Cliff Jump Goes Wrong, Painfully
6 Articles
6 Articles
Cliff Jump Goes Wrong, Painfully
An Australian thrill-seeker's bid for a cliff-diving world record ended in major injuries but an unbroken spirit. Vali Graham, 21, attempted to break the døds—or "death diving"—record by leaping from the 140-foot Minnehaha Falls in the Blue Mountains, ABC Australia reports. There's footage of Graham throwing himself off...
The 21-year-old Vali Graham was seriously injured after jumping from the top of a 42.5-metre cliff in Australia. He practiced dødsing, or "death diving", an extreme sport in vogue...
With the good days and the heat, the temptation to dive in order to buy a little freshness is great. Jumping from a cliff, making a salto from a bridge to land in a river. Every year dozens of people get hurt, sometimes very seriously. Broken vertebrae, paralysis, in the hospital center of the Ciotat, Dr. Jean-David Urbano has to rescue wounded divers every week. The doctor reminds him, the dive in height, it does not improvise. (Topics of socie…
The young diver tried to break the world record of diving despite the dangerousness that prevails in this discipline. However, the fall went wrong. Vali...
A 21-year-old Australian man was seriously injured after attempting to break the world record for "death dive" by falling from the top of a waterfall over 42 meters high. More...
Aussie dareveil left with horrific injuries after attempting record-breaking death dive
A young adrenaline junkie was left with horrific injuries after attempting a world record death dive off a 140-foot Australian waterfall. Vali Graham, 21, suffered a fractured spine, sternum, skull, and burst eardrum after he jumped from the top of Minnehaha Falls in the Blue Mountains, a scenic region west of Sydney in New South... The post Aussie dareveil left with horrific injuries after attempting record-breaking death dive appeared first on…
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