I've always considered wingsuits to belong to the Darwin clothing collection.
Many people who don't know consider small aircraft in that same line.
Just depends on how you use it.
Proxy flying in a win suit is about the same a super low level aerobatics in a plane.
Wingsuiting out of a caravan at 13,000 is about as safe as doing maneuvers in the practice area in your plane.
Yup, adrenaline can be addictive. To the point that it clouds one's judgement and box them into a corner.It seems like he had an out to the left.. why did he continue to hug the ridge with trees whizzing by at/above his head? Just had to get a *little* bit closer, I guess.
Link to interview with the guy, with his interesting thoughts on risk and flight physics.
http://topgunbase.ws/i-flew-my-wingsuit-into-trees-and-woke-up-in-a-hospital/
Okay that's true, but that's not the kind of activity that is getting people killed, it's the low level, close-in base jumping off mountains, like what our friend in the video was doing.
True, but hey could have been worse for the guy, could have lived a long and boring life of mediocracy, died in a hospital bed, tubes in all sorts of holes, smelling like poop and death, thinking of what could have been. .
Although, with the possible exceptions of mediocrity and death, doesn't that describe his current situation?
Although, with the possible exceptions of mediocrity and death, doesn't that describe his current situation?
This can probably be refined a bit to help define the distribution. There are at least four categories: Did not crash, landed safe; Did not crash, landed un-safe; crashed, lived; crashed, died.I'd say if he crashed and others didn't, he's found mediocrity, correct? The others who didn't crash performed above his mediocre level.
That's too twisted for me to follow - a double negative with a parenthetical...I think the mediocrity qualification should be also quantified by proximity in flight. Those who flew and didn't crash (because they never got close to terrain) cannot be automatically quantified as "above" mediocre.
Agreed?
'Merica's got talent!I can do a quadruple negative.
Can't you not say that you don't dislike it?
True, but hey could have been worse for the guy, could have lived a long and boring life of mediocracy, died in a hospital bed, tubes in all sorts of holes, smelling like poop and death, thinking of what could have been.
"It is not the critic who counts; not the man who points out how the strong man stumbles, or where the doer of deeds could have done them better. The credit belongs to the man who is actually in the arena, whose face is marred by dust and sweat and blood; who strives valiantly; who errs, who comes short again and again, because there is no effort without error and shortcoming; but who does actually strive to do the deeds; who knows great enthusiasms, the great devotions; who spends himself in a worthy cause; who at the best knows in the end the triumph of high achievement, and who at the worst, if he fails, at least fails while daring greatly, so that his place shall never be with those cold and timid souls who neither know victory nor defeat."
The meek do inherit the earth, in ticky tacky little boxes.
He would've made except for the damn trees ...
I think the mediocrity qualification should be also quantified by proximity in flight. Those who flew and didn't crash (because they never got close to terrain) cannot be automatically quantified as "above" mediocre.
Agreed?
Instead, he might get to do that at a younger age since he didn't die and has a head injury.True, but hey could have been worse for the guy, could have lived a long and boring life of mediocracy, died in a hospital bed, tubes in all sorts of holes, smelling like poop and death, thinking of what could have been.
I'm aiming for somewhere between the wingsuit and life-support deathbed extremes.
Sorry, wrong.'Merica's got talent!
:nod: :nod: :nod:As the great philosopher Jimmy Buffett once sang: "I'd rather die while I'm living, than live while I'm dead"
Link to interview with the guy, with his interesting thoughts on risk and flight physics.
http://topgunbase.ws/i-flew-my-wingsuit-into-trees-and-woke-up-in-a-hospital/
I feel bad for the mountain rescue folks who have to scrape these idiots off the rocks.
I don't, sure beats plucking idiots who go try to hike a crazy trail in a tshirt and shorts, navigating off their iPhone, or the fattie who gets shortness of breath in the middle of a wooded area. At least you can have respect for a extream athlete who pushed the edge just a little too far.