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Reply to: Could you do it?

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Previously on "Could you do it?"

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  • ladymuck
    replied
    Originally posted by BlasterBates View Post
    No. Not ever.

    Leave a comment:


  • BlasterBates
    replied

    Leave a comment:


  • NotAllThere
    replied
    No way. No how. Not ever. I had enough trouble doing the 3m. I could do that by switching my mind off and just walking forward. Keep legs together, arms by your side and you'll be fine. The choppier the water is, the less it can hurt. Don't lose your head and try a belly-flop... I'm sorry, I got that the wrong way round...

    My head is fine, but like the young man in the video, my knees buckle. It's most strange. I don't feel scared at height emotionally, but my legs are terrified.

    Leave a comment:


  • vetran
    replied
    Did it in my teens the local pool's diving board was 10m.

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  • NickFitz
    replied
    It reminded me of when I was about twelve or thirteen and used to go swimming a lot at the local pool. Having eventually summoned up the courage to dive from the 3m board, I started venturing up to the 5m platform, where I'd dither for ages exactly like those people before ignominiously climbing back down the ladder

    I made it off there after a few months though, so I hope I'd manage to go off a 10m one as well, even if it took a while

    Leave a comment:


  • xoggoth
    replied
    Dunno. Meant to go on the zip wire when I was last in Croatia but chickened out.

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  • Hobosapien
    replied
    Originally posted by malvolio View Post
    In her youth, SWMBO would routinely go off a board that high, but she was getting close to Olympic standard as a diver before injuring her neck off a much lower board into not quite enough water.

    She could still make a standing dive in from the side of a pool without making a splash until comparatively recently!!!

    Never understood why she married a complete non-swimmer who sees diving as just a difficult way to get wet....

    Maybe you were good at a different type of diving.

    In related news, whenever they have a local news piece about the beavers being reintroduced into the wild, to help protect against flooding downstream, I am still waiting for the presenters to crack up about any potential innuendo. They must be pros.

    Leave a comment:


  • clearedforlanding
    replied
    Yes. In Bali in March of this year at a waterfall. Started at 5M, then did the 10M, backed out of the 15M.

    The 10M took a lock longer to fall down than expected.

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  • AtW
    replied
    Originally posted by malvolio View Post
    Never understood why she married a complete non-swimmer who sees diving as just a difficult way to get wet....
    Big life insurance?

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  • malvolio
    replied
    In her youth, SWMBO would routinely go off a board that high, but she was getting close to Olympic standard as a diver before injuring her neck off a much lower board into not quite enough water.

    She could still make a standing dive in from the side of a pool without making a splash until comparatively recently!!!

    Never understood why she married a complete non-swimmer who sees diving as just a difficult way to get wet....

    Leave a comment:


  • AtW
    replied
    Don't try it sober

    Leave a comment:


  • Hobosapien
    replied
    Originally posted by ChimpMaster View Post
    I've jumped off a 5 metre pier into the ocean and that was frightening enough. But it was absolutely exhilarating and I did it again and again afterwards. And I suppose that is the psychology of it.
    My parents' labrador was same first time on a beach where there is a little bridge across a stream. Spent more time jumping off that bridge into the stream than running about on the sand. A few other dogs joined in after a while. Must be some sort of evolutionary instinct, or the lemming gene.

    Leave a comment:


  • OwlHoot
    replied
    Originally posted by ladymuck View Post
    Thirty feet? Yeah, complete doddle, although I'd jump off holding my crotch.

    They say anything up to about two hundred feet is pretty much OK, with a reasonable body position on reaching the water, but much more than that and your accumulated speed means the water just doesn't have time to be displaced and is like concrete when you hit it!

    Also, olympic pools have an air blower at the bottom of the pool below the diving boards, and the diffuse stream of underwater bubbles greatly "softens" the water.
    Last edited by OwlHoot; 24 December 2020, 10:18.

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  • ChimpMaster
    replied
    I've jumped off a 5 metre pier into the ocean and that was frightening enough. But it was absolutely exhilarating and I did it again and again afterwards. And I suppose that is the psychology of it.

    Leave a comment:


  • ladymuck
    replied
    The older lady around 8 minutes was my favourite. It was strangely fascinating to watch.

    Leave a comment:

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