In the past I've posted several video clips of BASE jumping and wingsuit flying. I've pointed out that some of the sport's practitioners appear to take insane risks. Well, it seems those risks are taking their toll on one of the sport's most renowned locations. Der Spiegel reports:
BASE jumping is a variation of parachuting, giving adrenaline junkies a buzz that lasts just seconds. But BASE jumpers don't dive out of planes. They jump from tall buildings, bridges and cliffs (BASE stands for Buildings, Antennas, Spans and Earth). And anyone who really wants to experience the feeling of flying comes here to Lauterbrunnen.
The village is a mecca for BASE jumpers. Enormous rock walls soar vertically at heights of up to 1,100 meters. Extreme sports fans come from around the world to enjoy the ultimate high, and there were around 15,000 jumps in Lauterbrunnen last year.
Many locals, however, are not happy about the visitors. Some 28 BASE jumpers have already died in Lauterbrunnen, including a French jumper who fell to his death in June after his parachute failed to open. For the local residents, the BASE jumpers are a plague from the sky.
. . .
Many BASE jumpers wear "wingsuits," full bodysuits with fabric surfaces under the arms and between the legs. This special outfit gives the jumpers momentum in the air. With outstretched arms they swoop down in a nosedive towards the valley floor, resembling a giant bat. The flow of the air creates a noise, a fine swoosh that sounds like a distant jet aircraft.
Everyone in Lauterbrunnen knows this noise. The cliff from which the BASE jumpers leap is immediately adjacent to the village. In good weather, they can see a Batman flying by every minute or so.
Right next to the gondola station is the Stechelberg elementary school, from which there is also a good view of the cliff. At the beginning of July, the schoolchildren were celebrating the end of their school year with a theatre performance, followed later by a buffet on the football field. It was a beautiful day with a bright blue sky -- BASE jumping weather. Once again, the sounds of jumpers in the air could be heard -- and then a shrill scream.
"We looked on as a jumper slammed against the rocks a couple of times. At the end, the man was left lying lifelessly in trees on a slope," says Rahel Charrois. The teacher is still shocked by it today.
Charrois says she has never seen a year go by without an accident. In 2009, a class on a bike trip witnessed a BASE jumper fall to his death. The cost of the thrill is simply too much, insists the teacher. "We teach the children that it is important to be careful when crossing the street. How can we explain at the same time that people go BASE jumping?" she asks.
Anger in the village is growing. Farmers have been complaining about the BASE jumpers for some time because they land in their fields. They can't make hay out of the grass that has been trampled flat. "But the worst part is the deaths," says farmer Mathias Feuz.
Sitting on a stool in his barn, he describes how he once made a deal with two BASE jumpers allowing them to land in his fields along with their friends. He had been close to accepting the sport. But then the two suffered a fatal accident. In all Feuz has been forced to watch seven accidents from his yard, and he can no longer stand it. "I don't want any more people to die on my land," he says.
In Lauterbrunnen, these two worlds are colliding. The locals in this idyllic Alpine community feel like the residents of a death zone. Meanwhile the BASE jumpers are only interested in their next adrenaline rush. Next week, a BASE jump world cup is set to be contested in the Lauterbrunnen valley.
The jumpers have set up a small camp close to the gondola station, the BASE house. Inside the log cabin with a fireplace, Jonathan, a young American from California, is sitting on a plastic stool. He has bloodshot eyes and a scar on his forehead, having just been released from a hospital after he was caught on a tree during a jump in France. A branch pierced his abdomen and ripped into his bladder. The doctors told him that it would not have happened with an empty bladder. So from now on, he will always urinate before a jump, Jonathan says. He has never even thought about quitting.
There's more at the link. More pictures may be found here.
I have to admit, my sympathies are with the locals. If you really want to let it all hang out, risking Mother Nature chopping it off, why not do so in a place where you won't disturb children or cows? Letting that happen in front of others is merely an exhibitionist form of suicide.
Peter
Market solution: charge a landing fee. Add in the price of however many bales of hay that can't be made from squished grass.
ReplyDeleteSpent some time in Lauterbrunnen and Murren in the mid 70's. Striking beautiful and peaceful place. The residents were friendly. So glad I didn't have people screaming to their deaths over my head. Sort of changes the whole place.
ReplyDeleteMaybe the villagers could have a big skeet shooting festival at the same time as the base jumping festival?
ReplyDeleteHeh- I LIKE Brigid's idea :-) I'd also raise the landing fees to a point they'd go elsewhere!
ReplyDeleteFreedom is messy. Sometimes people do stupid things, or things you don't like.
ReplyDeleteYou want concerned teachers and new immigrants from New York deciding whether people should be allowed to have an awful nasty loud shooting range in peaceful cowfield Tennessee?
Goose. Gander.
That said - absolutely they should be liable for the damage they create - at both ends of the jump.
+Jenny
ReplyDeleteapples and oranges since BASE jumping has no relation to an enumerated right.
I was going to suggest to start charging the landers with trespassing, but I like the landing fee idea better.
ReplyDeleteMechAg94
Here's another wingsuit link for you--a guy jumping out of a helicopter, and flying his wingsuit through a narrow hole in a mountain!
ReplyDeletehttp://www.obviouswinner.com/obvwin/2011/9/27/balls-out-crazy-wingsuit-skydiver-jeb-corliss-flies-through.html