Crazy leap of faith from the 'sky god'
from Danielle Gusmaroli in Salzburg
Base jumper bidding for world recognition drops in on Austria from 6,000 ft
He has already hurled himself from the statue of Christ the Redeemer in Rio de Janeiro, and taken the quick way down from the top of the 1,483-foot Petronas Twin Towers in Kuala Lumpur. Yesterday, veteran base jumper Felix Baumgartner chose the skies of his native Austria to make his latest dive.
Floating in a hot-air baloon at a height of 6,000 feet above Salzburg, the 31-year-old briefly took in the 360 degree panoramic views, made a final adjustment to his parachute and hurled himself into nothing.
He fell like a stone until, with a jolt, he deployed his parachute a mere 900 feet above a field frozen rock-hard.
His 15 minutes of fame were witnessed by onlookers below, taking bets on whether his parachute would open.
Baumgartner is little known outside his native Austria, but in two months he intends to be hailed as the "sky god". The stunt was a practice session for the World Sports Awards, which for the first time will recognise extreme sportsmen alongside conventional athletes. Base jumping has recently attracted criticism because of the high number of deaths amoung Baumgartner's fellow practitioners, and the fact that many jumps from buildings are done illegally. Most persue the sport regardless of its obvious dangers, becoming addicted to the sheer adrenaline adrenaline rush. London has seen them leap from the Whispering Gallery in St. Paul's, the London Eye, and, in one fatal descent, the 28th floor of the Hilton in Park Lane.
Next summer Baumgartner intends to go up in a balloon 9,000 metres above Calais, jump out and fly across the English Channel and hopefully land somehwere in Kent.
Baumgartner, who was an army drill sargeant for five years, has done 98 previous base jumps and holds records for the highest and lowest jumps.
"I want to be known as the god of the skies," he said. "It's time that people took base jumping and skydiving seriously. The bit I love the most is the second before jumping when you know it can all go wrong but yet you still do it.
"The sky is my second home. It's where I belong and where I feel most calm."
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