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When Ed Lucero plummeted 105.6 feet over Canada's Alexandra Falls, he set a new world record for the highest plunge in a kayak. What was he thinking? John Galvin finds out.
The BOOF will set you FREE By John Galvin.
Last summer, on a river-running safari in Canada's Northwest Territories, world-class kayaker and madcap steepcreeker Ed Lucero, 37, stopped off at a roadside park to admire Alexandra Falls, a raging 105.6-foot drop on the Hay River. Intrigued, he spent a week studying the "perfect curling line" that flows over the left side of the cataract. Then, on the afternoon of July 31, he strapped on his custom-made polyethylene-armored life vest and nudged his playboat over the edge. After falling ten stories, and being held under for a solid four seconds, Lucero popped out at the bottom—separated from his kayak, but otherwise intact—the shaken-but-still-sentient owner of a new world record. John Galvin: So, Ed. You flung yourself off a 105.6-foot waterfall. That seems a little crazy, doesn't it?
John: Um, OK. Take me to the edge. What was it like?
John: What happened as you went under?
John: Still, it must have hurt.
John: Were you scared?
John: Speaking of your young friends, most of the kayakers you were with are a lot younger than you. Did you think maybe you shouldn't be playing the
same games as them?
John: So you didn't go with the intention of setting a record?
John: Did you know that it would be a record if you made it?
John: Uh-huh. The last time you tried to get some attention, you embarked on something called the Soul Tour, where you drove around the country
spreading the gospel of kayak safety. Do you see a paradox in here anywhere?
John: The park manager at Twin Falls Territorial Park told me he was surprised you made it out alive.
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John Galvin, a frequent contributor to Outside, wrote about the Mississippi trash man in August 2002.
Reprinted with permission from Outside Magazine - January 2004.
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