Why build a diving board twice the Olympic height?
čas přidán 20. 11. 2022
The Montreal Olympic Sports Centre has a 20m (65ft) diving board. That's twice the Olympic height. Why would anyone need that? ◾ The Centre: parcolympique.qc.ca/centrespo... ◾ Thanks to @Lysanne_Richard
Edited by Michelle Martin twitter.com/mrsmmartin
I'm at tomscott.com
on Twitter at twitter.com/tomscott
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and on Instagram as tomscottgo
Edited by Michelle Martin twitter.com/mrsmmartin
I'm at tomscott.com
on Twitter at twitter.com/tomscott
on Facebook at facebook.com/tomscott
and on Instagram as tomscottgo
Komentáře
I did ask, and no, I couldn't throw the 360° camera down at the same time!
You shouldn't have asked. You should have just thrown it and asked for forgiveness after 🤣🤣🤣
You could have put it in the zipline...
least nobody can say you didnt try
Dang
It's amazing how many Canadians don't know English.
The precision of diving from so high and landing so smoothly in water is incredible! I have been dropped on my back in water enough from just a meter enough to be scared of 2 meters for life, let alone 20 meters!
i feel on my belly from a 5 meter board it was really painfull so i feel your pain
10m is no big deal at all. Little 10 year old kids do it all the time. It is way easier than you think.
@Ezanee Gires Genious.
Pool bridge rectifier
@helmit14 You can't put voltage _into_ anything.
Legend has it Tom is still up there to this day, wandering the scaffolding and trembling as he clutches the railing. It is said that if you stay still and listen closely, the railing will sway and wobble as you hear "I'm harnessed in, I'm harnessed in, I'm harnessed in."
😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
@Sable Saber I'd be like Beni from The Mummy, just pulling out symbols of every religion and praying in their respective languages. Lmao.
😄
Okay that actually made me crack up out loud XD
@Vina Waldren b j . n BHI
It's one thing to drop like a stone, it's another to drop with such grace and do all those flips and turns. Absolutely crazy talent.
@6SecondSilence petty
i watch "freerunning schlappen" all the time. they dive from 25 meters aswell and do flips and stuff. but this is still something different. perfect landing and perfect flips. not an inch over or underrotated.
@lakoka You don't seem to understand what 'talent' is. Anyone could do this. A dog could do this, if they were forced or trained to. Natural "talent" has zero bearing here.
@6SecondSilence its talent to even dare do this
Zero 'talent' involved here. It's practice and work. Anyone could do this, but few choose (or have the means) to.
Tom just gave more publicity to Olympic diving than the Canadian Olympic Committee or the sport itself had ever done. Amazing exposé.
I once heard a stand-up comedian say that they should have a regular dude try all the Olympic sports, just to show you how hard it is and just to show you how easy the athletes make it look. Diving looks easy: you’re just falling! But it, like many things, is much harder than it looks.
@Cal Saves the World Ah yes, because every sport is simply business only. After all it's not like half the worlds population enjoys soccer recreationally lmao.
@Cal Saves the World It is good that the other sports of the world are not recreational. Nope. Strictly business.
@Cal Saves the World then what counts as a real sport
I would LOVE to see a video on the physics of what it takes to be safe jumping from that height
I've never dived from that height, but from 10 metres all it takes is squeezing every muscle in your body as hard as you possibly can
Open water generally isn't stationary. Pools will be a higher impact because of this.
@Alexabix that is terrifying
@Alexabix Also I think the flipping manuever actually slows you down by increasing air resistance
Probably the splitting of the water beginning from the toes and tensing of the muscles so that it doesn't beat your organs up.
There is a place on Charleston lake, canada (close to where I grew up) called Indian head. The natural formations in the rock make it look like the head, and has been a "rite of passage" for many, many years. It is about 75-80 feet (22-24 meters) from the water and a few people have died there not knowing how to jump it. My friend and I jumped when were young. Told to jump with shoes on or you could hurt yourself. So we did. I landed just fine, (what a rush) my friend came into the water on a bit of angle hitting his back on the water as he landed. Knocked the wind out of him and he could hardly swim after. We hailed a boat over and he took us to land. It can be really dangerous if just the smallest thing goes wrong. He ended up being ok, but had a sore back for a week.
Give a thought to the ancient ancestors who carved that rock into a head eons ago, like an ancient mount Rushmore, since withered to look natural.
I feel like the dumbest people are the ones responsible for naming landmarks.
Thanks for the chat Tom! It was a pleasure meeting you and have a chance to talk about my sport!
Je pourrais me faire offrir un million$ et je ne ferais jamais ça. Vraiment impressionant! Ton parcours est vraiment fascinant, bon succès dans tes projets à venir.
Bravo Lysanne! Thanks again Tom. An inspiring video.
a very brave lady, i could feel the passion about your sport in the way you talked, wishing you all the best in life
You were truly amazing. Athletic Royalty ^_^
🇫🇷🇫🇷🇫🇷
Love how Tom restates facts about how safe he is to himself when he's afraid.
I've done a (very basic) dive off a ten metre board (many years ago). I enjoyed that. I suspect that, forty years later, even getting up to the 20 metre board would cause me palpitations
I'm getting them just watching the video. 😵
The only time I jumped the 10m platform was on my 14th birthday, the view from the ground and the view from up there is so different.
The most interesting part of this video to me is how small her splash was. I mean that was like 2 feet? I splash bigger when I dive from 10-12 feet. Like the form to go in with such a small splash is crazy, literally a human bullet
This is my dream. I'm cripplingly terrified of heights. My body nearly shuts down from fear. What an experience that must be.
I feell it at the beginning am I’m not there. 😱
@UrsaMajorPrime what are you jumping over? I'd feel safe doing that over water but over concrete or something I'd be terrified.
The Marine Corps confidence course did that for me. 12ft in the air and a rope 6 feet away I had to jump and grab. If I fail to even try, I don't become a Marine. It was a clarifying moment I will never forget.
Go for the GOLD!!!
That dive was truly breathtaking, it gave me tingles down my spine. Absolutely amazing athletic ability to dive from that height. And a thank you Tom for showing the whole of CS-tv that this facility exists in Canada, as I'm sure I'm not the only Canadian that had no Idea we had a 20m indoor high dive platform.
Taller than the sphinx btw
65.6 feet
I’ve dived from that exact 5m board. It felt so high, it took me a day to work myself up to it. I never noticed the 20m board.
One thing Tom has taught me over the years that's never explicitly said. Doesn't matter how many crazy places you go, you'll never lose your fear of heights.
It's not the heights...it's that sudden stop at the bottom that worries me!
With a bit of effort, you can rationalise all those fears down to negligible levels.
48 years ago I, together with two friends, started the diving club in my home town, since this got us dedicated training time in the city pool. We only had the standard 1 & 3 m spring boards and a 5m platform there so I never even tried 10m platform diving. I still make backwards volts from 3-7m cliffs but I would never even dream of dropping in from 15+m meters! That said, it was really nice to see that they managed to fit higher platforms into the old olympic facility!
As a Montrealer who's gone to the surrounding exhibits for years, I had no idea there was a 20m diving board there this whole time!
It's somewhat new.
Same and i even had swimming lessons there
I gotta say, Tom, it was really interesting being able to see the two different points of view in this video; one from the athlete and the other from an official! It's interesting how different the perspectives are, even within the same sphere of influence. Great video!
"Because I am 41" That hit me like a tonne of bricks.
@Noa Binnendijk Yet it's also largely true. Someone who's physically active all their life can likely do far more at old age than someone who was couch potato for 40 years. Doing smart decisions improves your lifespan and quality of it, on average.
So will the water
Healthy living. Take care of your body and it will take care of you.
@Alexander Roderick don't worry, this is a common misconception, that if you do everything right you'll be fully able for most of your life. I'm 19 and get sore walking downstairs. It has nothing to do with how you spend your life.
@dvrk I used to be an athlete like you, then I took a crippling blow to the knee. And now every bit of movement hurts. :D
It’s really cool to hear the guy from the Olympic park talk about making sure that the giant investment for the Olympics in the 70s should be something that still pays off today.
I think we all can agree on the awesomeness of the protagonist, but I am also awestruck by the beauty of that building! Granted the interior is a little to plastic-like and colorful (brings up association with nineties-/twothousands-fastfood-chains, but the monumentality combined with this graceful and elegant form, raw concrete and glass, wide spaces...fascinating!
I use to be terrified of heights. So To get over it I forced my self to go sky diving, bungee jumping, high diving etc and now I’m proud to say I’m still terrified of high diving 😬 perhaps its because you having nothing else attached to you or maybe just the fact you’re half naked and vulnerable but this is the only activity I’m still petrified of
I remember when I got old enough to jump from the 10m plank back when I was a kid, and I wasn't smart enough to not have my feet parallel to the surface of the water. Can't even imagine what it must be like with twice the height
I've been there! Granted, it was over a decade ago on a school trip, but it was really cool. We had some free time to swim around in the shallow and deep pools (I jumped off the lowest high dive and it was terrifying), then they gave us all life jackets, turned on the jets(!) that they have in the pool, and had us run a safety exercise on how to group together in turbulent water. Behind the high diving boards, I don't know if it's still there, but there was a really deep column of water, maybe like 30m deep? I don't remember what it was for, maybe diving in the only-underwater sense. There was a plastic chair at the bottom that I guess had fallen in and no one bothered to bring it back. Very cool place, and a hell of a local swimming pool.
Chair at the bottom seems a standard challenge in that other meaning of diving. That said, it's traditional to make pools very deep just below high-diving platforms just to avoid hitting the bottom and getting hurt from that after surviving all the other dangers.
Mad respect for that lady. 41 and diving 20 metres like it's nothing. Absolute mad lad.
@Lysanne Richard 💦
Or mad lass if we wanna be technical
@Hanny Dart It's simple physics: time dilation as you approach the speed of light.
Mad lass.
Mad lass
I got issues with my ears just jumping from 5 meters. While not being afraid of hights, nothing would get me to jump down that thing. I can't even imagine what kind of training you have to go through to make your body fit enough to just ... function after a jump like that. It's amazing! Tom really knows how to find interesting topics!
Wow, I've jumped off a cliff that was 14 meters, but doing flips off 20 is insane. She's super talented.
Talented? She's been jumping all her life. That's the results of hard work that you're seeing here.
Great job with the audio Tom - I felt the deep boom from the watery impact.
It's nice to see somebody invest in something that they are hoping will benefit people 45 years down the road. If politicians did that they could make a really positive impact on the world
This is exactly the kind of place I'd want to climb up and peek around in so thank you for taking us up there via camera!
Often when i see images and videos of old stadiums from previous Olympics, it's almost always horror stories of empty stadiums left to fall apart from disuse. So seeing one that is not only still fully usable, but accessible to the public, is a breath of fresh air. And the fact that it's from the 90's just makes it even cooler to me.
Everything in metro-Salt Lake City is still HEAVILY used. Park City is literally the home base of the official US Ski and Snowboard Team.
The 1993 (or 4) Olympics in Spain still has their pool in use!
@Niya Kouya And for me as a rower Munich is really iconic. This is the race course I rowed the most times and especially the race to the finish lines amazes me every time. Also they use this lake as a point for bungee jumping.
I guess it's a big difference if these sporting events happen in places where people live who actually care about and take part in the sport or if it's just done for sportswashing or other corrupt reasons (see the current World Cup for example).
@Sam Aronow Yup, most of the venues planned to be used in the 2028 games were either already in place or in development regardless of the games prior to the city selection. This in addition to the extended preparation period means Los Angeles is mostly focusing on transportation infrastructure to accommodate increased demand during the games and improve transportation in the area in general.
I was thinking "sure, jumping off it would be scary but it couldn't be that bad" Then I saw her flip/twist off it. That is absolutely insane
I am terrified of heights, this made me feel dizzy just watching! I could never. Props to her.
I'm not afraid of heights, and my palms got sweaty watching this.
What an incredible lady, and so jovial while she's doing this. I love heights myself and always feel like jumping off when I'm somewhere high up. But it's just a feeling in my mind. I wouldn't dare jump off that board for real, it would mean a direct trip to the hospital!
I jumped off an olympic diving board (4 times) and as someone who is terrified of heights, it took everything I had. Two normal jumps and two dives. Absolutely bonkers. I was 21 at the time. Now that I am 31, I dont think I could do it again.
I'd like to see a brief explainer video on the hand loop safety cable and how the overall mechanism works and operates.
It's so nice to see a former Olympic aquatic venue being used, instead of abandoned like in Brazil.
we take care of things in Canada..
This stadium was/is a complete mess though. It took until like 10 years ago to pay for the entire construction costs of it (built for the 1876 Olympics) and the building itself has so many structural issues that major renovations had to be done on it, hell renovations are always being done on it.
is not being used and we are still paying it
or Spain
@Luis Caldeira Brazil has always been famous--a disused Olympic venue isn't going to change that!
Lysanne Richard did a film called Always Higher about a 22 meter dive in the dead of winter over a frozen lake. It was awesome. I saw it when the Banff film festival came to my city. Would recommend!
How on Earth, or the Universe, can Tom be so brave? Mind-boggling, literally & otherwise. Even watching this video in a comfy room, is very tough.😱👏
I'm not great when it comes to heights as it is, but heights over water FREAK ME THE HECK OUT. You're way braver than me Tom - after that one shot looking down, I'd NEVER have made it down again, I'd have been frozen in place.
Thank you once again for presenting such an informative show. Your videos are always interesting and fascinating 😊
i really liked the length and editting of this one tom! it reminded me so much of older crt era interviews because you showed at length having a conversation while cutting to all the intresting facts or the other fast questions style interviewee. thanks as always☆♡
The self control it takes to throw yourself off a 20m high drop is incredible. I've done rappelling (aka abseiling) from that height, on an open wall where I was hanging free. Even knowing all the safety equipment was perfect it took a lot of self control to overcome my brain telling me to not do it. Believe it or not skydiving was actually easier despite the altitude being magnitudes greater. At that height the fall just seemed less real than 20m.
As they say, it's not the fall that gets you. It's the sudden stop at the end... And that is what your brain is warning you of as well.
@lars göran charming response.... Respecting her effort does not disrespect others. Get a grip, mate.
Take a look at red Bull rampage. They do comparable sized drops but on bikes
I think at the height for skydiving, your brain just doesn't process the danger properly anymore. Our brain isn't evolved to process the environment at that kind of height so it doesn't feel the same danger like, for example, a tree top or even mountain top.
Oh definitely. I'm terrified of heights, but skydiving was easy. I did quite a few static line jumps and a few freefall while at university. Looking down you just see the earth, there's no frame of reference. And then under canopy is just bliss. But when you're on the edge of something, it is very real. Even 2 metres up I get the heebie jeebies.
Absolutely incredible and inspiring. Thank you for sharing this with the world 😮
This summer I jumped from the classic 10 meter diving board. It was the highest I had jumped from with the second highest being like 3 meters. I just went up and did it, but this I don't know about. I would definitely give it a second thought standing up at the platform, though I would like to give it an actual try.
Are 10 meter diving boards accessible to everyone or is it only for trained or licensed divers ?
All through my youth from the age of 6 and up through my 20's I was regularly diving from the 10m board, but seeing that 20m drop from my 55 year old eyes totally made my brain recoil in fear!
Kudos to you Tom for overcoming your fear of heights.
Toms face during the interview, 18m up, was pricless. Trying to be polite and also holding of a heart attack.
The contrast between Tom Scott in support and the diver that is going to jump down without any is hilarious
yes it is.
I really like your videos. Nothing too controversial and always a lot of fun and super interesting. Thanks!
Tom is a lot braver than me getting up there and I have no words for how incredible Lysanne is for being fearless and her amazing jump
When I was young, I did a lot of diving 3-5m. In my 30s, I was t-boned by a Suburban in the ice and got checked out by the doctor. It turned out all the twisting of my neck as I hit the water wrong had left me with a very flexible spine which had saved me from further injuries in the accident so body impacts from diving aren't necessarily a bad thing.
I've jumped off a 10 meter high dive, just once. Straight down, not trying to do anything but survive. It is an extremely intense experience. I cannot imagine doubling that height and then trying to do something athletic on the way down. This has to be one of the most extreme sports out there. There is absolutely zero room for error.
Survivable errors include hitting the water with the wrong body end (but still using the proper technique to break the surface), making fewer saltos than planned (but still becoming a vertical stick before impact) etc. So the margin for error is tight but not zero.
The most terrifying thing for me is the wobble of the structure. Going up to a very high waterslide or something like that is way worse than actually going down.
As someone terrified of heights, I remember standing on a diving platform and realizing that it isn't just the height of the platform that is frightening, but that you can see all the way down to the bottom of the pool. It makes you feel like you are that much higher up.
Yes, it adds another 5 meters. IIRC
@Nico Lala is ur pfp robot soldier tf2
@Cole.- I think thats more about disrupting the surface tension than making the surface visible
For me diving boards are actually less terrifying than normal drops, but that could be because I'm not afraid of the height itself, but I'm afraid of FALLING... And for some reason, falling into water is less scary for me than falling into, for example, an airbag...
What a dive! Absolutely perfect and incredibly brave.
I used to live right next to that center a few years ago, I would walk by it every day on the way to the metro, and I had no idea there was a 20m diving board there all along. How cool to learn something new about my city. :D
What an amazing video, I've been there many times and never even spotted the 20m!
I remember jumping from a cliff with friends. One guy mesured it and it was 60 feet, almost 20 meters. We jumped with shoes on to avoid hurting our feets and it was awesome. Just have to jump far enough to avoid the rocks.
@Nick HV Well no. You don't really have to do it.
@Emir K No.
Was looking for this. Me and my little brother jumped from 15 meters off a waterfall when we were 10/12 years old. It was really scary but you just have to do it.
@Colin source
@eve-LL blyat I saw a video of someone dying doing that, then one by one his buddies jumped off the bridge to try and rescue him, as he was floating face down. They all came to the same fate.
I'm afraid of heights. Made me nervous just watching you two on the platform!
I could sit down and dangle my legs at that 20m board but my body would physically not allow me to jump down there. What she's doing is nuts, props to her.
nope. not dangling any legs at this height thank you very much. I might be intrigued walking up there harnessed in, but that's all i can do.
Although I'm not afraid of heights, I could not go anywhere near the edge, because something in the back of my brain would say "don't you wanna find out what happens if you jump down there?" I haven't had thoughts of Sudoku for almost a decade, yet the call of the void is still there and scares the hell out of me.
@Ashley Crow Honestly I would fall of, I cant go near and edge like that.
For a non-athlete it’s seriously dangerous to be up there. It’s like falling from two 2-story houses stacked on top of each other. From such height it doesn’t matter anymore whether its water or concrete you’re landing on. If you don’t enter the water perfectly vertical you’ll be in the hospital. So being a non-athlete, considering to jump off there, is same as considering jumping off two double story houses stacked on top of each other… That’s something you do when you don’t like life anymore.
This judge gives her a "10".
Brilliant interview, so well paced and timed questions, especially the end. Lysanne has a fascinating story and life, great video.
I jumped from 5m once. I defenitly hurts a bit on the feet, I cant imagine how bad it is from 20m.
It's not as painful as you might think. More of a full body impact at that height that doesn't really hurt but more feels a jolt through your body
The amount of control you have to have over your body to be falling through the air and only turn your body half a rotation is insane to me. I would be spinning uncontrollably if I tried that.
Huge props to Tom for doing this. My palms were sweaty just watching.
The highest jump to water I've ever done was about that height. A few meters short from the full 20 meters. It was in an abandoned quarry after a climbing trip. I sure as hell didn't have the courage to do any flips, even though I've also done a lot of parkour.
I always wanted to try jumping from higher than 10m but then again I already have to push myself hard to jump from there. Huge respect to Lysanne for still doing this at 41!
@lars göran who said she's the most amazing diver to walk the earth? You got some big incel energy.
In the world championships, men jump from a 27-metre-high (89 ft) platform while women jump from a 20-metre-high (66 ft) platform. But yes sure, she's the most amazing diver to ever walk the earth...
@chouseification ok, you convinced me... Never gonna jump of a bridge higher then 1 meter 😂🙈
@EmoJackLP much more so... at an indoor swimming pool, you have very clear water and know if you're safe below you... on a river, you did some safety dives to check for tree trunks right under your dive site, but of course stuff could move in the current while your group was jumping. That one train bridge over the Mississippi a friend had jumped many times, but he was drunk that day and not safe to jump - so I did it a few times solo while he sat in his boat by the shore. If I broke my back, I would have been a goner with that guy around to assist, but oh well...
@chouseification id imagine a bridge would be as "bad" (as in intimidating) as a tower at a swimming pool, right?
That is unbelievable and in my own backyard too!! Great job Tom!!
The budget for this building was $250M, and it ended up costing $1.4 BILLION. It took the city just over 30 years to pay it off.
The world record high dive is 58.8 meters. Imagine what it'd look like to the ground from just over triple the height Tom recorded the jump from.
That was completely brilliant. Thanks Tom and Lysanne!
Tom, you are quite a brave soul. I've done highrise window cleaning, and have been a roofer with one bounce under my belt for about 10 years now. Watching this made my hands sweat in a way they haven't in a long time. Kudos eh. Lysanne Richard, you are nuts. Nice dive though.
For the curious: "In 2015, Laso Schaller broke the cliff jumping world record. He jumped 58.8m (192ft) off the Cascata del Salto in Switzerland, reaching an eye-watering 76.4mph (122.31kmh) in the moments before he hit the water. "
@astrojeff You put enough pressure to something, it turns into a liquid. Whether that matter used to be solid or gas, compressive force will turn it into a liquid. Now. Concrete is more dense than water, but it can be compressed. What we're looking at here is not density and comparing those, we're looking at the percentage change in density in the material when compressive force is applied. Concrete has a compressive strength, in other people have calculated the amount concrete compresses under pressure and put it into a formula that tells them when it compresses under pressure and how much. Liquids do not have a compressive strength as any compression is on such a small scale to be next to immeasurable. I don't know about the whole water harder than concrete bit. Harder is still a really weird word without a direct term in physics to compare it to.
@Gabriel Ståhl But if you're (the pilot) in a small plane too much fear of the ground can be just as dangerous.. 😱😅⛽⏳😭⌛☠😇
@ShloKing I was replying to your statement, “water is incompressible. Concrete can certainly be compressed” and wondering whether this is why water is “harder than concrete” at higher impacts. I studied engineering and understand the difference between gasses and liquids/solids, that the latter are much less compressible than the former. But I was skeptical of your claim that seems to indicate that concrete is more compressible than water, or that concrete IS compressible and water isnt. Either your statement wasn’t clear (hence all the people commenting), or you need to explain why concrete would be more compressible than water, rather than explaining what we already know, that solids and liquids are less compressible than gases.
@astrojeff Already cited sources stating that the whole point of differentiating between gases and liquids (because both are considered fluids) is that gases compress, liquids do not. This is in fluid mechanics textbooks, on national geological survey sites, on Wikipedia pages about thermodynamics, etc. Of course according to non-classical physics such as quantum mechanics, everything is compressible. However for the sake of 99.999% of applications... Assume liquids are incompressible. This is why hydraulics work, this is a fundamental law, liquids exist due to pressure and the whole point is that a material is compressed until it turns into a flowy liquid mass that is as compressed as it can get (without assuming stupidly extreme temperatures or pressures where the normal laws of physics don't apply anyways) minus extremely negligible change that's barely even measurable on the scale of thousandths of a percent changes in density. To make your statement correct every solid and GAS is compressible. One of the defining traits of a liquid, again, according to fluid mechanics, is incompressiblity.
@Sambenmoser If you're going terminal velocity then yes, water simply can't shift out of the way fast enough, now matter how perfectly you dive. But it's less that and more the matter of when you fall unconscious from initial injuries or the pain, you'll drown. Hell, if you're unconscious you can drown in a puddle if it's deep enough.
As someone terrified of heights. I had anxiety the entire time you two were on that walk way.
We got to give you some cred for going up there Tom. I know you don't like hights 😊 but every time you go up to hights you're pushing limits and getting used to hights! Keep doing what you do. That's how the divers also come to were they are to day. I am speaking from experience.
now I'm super curious what the effects of high diving on your body are. Does your body ever adapt to having to repeatedly recover from that?
Aside from the amazing feat of athleticism on display here which was amazing, that interlocking-ring design of the catwalks is really cool!
Soyons fiers de notre Stade Olympique et de ses athlètes! :O
Got a severe fear of heights. I dived from a 3 m (10 ft) springboard once. Absolutely terrifying! I felt like I was in the air for minutes! And the water hurt like hell when I landed. I am certain that I would die if I jumped from 10 m (30 ft) and I would shatter into fleshy fragments falling from 20 m...
@Lone Starr LMAO! Dont give 'em any ideas!
If you had severe fear of heights, you wouldn't have jumped from 3 m.
We had a wharf on the island in Maine we grew up on that everyone had to go off the top perch to prove their manhood at some point. Some were smart and did it at around high tide (15 to 20 feet). Others (me) did it at around low tide (35 to 40 feet+). Never do that again. You jump out, pause and then start to fall and just keep picking up speed until you felt the cold slap of Maine ocean water, hard. Then you go down. Down to water layers where it gets colder and colder. Now you were freezing, out of air because it was slapped out of you when you hit the surface and you are a long way from that surface where the air is. As I said I will never do that again.
I used to love jumping from 5 m when I was 10. Very few from my swimming class dared it, at that age it felt more like 20 m 🤣
Good on you for conquering you for beating your fear, even if it was only once, meanwhile i have been jumping from 2+ meters (highest I've ever gone was 12 to 15 meters, but i haven't encountered any higher cliffs where you're not guaranteed to hit the wall or bottom if you jump) since before i knew how to swim (i would just surface and climb onto dad's back) so from when i was 3 or 4.
I was born and raised in Montréal and I left to live in various cities in the province of Québec and in the 80's and 90's I went countless time to La Piscine Olympique (The Olympic Pool) especially during the summer when the temperature could reach 40 Celsius with the humidity factor (104 Fahrenheit). As I'm afraid of heights, I only went a few time to the highest normal height to jump into water. For the life of me I would never never never ever go to this insane height even if I wasn't going to jump. I'm 50 and slightly overweight so I'd probably die of a fear-induced heart attack.
I'm not all that scared of heights, when I know there's a railing between me and the edge. I'd be scared my knees buckle... Great job Tom :)
That's gotta be such a terrifying rush. I don't think I could ever get over the mental hurdles required to jump from that high.
Props for going up Tom, would be scared af myself and know you struggle with heights too
The bucket truck I use at work is 20m at full height- I've dropped branches and things as we're working from there and the couple second lag always surprises me. Absolutely no way in hell I'd jump that distance.
Well done Tom! As a person who is also afraid of heights you are an inspiration. And imagine, you actually conducted an entire interview at the same time, incredible.
@SECONDQUEST well you do make a good point maybe i was a bit too judgmental
@BCRox when you're incredibly intelligent and you can rationally say you are safe and overcome things.
He cant be that scared of heights. I & most with real fear wouldn't be able to take a single step on that platform. Not even to fallow her crazy butt 👀 Haaaaa
@Aaron, check out the one he did for Pulpit Rock!
@Pipsa Possu So then you know a large majority of people wouldn't do your job, which means you should be proud, not belittle people who won't do it. It's worthless to talk smack on people for not doing things we can do, it makes it look like what we do is easy which degrades the value of our work. Plus it makes you look like a jerk.
Usually in pools like this, you will see people standing at the end of the tall platforms, trying to convince themselves to jump, sometimes they can stay there for 15 minutes before going back down via stairs, I used to have a fear of heights, my best advice is to just jump, keep walking until you go over the edge and keep arms tightly to you body so you dont grab onto something. because once you start thinking, its too late, and you can't do it. At least that's what I do whenever I have to jump into a pool from a high place.
As a person from quebec I'm happy to see our province get recognition for the many things we have to offer
I really appreciate your effort to show us the world despite your obvious uncomfort being high above the ground. I remember the scenes up on the rooftop of the opera... I don't laugh, I feel you. And I'm thankful that's you not me high above there 😅
Montreal. Great to see that facility continue and expand. Can't wait to get back up there.
Oh my goodness! I've only tried the impact from hitting the water from the 3 meter platform, and that's quite enough for me 😅
In the Army, we decided to do the Combat Water Survival Test using the 10M board. Just to dial it up. It didn't seem that high until you go up there. Then you had to blindfold your self and walk the plank to drop (w/ all your gear, you have to hit the bottom, un do every equipment and swim back up). That walk, it did have a high pucker factor.
@Connection Lost Sillyvillian. It's to simulate night/darkness and to make sure you you have your wits about you not lose your weapon or drown.
Ah yes, most armed combat does take place blindfolded and underwater, after all.
😱😱😱😵💫
Doing a 10m jump not blindfolded took me some courage already. Doing it blindfolded, walking the plank with gear - oh f*** me.
@James I think that's what the Japanese were trying to do but got sunk on the way there
I used to do maintenance on a cable waterski system. The towers were 8 meters high, and trust me when you are up there and the tower bounces, you are VERY aware of it. That's only EIGHT meters.
This is possibly one of my favourite videos of yours, I really enjoy you interviewing interesting people!
Total respect to Lysanne for diving from that height. I get a nosebleed if I stand on a chair to change a lightbulb!!! Tom, at what height is it considered dangerous for someone to dive from?
I was terrified jumping 10ft into the pool during water qualification in the Marines. Can't imagine anywhere close to that height she's jumping no way in Hell.
Crikey dude, i was getting chills just watching this. I would struggle to walk out on that platform, heights in buildings just spin my head.
The 2 lanyards on your harness are there in order to stay 100% tied off at all times. You only need to have 1 lanyard attached. You hook the second lanyard while transitioning to another area then remove the previous lanyard to continue. There should have never been a moment you were not tied off during that climb.
@Kevin Wetter those cables can hold up small cars with no problem. The design here is up to code as it would be in the states
Is that not obvious?
I actually used to be head lanyarder at my local high dive facility and the lanyards here didn't have enough lanyarding to be double flied. So in my professional lanyarding opinion the lanyards were lanyarded correctly and within global lanyard regulations set by the LLL (The Legion of Lanyarding Lanyarders)
@All Night Cats perhaps he just did the wrong thing by accident, and there is a way to do it
Im more impressed of how that safety line works along one of those straight bridges. Its attached and fixated at several points but the harness is connected in a way that still allows it to slide through without detaching and the safety line being structurally strong enough to hold a person. How is that connection type called and how does it work?
But wait, how did you go back through that ladder where your harness wasn't connected Tom? That bit seems terrifying to do backwards.
I just watched the 2022 Cliff Diving World Series Finale in Sydney last month. Lucky it took place during my short stay there. Haven’t seen anything like this before. Greetings from Germany🇩🇪 and Australia🇦🇺
High diving is truly a spectacle! The Red Bull event in Copenhagen is 27 meters, it's insane...