (424) 257-0133
    Website: BASE-Dynamics.com
    Facebook: BASE Dynamics fan page

    FJCs in Spain

    Freefall University

    Course Location: Madrid, Spain
    Date(s): Contact for dates
    Course duration: 2-6 days
    Email: Use this form
    Phone #: London office – 0207-870-2505
    Website: FreefallUniversity.co.uk

    ProBASE Academy

    Course Location: Switzerland, contact for exact course location
    Date(s): Contact for dates
    Course duration: 5 days
    Email: info@probaseworldcup.com
    Website: ProBASEAcademy.com
    Twitter: @ProBASEWorldCup
    Facebook: ProBASE World Cup fan page

    FJCs in Switzerland

    321 BASE

    Course Location: Lauterbrunnen, Switzerland
    Date(s): Contact for dates
    Course duration: 5 days
    Email: ugojump@321BASE.eu
    Phone #: +41 787 434 170
    Website: 321BASE.eu
    Twitter: @321BASEeu
    Facebook: 321 BASE fan page

    FJCs in Germany

    Pressurized FJC

    Course Location: Saaldorf, Germany
    Date(s): Courses during April, June, July, and September 2015
    Course duration: 8 days
    Email: andreas@pressurized.at
    Website: Pressurized.at
    Facebook: Pressurized fan page

    Sepp Bunk FJC

    Course Location: Contact for available locations
    Date(s): Contact for dates
    Course duration: 4 days
    EmailUse form here to contact 
    Website: Base-jumper.de
    Twitter: @Sepp_Bunk

  • Jokke Sommer Wind Tunnel Training At Skydive Dubai

    Jokke Sommer Wind Tunnel Training At Skydive Dubai

    Total control while in free-fall is a life-or-death skill for a wingsuit proximity flyer such as Jokke Sommer. In this video, Sommer and the Soul Flyers take on the enormous and amazing wind tunnel at Skydive Dubai to show off their skills and share their thoughts on skydive/BASE training indoors.

  • World Record Highline: The Ghost Inside

    World Record Highline: The Ghost Inside

    The Ghost Inside is a great documentary about Alexander Schulz, who set a new slack lining world record when he walked a 100 meter high, 375 meter long highline between two limestone cliffs in China’s Guangxi province.

  • Google VP Secretly Shatters High-Altitude Skydive Record

    Google VP Secretly Shatters High-Altitude Skydive Record

    On October 14th, 2012, after 7 years of planning and a 2 1/2 hour ascent, Felix Baumgartner jumped from 128,100 feet above Earth’s surface, breaking 3 world skydiving records in just over a 10 minute period with the Red Bull Stratos project.

    Just last week, Alan Eustance, a 57-year old computer scientist and Senior Vice President of Knowledge at Google, shattered that record.

    Tethered to a helium balloon that sped upwards of 1,600 feet per minute, Eustace smoothly rose from an abandoned Roswell, New Mexico runway, soaring to an altitude of 135,890 feet, over 25 miles above Earth’s surface.

    Then, after just over two hours, Eustace ignited a small explosive device that severed himself from the balloon. For a full 15 minutes, he reverse-rocketed back down to Earth, at one point, triggering a sonic boom as he hit a top speed of 822 miles per hour.

    “It was a wild, wild, ride,” Eustace explained to the Times.

    Background: Alan Eustace’s Three Year Secret

    Eustace decided to pursue the project back in 2011, connecting with Taber MacCallum. McCallum is one of the founding members of the Biosphere 2 project, an artificial ecosystem built to explore concepts like the possibility of space colonization.

    Eustace thought he could develop a simpler system that what Baumgartner used, working with MacCallum’s company, Paragon Space Development Corporation, to develop a life-support system that would allow him to breathe pure oxygen in a pressurized suit, during both his ascent and fall.

    While Eustace’s company, Google, offered to help with the project, he declined support, worried that his jump would become a marketing event. Instead, Eustace recruited a small team of engineers to help him actualize the project.

    Kudos to Eustace and his team for pulling this off so successfully. Here’s looking at you, Baumgartner, to take it to the next level 🙂

  • 30 of the World’s Most Extreme Athletes

    30 of the World’s Most Extreme Athletes

    There is a major difference between an athlete and an extreme athlete.

    Athletes simply push their minds and bodies to great lengths for sport, for fun, or perhaps to maintain their health. Extreme athletes push their minds and bodies to the farthest possible limit of human ability while simultaneously risking their lives. Extreme athletes are who we look to when trying to understand and measure what is humanly possible. They serve as self-appointed test subjects, leaving most of the average population watching (and studying) in awe from afar.

    Extreme athletes continue to take on death-defying feats again and again, chasing the adrenaline rush like drug addicts. They are truly a different breed. To honor the most extreme of extreme athletes, we put together a list of 30, which spans across six major categories: sky, snow, race, water, climb, and wheels.

    SKY

    In the aftermath of WWII, groups of Army Airborne Soldiers began jumping out of planes for fun using military surplus gear. Since those days, skydiving as a sport has grown into full-fledged sport and evolved to incorporate many modifications such as base jumping and jet pack flying. Sky sports are only increasing in popularity with skydiving schools popping up all around the world. Some of the most famous pioneers of gut-wrenching sky sports are listed below.

    Jeb Corliss

    Skydiver / BASE Jumper

    jeb-corliss-skydiver

    Jeb Corliss is a professional skydiver and base jumper who has leaped into the public arena (quite literally) after BASE jumping from such sights as the Eiffel Tower, Seattle’s Space Needle, the Christ the Redeemer statue in Brazil, and the Petronas Twin Towers in Malaysia. He was born March 25, 1976 near Sante Fe, New Mexico and has survived several extreme and record breaking jumps. He is the first person to fly through a waterfall wearing a wingsuit and in 2013 he completed a jump called “flying dagger” in which he jumped out of a helicpoter wearing a wingsuit and flew through a narrow crack in Mount Jianglang in China. The passageway was a mere 15 feet wide, making the jump very risky. Corliss was quoted saying this jump was “…the single gnarliest thing I’ve ever done…” and “I have never experienced anything so hardcore. Period. I have not been that scared in my life. It was so powerful and overwhelming. I started crying.”

    Alexander Polli

    BASE Jumper

    alexander-polli-skydiver

    Alexander Polli is an Italian/Norwegian BASE jumper born June 26, 1985. He is considered one of the most extreme BASE jumpers on the scene today due to his daring jumps which had previously been considered too technical or dangerous by other fliers. Alex travels the world in search of the best jumping locations. Polli is also a wingsuit jumper and has contributed to the WiBASE jumping. In November 2012, he became the first WiSBASE jumper to successfully strike a wingsuit target which was made of foam and around ten feet tall.

    Felix Baumgartner

    Skydiver / BASE Jumper

    Felix-Baumgartner- sky

    Felix Baumgartner is an Austrian skydiver and all around daredevil born April 20, 1969. He is famous for setting the world record for skydiving an estimated 39 kilometers reaching a speed of 843.6 MPH. In 2012 he became the first person to break the sound barrier without vehicular power on his descent. His most recent project was called Red Bull Stratos, in which he jumped to Earth from a helium balloon in the stratosphere. The jump took place on October 14, 2012 and set the altitude record for a manned balloon flight, parachute jump from the highest altitude, and greatest free fall velocity.

    Yves Rossy

    Pilot/Jet Pack Inventor

    yves-rossy-jetpack

    Yves Rossy is a Swiss pilot and general avation enthusiast who is best know as the inventor of the individual jet pack. Rossy was born in 1959 in Neuchatel and served as a fighter pilot in the Swiss Air Force. He also flew Boeing 747s for Swissair and Swiss International Air Lines. He developed the wing-suit system comprised of a backpack equipped with a semi rigid aeroplane-type carbon-fiber wings that had a span of 7.9 feet. In 2008, Rossy used his jet pack to fly over the Alps and reached speeds of up to 189 MPH. He is the first known perso to fly a jet engine powered wing.

    Luke Aikins

    Skydiver

    luke-aikins-kaydiver-irving-2013

    Luke Aikins is an American professionall skydiver with two decades of experience and more than 16,000 under his belt. Luke comes from a family of skydiving legends and has contributed to the family legacy by setting three world records. After completing his first jump in 1989, he just could not get enough. Today he is a member of the Red Bull Air Force and travels the world with the team, performing exhibition jumps, VIP tandems and more. He is also the owner of Para Tactics, which provides advanced skydiving training to elite military forces such as the U.S. Navy Seals.

    SNOW

    While skiing has a long and well established history, extreme skiing and snowboarding are more recent developments in the world of extreme sports. Both skiing and snowboarding incorporate many subsets of riding styles such as alpine, freestyle, half-pipe, jibbing, and racing. The most extreme snow athletes generally are well versed in all of these styles but may favor one or two in particular when it comes time to compete. Snowboarding, more specifically, has exploded in popularity in the past 20 years with more and more amateurs attempting to follow in the extreme footsteps of these snow sport legends:

    Shaun White

    Snowboarder/skateboarder

    Shaun-White-snowboarder

    Shaun White is a professional snowboarder and skateboarder and perhaps the most recognizable name in extreme sports. He has won two olympic gold medals and holds the X-Games records for gold medals and highest overall medal count. White was born in San Diego on September 3, 1986 and began skateboarding at a young age. He turned pro by age 17 with the help of Tony Hawk and went on to win many skateboarding titles including the Action Sports Tour Championship. He began snowboarding at age six and got his first sponsorship at age seven. Shaun primarily competes in half-pipe events and in 2012 he became the first person to score a perfect 100 in the men’s snowboard superpipe event at the winter X games.

    Xavier De Le Rue

    Big Mountain Snowboarder

    xavier-de-le-rue-snowboarder

    Xavier is a French big mountain snowboarder born July 1, 1979. He began his pro career competing on the boardercross pro tour and later competed for France at the 2006 Winter Olympics. He is a two time gold medalist at the FIS Snowboarding World Championships, also taking home silver in 2009. De Le Rue has been named “big mountain rider of the year” by Snowboarder Magazine.

    Jeremy Jones

    Big Mountain Snowboarder

    jeremy-jones-snowboader

    Jeremy Jones is an American snowboarder born January 14, 1975 in Cape Cod, MA. He is best known for big mountain freeriding. Jeremy began skiing at the age of three and later switched to snowboarding at age nine. Jones went pro by age 18 and is considered a legend by his fans. Also known as one of the godfathers of freeriding, he has been riding at the highest level for three decades. In 2012 he was selected by National Geographic Magazine as a nominee for Adventurer of The Year. Jones is also a big environmental protection advocate and has opted to forego the use of helicopters and lifts in favor of hiking as his primary means of transportation up the slopes.

    JP Auclair

    Freestyle Skier

    jp-auclair-snowboarder

    Jean-Philippee Auclair was a Canadian freestyle skier born August 22, 1977. JP was a prize winning skier and filmmaker who found a way to combine his two passions. In 1998 he won 1st place at both the King of the Hill Half Pipe competition and the US Open. In 2002 he was nominated for skier of the year at the ESPN Action Sports and music Awards. He also obtained Level One certification in avalanche operations through the Canadian Avalanche Association in 2009. Auclair tragically passed away in an avalanche on september 29, 2014 while filming for his web series in Aysen, Chile.

    Shaun Palmer

    Snowboarder/Skier

    shaun-palmer-snowboard

    Shaun Palmer is a professional snowboarder, skiier, mountain biker, and motocross rider born on November 14, 2014 in California. He is known as one of the forefathers of extreme sports. He began skiing at a young age and became fascinated with snowboarding. Since snowboarding was not yet popular at the time, Palmer built his own snowboard when he was just 12 years old and taught himself how to ride. He has been given many titles such as USA Today’s Worlds Greatest Athlete, Details Magazine’s Athlete of the year in 1998, and the NEA Extreme Athlete of the year in 2000. He has won several gold medals in many competitions including: the Winter X Games, Swatch World Halfpipe Championship, US National Championship, and the Gravity Games. He also managed to play in a 1990s punk rock band called Fungus!

    RACE

    Endurance athletes are extreme at the most primitive human level. Essentially, they make full use of the human body and stretch it to its furthest possible limit. These extreme athletes set out on expeditions into the physical and mental frontier of the self physically and mentally – typically doing so in the raw habitat they find themselves in. This category incorporates skyrunners, marathon runners, triathletes, and mountaineers. Such extreme athletes have completed feats that exhibit the amazing potential of human physical ability.

    David Goggins

    Endurance Athlete

    david_goggins-runner

    David Goggins is a Navy SEAL who has served in Afghanistan. After losing several friends on battlefields overseas, he began long-distance running to raise money for armed forces charities. In 2005 he entered the San Diego One Day event which is a 24-hour ultramarathon. He ended up running 100 miles in under 19 hours despite never having run a marathon before. This event helped grant him entry into the Badwater-135 ultramarathon invitational in 2006 in which he finished 5th overall, an unheard of result from a ultramarathon novice at a world class event. Since then, he has competed in several notable events such as the Kona Ironman World Championship, Ultraman World Championship, and 24 Hour Pull-Up World Record of 4,025 pull-ups!

    Kilian Jornet Burgada

    Skyrunner

    kilian-jornet-runner

    Kilian Jornet Burgada is a spanish ski mountaineer, distance runner, mountain biker, and skyrunner. He is the three time champion of the Skyrunner World Series (2007-2009). He was born in Catalonia, Spain and began ski mountaineering in 1999. He began skyrunning competitively in 2005 and has placed first in several competitions. In 2014, Kilian broke the fastest known time for ascending and descending Alaska’s Mount McKinley in 11 hours and 40 minutes, breaking the previous record by 5 hours and 6 minutes. He also ran up and down the matterhorn in a record time of 2 hours and 52 minutes. His other notable achievements include the 2008 Champion of the Year at the Skyrunner World Series.

    Lizzy Hawker

    Endurance Athlete

    lizzy-hawker-runner-

    Lizzy Hawker is a British ultra-distance endurance runner who has broken several world records. She has two gold medals from the 100k World Championships and holds the world record for running from Everest Base Camp to Kathmandu. She is the first woman to compete in many endurance races including: The North Face Ultratrail Tour Du Mont Blanc, Annapurna 100, Hong Kong 100, and Swiss Alpine Davos. In 2013, National Geographic named her Adventurer of the Year. She says she was inspired to become a long distance runner when she fell in love with the Matterhorn at age six, saying, “it was the birth of a passion and I knew that the mountains and nature were ‘home’.

    Chrissie Wellington

    Triathlete

    Chrissie wellington

    Christine Wellington is a British professional triathlete and four-time Ironman Triathlon World Champion. She was born February 18, 1977 in Suffolk, England and attended the University of Birmingham. Upon graduating with her degree in geography in 1998, Wellington traveled the world and became aware of the “many problems that exist in the world, but also the opportunity for positive change.” In 2004 she entered her first triathlon race where she finished in third place. In 2006 she entered the Coast to Coast endurance race which involved a 243 km of cycling, running, and kayaking across the southern Alps of New Zealand. She finished second despite having no previous kayaking training. Later that year she also won the Shropshire Olympic Triathlon and in 2007 she officially decided to become a professional triathlete.

    Dean Karnazes

    Ultramarathon Runner

    dean-karnazes-runner

    Dean Karnazes is an American ultra marathon runner born August 23, 1962 in California. Karnazes first became interested in running when he was in kindergarten and by third grade he was organizing running events with other children. By age eleven he had hiked across the entire Grand Canyon and also climbed Mt. Whitney. From his professional ultramarathon career he is most known for completing several super-human runs. He ran fifty marathons in fifty states on fifty consecutive days, he ran 350 miles in three days without stopping or sleeping, and he has run the infamous badwater ultramarathon seven times which is a treturous 135 mile trek from Death Valley to mid-way up Mount McKinley. He runs 100 to 170 miles a week.
    He couldn’t find time to run 4–6 hours a day, so he began sleeping less. He currently only sleeps four hours a night. His resting heart rate is 39 beats per minute!

    WATER

    We all know that humans are mammals and do not thrive in water. The following extreme watersports athletes turn this basic fact on its head. From big wave surfing to long-distance swimming, these athletes push the limits of what a human can achieve while submerged in water.

    Laird Hamilton

    Big-Wave Surfer

    laird-hamilton-surfer

    Laird Hamilton is an American big-wave surfer born March 2, 1964 in California. He had become quite a talented surfer by age 17 but had no plans to enter in surfing competitions because he saw surfing as more of an artform than a competitive sport. He became well known for riding waves few other surfers dared. For example, he surfed huge waves during Hurricane Marie. Hamilton is regarded by surfing historians as the “all time best of the best” at big wave surfing, regularly surfing swells of 35 feet tall, and moving at speeds in excess of 30 miles an hour and successfully riding other waves of up to 70 feet high, at up to 50 mph.

    Diana Nyad

    Long-Distance Swimmer

    diana-nyad-swimmer

    Diana Nyad is an American long distance swimmer born August 22, 1949. She began generating national attention when she swam around the island of Manhattan in 1975 and then again in 1979 when she swam from the Bahamas to Florida (102 miles). In 2013 she became the first person to swim from Cuba to Florida (110 miles) without the protection of a shark cage.

    Herbert Nitsch

    Freediver

    nitsch-herbert-swimmer

    Herbert Nitsch is an Austrian freediver born April 20, 1970. Herbert currently holds the world record for freediving. He is recognized as the “deepest man on earth” after freediving a depth of 702 feet in 2007 and then broke his own record in 2012 by freediving 831 feet. He has achieved over 30 world records related to diving.

    William (Bill) Stone

    Extreme Caver

    bill-stone-caver

    Bill Stone is an American caver and explorer born December 7, 1952. He is well known for his exploration of deep caves and has participated in over forty international expeditions. In 1976, Stone took part in an expedition to the Sistema Huautla in Oaxaca, Mexico, where his group set a new penetration depth record of 2,624 feet. He is president of Stone Aerospace and has been funded by NASA to explore the world’s deepest sinkholes.

    Keala Kennelly

    Big-Wave Surfer

    keala-kennelly-surfer

    Keala Kennelly is an American professional surfer from Kauai, Hawaii born August 13, 1978. Kennelly went pro at age 17 and not long after went on to compete in the World Qualifying Series. 2003 was a breakout year for Kennelly as she peaked at number 1 in the WCT rankings before ending the year ranked as the 2nd best female surfer in the world. She finished in 2nd place at the Billabong Pro Maui and won the gold medal at the 2007 Summer X Games. Keala was named Female Surfer of the Year by ESPN in 2002 and she has been ranked in the top 10 on the ASP World Championship Tour for 10 consecutive years.

    CLIMB

    Rock climbing is a physically and mentally demanding sport, one that often tests a climber’s strength, endurance, agility and balance along with mental control. Extreme rock climbers are proven adrenaline junkies who regularly put their lives on the line in order to catch some of the most incredible thrills imaginable. Additionally, these guys often go down in history as the few who make it to the top of the world’s most famous mountaintops.

    Ueli Steck

    Speed Alpinist

    Ueli-Steck-climber

    Ueli Steck is a Swiss rock climber made famous for his speed records on the North Face Trilogy in the Alps. He was born October 4, 1976 and achieved the 9th difficulty rating in climbing by age 17. After his solo-climb of the north wall of Cholatse and the eastern wall of Taboche, Climb Magazine named him one of the three best alpinists in Europe. Some of his greatest climbing achievements include a solo ascent of Annapurna, Solo ascent of the Matterhorn, the 2008 Eiger Award for his alpinistic performances, and the 2010 Karl Unterkircher Award for his climbing versatility.

    Alex Honnold

    Free Solo Rock Climber

    alex-honnold-climber

    Alex Honnold is an American rock climber best known for his free solo ascents of big walls. He started climbing at age 11 and later dropped out of the UC Berkeley to devote all his time to climbing. He has broken a number of speed records. Some of his most notable achievement include the only known solo climb of the Yosemite Triple crown, an 18 hour 50 minute link up of Mount Watkins, The nose, and the Regular Northwest Face of half Dome. Alex has mentioned that he enjoys completing tall, long routes as quickly as he can.

    Chris Sharma

    Rock Climber

    chris-sharma-climber

    Chris Sharma is an American rock climber who has been described as the best rock climber in the world. He began climbing at age 12 and by age 14 he was already winning national bouldering competitions. When he was 15 years old he completed the first ascent of Necessary Evil in the Virgin River Gorge – the highest rated climb in North America at the time. Chris is famous for completing nearly 20 daring “first ascents” of dangerous peaks all around the world including Jumbo Love, Papichulo, French Gangster, and Catxasa in Spain.

    Reinhold Messner

    Mountaineer

    reinhold-messner-mountaineer

    Reinhold Messner is a legendary Italian mountain climber who has been called the greatest climber in history. He is renowned for making the first solo ascent of Mount Everest without supplemental oxygen and for being the first climber to ascend all fourteen peaks in the world that are over 8,000 meters high. He has a vast list of ascents on resume many of with are first and solo ascents. Between 1950 and 1964 he led over 500 ascents, primarily in the dolomites. Messner has also written over 65 books.

    Dean Potter

    Free Climber/Alpinist

    dean-potter-alpinist

    Dean Potter is an American Freeclimber and Alpinist born January 18, 1972. He is well known for his difficult first ascents, free solo ascents and speed ascents primarily in Yosemite and Patagonia. Potter rowed crew and taught himself to climb when he was in high school. His fascination with climbing only grew as he dropped out of the University of New Hampshire to pursue climbing full time. He went on to famously climb many first and solo ascents including Supercanaleta in Patagonia, Heaven in Yosemite, and Deep Blue Sea in the Swiss Apls.

    WHEEL

    Wheel sports are one of the categories of extreme sport that has truly blown up over the past 30 years. Skateboarding, BMX, and motocross have become the face of “extreme sports” with the development of the X games and Tony Hawk video games. The mainstream popularity of wheel sports has inspired an entire generation of amature skatboarders and BMXers leaving their worried parents biting their nails on the sidelines of their local skatepark. Here are some of the most influential pioneers of extreme wheel sports.

    Travis Pastrana

    Motorsports Competitor and Stunt Performer

    travis-pastrana-bmx

    Travis Pastrana is an American motorsports champion who has won several gold medals at the X games across multiple events including supercross, motocross, freestyle motocross, and racing. In 2004, Travis crashed while trying to perform a 360 on a 50 foot jump and sustained a concussion. Nevertheless, he was able to compete the next day and win the silver medal. At the age of 14 he also sustained very serious injuries following a motorcycle crash at an FMC Competition with required six blood transfusions. Doctors reported that only three people in the U.S. have ever lived following such injuries. After his recovery, Travis vowed to continue motorcycle jumping and. He has since won three motocross championships and due to his affinity toward his fans and passion toward the sport he is regarded as one of the most popular riders of all time.

    Danny MacAskill

    Trials Cyclist

    danny-macaskill-trials cyclist

    Danny MacAskill is a Scottish cyclist who works professionally as a street trials pro rider for Inspired Bicycles Ltd. Danny was born December 23, 1985 and has been practicing street cycling for the past 12 years. He first started generating lots of buzz when his video showcasing his street cycling tricks went viral on the YouTube. The video is now at over 35 million views and highlights some of Danny’s sickest street moves including a backflip off a tree in a park. It is truly extreme.

    Mat Hoffman

    BMX Rider

    Mat_Hoffman-biker

    Mat Hoffman is an American BMX rider born January 9, 1972. He is nicknamed “The Condor” and has been considered one of the best vert riders in the history of the sport. At age of 15 he became the youngest rider to join the freestyle BMX circuit. Four years later he attained the pro division and launched his bike company Hoffman Bikes. Hoffman was the first person to ride an over-sized (“Big”) ramp in 1993 with his first High Air attempt off of a 24-foot quarter pipe; on one of his runs, he tore his spleen and almost died. In 2005 Mat was elected president of the International BMX Freestyle Federation

    Dave Mirra

    BMX Rider

    sports

    Dave Mirra is an American BMX athlete born April 4, 1974. Mirra turned pro at age 17 and began competing around the same time. He held the record for most X-Games medals up until 2013. He has placed in every X-Games that has taken place since the games began in 1995 up until 2008. He is primarily known as a vert and park ramp rider and has won such titles as “Freestyler of the Year” by BMX Magazine and Rider of the Year by the ESPN Action Sports and Music Awards in 2000.

    Danny Way

    Skateboarder

    danny-way-skateboarder

    Daniel Way is an American professional skateboarder born April 15, 1974. He began skateboarding competitively at age 11 and won his first competition in 1985. By 1991 he was named Thrasher Magazine’s “Skater of the Year.” He has won multiple gold medals at the X-Games in the “Big Air” category and holds the world record for land-speed on a skateboard. Danny is best known for extreme stunts such as jumping into a skateboard ramp from a helicopter and pioneering mega-ramps. He used one mega-ramp to jump the Great Wall of China on a skateboard (which he did with a broken foot!)

  • Cliff Diving in Malta

    Cliff Diving in Malta

    Don’t know much about this video clip, but it’s beautifully edited, has a great soundtrack and gets me amped up for cliff jumping. What more could we ask for as adrenaline junkies?

  • Shane McConkey Documentary at Tribeca Film Festival

    Shane McConkey Documentary at Tribeca Film Festival

    “An honest person. A kind person, a hilarious person, an incredibly gifted athlete, but most of all, somebody who dedicated his life to having fun.” RIP Shane McConkey, you were an inspiration for all of us adrenaline junkies out there.

  • 10 Most Bizarre Extreme Sports

    10 Most Bizarre Extreme Sports

    While most people would be completely satisfied with the thrill of surfing, snowboarding or skateboarding, serious adrenaline junkies have been coming up with new and bizarre ways to get that extreme adrenaline rush. Below is a list of 10 of the most outlandish extreme sports we could think of. Bet you’ve never even heard of most of these sports!

    1. Slacklining

    Not to be confused with tight-rope walking, slacklining uses a wider fast mesh line that is strung slacker than a tight-rope. Much like tight-rope walking slacklining involves strong balancing skills and focus. Remember Dean Potter, the guy who highlined 6,000 feet up in the air across the Enshi Grand Canyon in China?

    Slacklining has become so popular for its versatility and “slackers” ability to practice pretty much anywhere. There are a bunch of variations on slacklining which include urbanlining, tricklining, waterlining, highlining, windlining, freestyle slacklining and tunnelining.

    2. Street Luge

    This gravity-powered activity involves riding a street luge down a paved road or course. Ever go down a hill while sitting on your skateboard instead of standing? This sport originated in Southern California when skateboarders realized they could go much faster downhill by lying on their skateboards. Eventually someone developed a special street luge board and the sport really took off with professional competitions!

    3. Volcano Surfing

    Also known as ash boarding or volcano boarding, this sport involves boarding down the ashes of a volcano on a thin plywood or metal board. Riders hike up the volcano and then either stand or sit as they head back down to the bottom. This sport is actually pretty dangerous considering the volcanic ash is sharp and painful to fall on so riders are encouraged to wear protective gear while practicing. Pretty cool concept though!

    volcano surfing 10 most bizarre extreme sports

    4. Sky Surfing

    By far one of the coolest activities on this list, sky surfing is a form of skydiving where the skydiver attaches a board to their feet and performs surf-style aerobatics during their freefall. This dangerous sport requires a substantial amount of practice and not every skydiving club permits sky surfing, but the video below of this guy sky surfing is pretty cool to watch!

    5. Train Surfing

    What started out as a means of transportation eventually became a form of extreme sport for daredevil thrillseekers. Train surfing first appeared as a sport in South Africa when teenagers from poor families would ride on the tops of trains for fun. Train surfers essentially risk their lives while performing tricks and dance moves on high speed trains. Train surfers face multiple risks including electrocution from overhead cables, serious injury, death and punishment by law enforcement. Below is a video of some kids in Russia train surfing.

    6. Wing Walking

    Wing walking is similar to train surfing except wing walkers perform on the wings of moving airplanes. The earliest known instance of wing walking began in the early 1900’s when Ormer Locklear would climb out onto the lower wings of his plane during World War I pilot training. Wing walkers then began performing stunts with the goal of constantly outdoing one another. Such insane stunts as hanging by one’s teeth, transferring planes and doing handstands were often performed!

    wing walking 10 most bizarre extreme sports

    8. Trampo-Walling

    Trampoline walling is pretty much exactly what it sounds like. Gravity-defying daredevils jump from heights upwards of 16 feet, land on a trampoline to bounce back up to the wall. Jumpers typically incorporate flips and twists as they go from trampoline to wall and back again. Former Cirque du Soleil performer Oliver Lemieux is one of the first to make trampo-walling a mainstream activity where people can now try in the safety of a gym.

    7. Sepak Takraw

    Sepak Takraw, or kick volleyball originated in Southeast Asia. Players use a rattan ball and only their feet, chest, head, or knees to score on the opponent by sending the ball over the net. Could be a fun game to start in your backyard! Check out the game video below.

    9. Underwater Hockey

    This bizarre underwater sport first originated in England in 1954 as a way for Southsea Sub-Aqua Club members to stay active during the cold months when open-water diving was no longer as appealing. The game, consisting of two 10-15 minute halves, calls for two teams of six to compete to move a hockey puck across the bottom of a pool to score on the opponents’ goal. The game requires players to hold their breath for long periods of time as they strive to push the hockey puck across the pool floor to score on the other team…a lot harder than it sounds! Equipment includes a snorkel, diving mask, fins, stick (also known as a “bat” or “pusher”) and a protective glove. Check out the video below of a US Women’s Underwater Hockey game!

    10. Hangboarding

    One day, a man named Don Arney had the random idea of combining hang gliding with snowboarding and so hangboarding was born! Hangboarders soar horizontally downhill on a hangboard which looks like this:

    nerve rush 10 most bizarre extreme sports hangboarding

    The “pilot” holds onto handlebars at the front of the hangboard while hanging from a T-shaped bar. The rudder at the back, where the pilot’s feet are secured, functions as a way to steer your way down the mountain as well as a brake in case you need to stop at any time.

    Any sports we should add to this list?