offrope




I'm doing 2 things
 

offrope's Life List

  1. 1. get out of debt
    1 cheer
    11,053 people
  2. 2. rappel
    17 people
Recent entries
Learn Crazy Tricks on a Jet Ski
Crazy tricks 2 years ago

The best part about doing tricks on a jet ski is, if you mess up, what happens? YOU GET WET! Yee haa!

Start slow and build up your repetoire (sp?).

I also recommend doing tricks on a stand-up, not on a runabout (sit down) jet ski.

Stand ups are more graceful and my Grandma can stand on her head riding a runabout. It’s a little more difficult on a stand up. Try it, you’ll love it.



go rappelling
Extreme Rappelling 2 years ago

I got into rappelling to be able to explore more of the caves in my area and have progressed to longer and longer rappels. My first long rappel was Surprise Pit in Alabama at 404 ft, then I did Fantastic Pit (GA) at 586 ft, then Whitesides Mountain, NC at 620 ft.

What? No longer in a cave?

That’s right. Fantastic Pit is the longest in-cave rappel in the US so I had to go above ground. Following that I have since rappelled the Bridge over the New River Gorge (876’), The Black Canyon of the Gunnison, CO (1,570’) and El Capitan at 2,650 feet, the longest rappel in the US.

But I craved more.

What was left? A friend of mine invited me on an expedition to Baffin Island, Canada to set a new WORLD RECORD in 2004. Seven members carried a mile-long rope to the summit of Thor Peak only to be turned back by bad weather. Thor Peak sits inside the Arctic Circle in a Canadian National Park. The expedition, even though it was a failure, prompted Sports Illustrated to publish a story entitled “Toil and Trouble on Mount Thor”. We did all the hard work with none of the glory but it steeled me not to quit.

Determined not to live life without achieving my goals, I assembled and led an expedition back to Thor in 2006. This time, the weather cooperated and we achieved our goal of setting a NEW WORLD RECORD. Four members of the original expedition, including myself, went back and all did the rappel of a lifetime.

At 4,200 feet, we bested the current record by almost 600 feet. Unfortunately, a Parcs Canada Patrol officer died when he lost control of his descent on our rope and 2 members of the expedition didn’t get to do the rappel because Parc officials halted the expedition.

To learn more, please visit www.whitewaterunderground.com.

Be safe,

The Dirtman




 

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