Skydivers make unprecedented jump over Everest
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Making the
jump |
Three skydivers made the first ever parachute jump over Mount
Everest, organisers and participants said, culminating years of
preparation. About 32 skydivers from more than 10 countries including
Britain, Canada, the United States and New Zealand have been in the
Everest region for a while to jump from an aircraft flying 465 feet (142
metres) higher than the Everest summit. Wendy Smith of New Zealand,
Holly Budge of Britain and Neil Jones (Canadian/British) made the leap,
said Krishna Aryal, an official of the Explore Himalaya, the agency that
provided the logistics.
"They looked like tiny birds flying in the blue sky as they jumped
from the plane," Aryal, who saw the jump from Syangboche in the Everest
region, told Reuters. "This is the first of its kind and has never been
tried before."
All three were in freefall for nearly half a minute and then opened
their canopies before landing at a flat drop zone after cruising over
the mountain, Aryal said. They used parachutes that were larger than
normal size to help them cruise and descend fast through the thin air of
the world's highest drop zone. All three wore oxygen masks.
New Zealand's Sir Edmund Hillary and Tenzing Norgay Sherpa first
climbed Mount Everest's 8,850-metre (29,035 feet) peak 55 years ago.
More than 3,000 climbers, among them a 16-year-old boy, a 76-year-old
man, a man with an artificial limb and a blind person, have since
reached the top of the mountain. - Reuters |