Pattaya Xbungy Safety Procedure Here - https://youtu.be/eYpZf5NKspY?si=aV8lWFMtl74ic1H1 - Bungy Jumping is steeped in tradition and dates back to an ancient ritual that is performed in the village of Bunlap on Vannatu Island. The “Gkol” that is performed is a rite of passage for the tribesman and entails them Bungy Jumping using Banyan tree vines attached to their ankles. Inspired by this, the first modern era Bungy Jump was conducted by Oxford University Dangerous Sports Club on the 1st April 1979 at Clifton Suspension Bridge, Bristol, England. Members of the club jumped using shock cord instead of banyan tree vines whilst wearing top hat and tails. You can watch a video of this very first jump called: 1979 Bungee jump from Clifton Suspension bridge.
The enormous publicity form the stunt led to the club performing a second jump from the Golden Gate Bridge in San Francisco then a jump from the Royal George Suspension Bridge in Colorado.
All went quiet until the video was seen by New Zealander AJ Hackett who in June 1987 very publicly performed a Bungy Jump from the Eiffel Tower in Paris France. The key difference was AJ Hackett saw the opportunity to commercialize Bungy Jumping into an extreme sport by using rubber instead of shock cord and in November 1988 the Kawarau Bridge 43m Bungy Jump opened. During the first year AJ Hackett had just 28 customers.
In Thailand that year, Pattaya Bungy Jump opened with a jump 17m higher than the Kawarau Bridge Jump at 60m.
The Pattaya Bungy Jump was not only the first in South East Asia but still remains the highest Bungy Jump in Thailand today. Since 1989 the Bungy Jumping craze has exploded and there are now many thousands of Bungy Jumps worldwide all started from the humble beginnings in New Zealand and Thailand.
Music: Hard To Get Along by Dhruva Aliman - Amazon- https://amzn.to/3dgKA52 - Apple - https://music.apple.com/us/artist/dhruva-aliman/363563637 - Spotify - https://open.spotify.com/artist/5XiFCr9iBKE6Cupltgnlet - Bandcamp - https://dhruvaaliman.bandcamp.com/album/hard-to-get-along - http://www.dhruvaaliman.com/ - https://x.com/DhruvaAliman
#Adventure #ExtremeSports #travel
The enormous publicity form the stunt led to the club performing a second jump from the Golden Gate Bridge in San Francisco then a jump from the Royal George Suspension Bridge in Colorado.
All went quiet until the video was seen by New Zealander AJ Hackett who in June 1987 very publicly performed a Bungy Jump from the Eiffel Tower in Paris France. The key difference was AJ Hackett saw the opportunity to commercialize Bungy Jumping into an extreme sport by using rubber instead of shock cord and in November 1988 the Kawarau Bridge 43m Bungy Jump opened. During the first year AJ Hackett had just 28 customers.
In Thailand that year, Pattaya Bungy Jump opened with a jump 17m higher than the Kawarau Bridge Jump at 60m.
The Pattaya Bungy Jump was not only the first in South East Asia but still remains the highest Bungy Jump in Thailand today. Since 1989 the Bungy Jumping craze has exploded and there are now many thousands of Bungy Jumps worldwide all started from the humble beginnings in New Zealand and Thailand.
Music: Hard To Get Along by Dhruva Aliman - Amazon- https://amzn.to/3dgKA52 - Apple - https://music.apple.com/us/artist/dhruva-aliman/363563637 - Spotify - https://open.spotify.com/artist/5XiFCr9iBKE6Cupltgnlet - Bandcamp - https://dhruvaaliman.bandcamp.com/album/hard-to-get-along - http://www.dhruvaaliman.com/ - https://x.com/DhruvaAliman
#Adventure #ExtremeSports #travel
Category
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TravelTranscript
00:00hi
00:03come to Thailand
00:20how you feel scared
00:26but the view is pretty
00:30okay come here
00:32no
00:34don't worry
00:36don't push me
00:38one hand
00:40no pushing
00:42walk walk walk
00:44walk out
00:46walk
00:48walk
00:50walk
00:52more
00:54should I jump
00:56yes
00:58super
01:08super
01:24super
01:26scream
01:28wow
01:30wow
01:32wow
01:34wow
01:36wow
01:38wow
01:40wow
01:42wow
01:44wow
01:46wow
01:48wow
01:50wow
01:52wow
01:54wow
02:06oh
02:10shake
02:16hello
02:18I'm going backwards.
02:25Ok.
02:26Alright.
02:27Are you ready?
02:28I'm ready.
02:29See you later.
02:301, 2, 3!
02:31Woo!
02:32Woo!
02:33Holy shit!
02:34Woo!
02:35Wow!
02:36Woo!
02:37Woo!
02:38Woo!
02:39Woo!
02:40Woo!
02:41Woo!
02:42Woo!
02:43Woo!
02:44Woo!
02:45Woo!
02:46Woo!
02:47Woo!
02:48Woo!
02:49Woo!
02:50Woo!
02:51Woo!
02:52Woo!
02:53Woo!
02:54Woo!
02:55We did it bro!
03:13We did it!
03:14fucking AWESOME bro!
03:15I'm gonna say it again bro!
03:17Just water. Water touch.
03:21Okay.
03:23Okay, head up. Look me.
03:25Okay, slow, slow, slow.
03:27Oh, yeah.
03:31You can fly, right?
03:37Okay.
03:39Good feel.
03:41Good feel.
03:43Okay.
04:05Okay.
04:07Alright.
04:09Be careful.
04:11Backwards.
04:13More, more, more.
04:15Are you ready?
04:17Ready.
04:191, 2, 3.
04:431, 2, 3.
04:471, 2, 3.
04:491, 2, 3.
04:511, 2, 3.
04:531, 2, 3.
04:551, 2, 3.
04:571, 2, 3.
04:591, 2, 3.
05:011, 2, 3.
05:031, 2, 3.
05:051, 2, 3.
05:071, 2, 3.
05:091, 2, 3.
05:111, 2, 3.
05:151, 2, 3.
05:171, 2, 3.
05:191, 2, 3.
05:211, 2, 3.
05:231, 2, 3.
05:251, 2, 3.
05:271, 2, 3.
05:291, 2, 3.
05:311, 2, 3.
05:331, 2, 3.
05:351, 2, 3.
05:371, 2, 3.
05:391, 2, 3.
05:411, 2, 3.
05:451, 2, 3.
05:471, 2, 3.
05:491, 2, 3.
05:511, 2, 3.
05:531, 2, 3.
05:551, 2, 3.
05:571, 2, 3.
05:591, 2, 3.
06:011, 2, 3.
06:031, 2, 3.
06:051, 2, 3.
06:071, 2, 3.
06:091, 2, 3.
06:111, 2, 3.
06:151, 2, 3.
06:171, 2, 3.
06:191, 2, 3.
06:211, 2, 3.
06:231, 2, 3.
06:251, 2, 3.
06:271, 2, 3.
06:291, 2, 3.
06:311, 2, 3.
06:331, 2, 3.
06:351, 2, 3.
06:371, 2, 3.
06:391, 2, 3.
06:411, 2, 3.
06:431, 2, 3.
06:451, 2, 3.
06:471, 2, 3.
06:491, 2, 3.
06:511, 2, 3.
06:531, 2, 3.
06:551.