tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-15907727.post61741755272212658..comments2023-11-10T04:17:00.492-05:00Comments on View From The Porch: OMIGOD IF UR AN ACROPHOBE DO NOT WATCHTamhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07285540310465422476noreply@blogger.comBlogger47125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-15907727.post-69627662810437778352013-01-28T07:37:15.374-05:002013-01-28T07:37:15.374-05:00carnaby,
Yeah, that's Dean Potter. I was watc...carnaby,<br /><br />Yeah, that's Dean Potter. I was watching an interview with him where he said that he loves the 'chute because it lets him attempt to free solo that not even he is normally suicidal enough to attempt. (Of course he didn't phrase it that way, but that's how my brain parsed it.)<br /><br />To see some of the other things he does for giggles, google "Dean Potter Yosemite Slackline".)Tamhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/07285540310465422476noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-15907727.post-56277114184104640032013-01-27T22:32:55.805-05:002013-01-27T22:32:55.805-05:00You can see it better here where he tracks away fr...You can see it better here where he tracks away from the cliff:<br /><br />http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EF3v9v8zIHgcarnabyhttp://www.carnabyfudge.blogspot.comnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-15907727.post-34349589741094149732013-01-27T22:32:27.671-05:002013-01-27T22:32:27.671-05:00Not sure if anyone already mentioned it, but that ...Not sure if anyone already mentioned it, but that guy who misses and appears to be falling to his death is a base jumper and has a parachute on his back. He made it down just fine. carnabyhttp://www.carnabyfudge.blogspot.comnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-15907727.post-45943202245121507362013-01-27T18:29:10.150-05:002013-01-27T18:29:10.150-05:00Guys, It's like running a super fast tri-Lambd...Guys, It's like running a super fast tri-Lambda,or 1200M first round hits. It takes skill, practice and incredible awareness. Yes, I'm a climber. I'm also well over 40. I solo things I KNOW I can solo. You may think a foot wide ledge is narrow, I think it's wide. <br /><br />All a mater of perspective really.<br /><br />P.S. I knew DanO...Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-15907727.post-87274112393038493782013-01-27T07:08:36.074-05:002013-01-27T07:08:36.074-05:00I always liked this video:
http://www.youtube.com...I always liked this video:<br /><br />http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NxqB9T3T004<br /><br />That must be the official climbing music or something.<br />Netpackrathttp://www.boomsticksforever.com/noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-15907727.post-27821468144574344342013-01-26T21:41:13.943-05:002013-01-26T21:41:13.943-05:00Didn't finish that...
Consider I can fly a pl...Didn't finish that...<br /><br />Consider I can fly a plane upside down and every which way. Open the door and even looks down of course while strapped in. after landing I get out and be totally intimidated by a 4ft step ladder needed to put fuel in the wing tanks. <br /><br />Fear of falling. that clip does it bad.<br /><br />Eck!<br />Eck!https://www.blogger.com/profile/13890237094647111653noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-15907727.post-1476474791793172122013-01-26T20:26:07.891-05:002013-01-26T20:26:07.891-05:00Couldn't pay me enough Twinkies to do THAT!
U...Couldn't pay me enough Twinkies to do THAT!<br /><br />Ulises from CAAnonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-15907727.post-57902233761117403532013-01-26T20:13:03.048-05:002013-01-26T20:13:03.048-05:00Like Critter - I used to climb a lot but always wi...Like Critter - I used to climb a lot but always with safeties and belays. Then one day we were staged about half way up a very challenging climb, taking a breather and having a bit of lunch. Another (unhelmeted) climber that was climbing about 200 feet over from us - fell. She hit the rocks hard, went limp in her harness, and was hanging there with a steady stream of blood flowing off her head. Her climbing partner, who was belaying her, freaked out.<br /><br />One of the guys I was climbing with and I realized that it was going to take too much time to move our equipment to get over to her. But while the other two guys with us immediately started doing just that, the two of us unclipped from our safeties, and started traversing over to where the injured climber was at. I don't believe either of us would have made that traverse without the other one guiding and advising each other.<br /><br />We got to the girl, stopped the blood flow from a crushed spot over her right temple. Our climbing partners eventually got to her partner got him calmed down, and fed us a second line to lower her down.<br /><br />As some people on the ground where loading her into a car to take her into town my climbing partner grabbed me - pointed to the face we had just traversed across, without ropes, and asked "What the hell were we thinking? Neither one of us should have been out there even with ropes, we're not that good."<br /><br />All I could say was "Well maybe, today, and together - we were that good." Then we hung there for a while, enjoying the view, until we both stopped shaking enough to be able to rappel down. <br /><br />Neither one of us ever climbed again. I am awed watching these people climb. But I haven't had the desire to try it myself for many years. I'm in my 50s now and perfectly happy to have given up a sport that probably would have eventually killed me. Since I apparently don't think too clearly at times of stress...<br /><br />(according to the papers, the girl who fell, survived, but had quite a time recovering from her head injuries)Davidnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-15907727.post-9666374295759726722013-01-26T16:22:46.560-05:002013-01-26T16:22:46.560-05:00Will,
"That huge adrenaline dump you get whe...Will,<br /><br />"<i>That huge adrenaline dump you get when suddenly scared, is definitely NOT what they are working with, or even looking for.</i>"<br /><br />This echoes Alex Honneld's comment at the 2:05 mark in <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SR1jwwagtaQ" rel="nofollow">this video</a>.Tamhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/07285540310465422476noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-15907727.post-80176935658794730592013-01-26T16:18:02.707-05:002013-01-26T16:18:02.707-05:00Yep - I would spend my wishes elsewhere. Yep - I would spend my wishes elsewhere. Bramnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-15907727.post-63358251156952436752013-01-26T16:02:28.957-05:002013-01-26T16:02:28.957-05:00Anon @1:37
Your question is from a common miss-pe...Anon @1:37<br /><br />Your question is from a common miss-perception of people who do not regularly engage in an activity that has severe physical damage or death as a possible result of you screwing up, or from elements beyond your control.<br /><br />That huge adrenaline dump you get when suddenly scared, is definitely NOT what they are working with, or even looking for. It tends to make things more difficult, as it impedes the control you need to function, at the extreme limits you are working at.<br /><br />My own experience of this would primarily be roadracing motorcycles. I last raced at age 46, and would still be racing at age 60, if not for a stroke a few months after that last race. <br /><br />CA has a state level racing club that has an "over age 40" class. It was originally set up for old racers that still wanted to keep their hand in, but maybe weren't competitive. By the time that I qualified for it, it was the most contested class in the club, since there were no bike limits (run-watcha-brung).<br /><br /> The top guys in the class were also winning other classes. No quarter given. I made a mistake in line choice, and they ran me right onto the grass in that last race! Normally, I've only encountered that level of intensity at national level races.<br /><br />Anyway, my point is that there are still areas of endeavor beyond teens and twenties that have similar threat/enjoyment levels. The just tend to cost more to engage in!Willhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/00722792638246578812noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-15907727.post-57497599733068606092013-01-26T15:54:29.071-05:002013-01-26T15:54:29.071-05:00Bram,
"1. PT standards have nothing to do wi...Bram,<br /><br />"<i>1. PT standards have nothing to do with the kind of fitness needed in a combat arms job. "30-mile march with 75-lb pack" would have to replace the run. Then the sit-ups and chin-ups.</i>"<br /><br />That's why I suggested that PT standards would need to be re-written on an MOS-by-MOS basis. (To use an AF example, somebody could be an outstanding screen-watcher at STRATCOM without necessarily measuring up to the running quals required by PJs and JTACs.)<br /><br />And the ability to do the job shouldn't be adjusted based on the gender or age of the person wanting to do it.<br /><br />But, as you noted, this is all so much pie-in-the-sky wishing in our current "Everybody Gets A Trophy" climate...Tamhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/07285540310465422476noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-15907727.post-80290662963027693402013-01-26T15:37:41.346-05:002013-01-26T15:37:41.346-05:00As a geologist, they are working on some great loo...As a geologist, they are working on some great looking pieces of rock. I wish they would have grabbed a few hand samples for those of us on the ground. Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-15907727.post-45792392653396526952013-01-26T13:37:05.113-05:002013-01-26T13:37:05.113-05:00I have a question, when you are 25 or 30 and you r...I have a question, when you are 25 or 30 and you realize your body is no longer capable of this, what do you then do for thrills and chills?<br /><br />I mean, assuming you survive, you've already, I'm sure, used up every nano-gram of adrenaline your body will ever make.<br /><br />What could give you a rush bigger than this? <br /><br />Flying a supersonic aircraft in ground following mountain without radar assist in the mountains? <br /><br /> Racing F1 cars on track that has mines?<br /><br />Doing sword practice with live steel and no armor?<br /><br />Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-15907727.post-69588280680540023592013-01-26T13:35:48.693-05:002013-01-26T13:35:48.693-05:00Tam,
1. PT standards have nothing to do with the k...Tam,<br />1. PT standards have nothing to do with the kind of fitness needed in a combat arms job. "30-mile march with 75-lb pack" would have to replace the run. Then the sit-ups and chin-ups. <br /><br />2. The Army is incapable of moving to one standard - PC is too deeply ingrained in the culture, and politicians are too willing to intervene if the desired "equal" results aren't achieved. It won't happen in any Administration and won't be considered by this one. <br /><br />3. Those climbers are nuts. Bramnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-15907727.post-68367452362343705592013-01-26T13:03:27.429-05:002013-01-26T13:03:27.429-05:00Cool music on the vid.
I admire their ability. Y...Cool music on the vid.<br /><br />I admire their ability. You wont catch me doing it without ropes like that, and this is coming from someone who regularly exits perfectly good airplanes...with parachutes. I imagine a "free" skydiver would have a short career.<br /><br />The question I have on the women in combat thing (which I support), is will the public/congress have the self-control to not meddle when almost no women make it in certain career fields? When they have a radically lower pass rate? Additionally, will they accept it if, in 10 years, the military comes forward and says "here is the stats, of those that make it, after 4 years of humping 1.5 times their body weight 75% are medically retired. We dont think it is worth the medical costs to allow women into X MOS."<br /><br />I dont know if that will happen or not, but it might.Chemnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-15907727.post-45418162452175644342013-01-26T10:56:35.036-05:002013-01-26T10:56:35.036-05:00Well, ok, let me restate that. I used to climb wi...Well, ok, let me restate that. I used to climb without ropes. I've never been anywhere near in shape enough to climb like those folks are.perlhaqrhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/01920117742664645165noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-15907727.post-82491718970089322722013-01-26T10:52:50.467-05:002013-01-26T10:52:50.467-05:00I used to climb like that. And then I wasn't ...I used to climb like that. And then I wasn't 16 and "immortal" any more and I stopped.perlhaqrhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/01920117742664645165noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-15907727.post-82850312724500614182013-01-26T10:40:44.924-05:002013-01-26T10:40:44.924-05:00i did a bit of climbing back in my mi-spent youth,...i did a bit of climbing back in my mi-spent youth, but nothing like this. ropes, pitons, carabiners. i liked to be connected to the rock by more than my fingernails.Critterhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/04452486400885521156noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-15907727.post-1939498589871077772013-01-26T08:08:27.232-05:002013-01-26T08:08:27.232-05:00Didn't finish watching. I do have acrophobia -...Didn't finish watching. I do have acrophobia - I have no problems in airplanes but I can't even look straight down from a balcony if it is higher up than a few stories without starting to feel weak on the knees. Also mild claustrophobia - I can handle, say, caves, as long as I can stand up but do not ask me to get anywhere where I'd have to crawl, even having to bend because the ceiling is too low makes me uncomfortable. I have been trying to condition myself away from both phobias but while I'm nowhere as bad as I used to be I haven't been completely successful. <br /><br />I'm not quite sure whether I'm envious of those people or consider them idiots. Bit of both, maybe.Marjanoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-15907727.post-21095550289861654812013-01-26T07:40:40.878-05:002013-01-26T07:40:40.878-05:00Thank you, Tam and anonymous 2:11!
I haven't f...Thank you, Tam and anonymous 2:11!<br />I haven't felt this close to fainting since I read an article about epidural anaesthesia.T.Stahlhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/05351094909296928284noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-15907727.post-89533676944365722922013-01-26T07:03:16.609-05:002013-01-26T07:03:16.609-05:00FALLING IS NOT THE PROBLEM
IT IS THE SUDDEN STOP !...FALLING IS NOT THE PROBLEM<br />IT IS THE SUDDEN STOP !NAVIGATORnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-15907727.post-16526161767480909422013-01-26T07:01:48.001-05:002013-01-26T07:01:48.001-05:00Unnh...yeah. Now I'm going sit very very still...Unnh...yeah. Now I'm going sit very very still until my immediate world quits spinning. Johnhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/14025768362210499102noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-15907727.post-29461830787622758522013-01-26T02:15:00.788-05:002013-01-26T02:15:00.788-05:00I'm always awed by the phenomenal things human...I'm always awed by the phenomenal things human beings can accomplish. Thrilling.<br /><br />Also, my head is spinning, my heart is thumping a bit and my hands were so damp I had to dry them to type...<br /><br />Thanks, Tam, now I have to drain enough adrenaline to sleep...<br /><br />JSGJustSomeGuynoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-15907727.post-81853448440273158422013-01-26T02:11:57.082-05:002013-01-26T02:11:57.082-05:00Mountain climbing always just seemed like fun to m...Mountain climbing always just seemed like fun to me. This, on the other hand...<br />http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2A_h2AjJaMwAnonymousnoreply@blogger.com