lwronk
Contributor
It is a whole new world to me. I just like being underwater and exploring where most people don't go. No one will play tennis with me because I hit the ball at their heads if they rush the net.
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Wow that's some mega-BS!!!! Thousands of people climb Everest a year! 1 in 2?!Green Hand:But how far are you prepared to push your diving? People climb Mt.Everest [believing that they will be OK - many who are not fully proficient for such a climb but have
US$60,000 to pay a guide] when the hard cold statistics are that historically 1 in evry 2 climbers on Everest will die.
I dunno about THEM, but I'm not an adrenaline junkie.. I just love doing these things because.... well, they're fun! I like excelling at things. I love hitting the ski slopes, and I always have a huge grin on my face after I tear up some glades. It's the same kind of grin I'd get when solving a tough physics problem or doing a good job getting one of our main routers back up and running.Green Hand:I know we all love being in the water, but some divers [specifically technical divers & cave divers] are constantly pushing the boundaries of their personal safety and I find the pyschology of their self belief and confidence in their abilitities [their motivations as well] fascinating.
Some of these people visit Scuba Board and I would love to hear their personal thoughts on what drives them.
Are they adrenalin junkies, control freaks, tech heads, or just pioneers and adventurers?
Green Hand:I know we all love being in the water, but some divers [specifically technical divers & cave divers] are constantly pushing the boundaries of their personal safety and I find the pyschology of their self belief and confidence in their abilitities [their motivations as well] fascinating.
Some of these people visit Scuba Board and I would love to hear their personal thoughts on what drives them.
Are they adrenalin junkies, control freaks, tech heads, or just pioneers and adventurers?
jonnythan:Wow that's some mega-BS!!!! Thousands of people climb Everest a year! 1 in 2?!
Jonnythan, your quite correct - my late night typing was very incorrect. As at 1999 the number of people who had summited Everest was 630 and the number who had died trying was 144, equating to a rate of 23% [nearly 1 in 4].
If you account for the total number of people climbing in all the Himalayan peaks of Nepal it drops dramatically [thank God] to 2.9%.
Sourced from Jon Krakauer's book Into Thin Air.
From 1990 to 2001 there have been 1211 summits and 66 deaths, giving 1 in 18. The numbers in 98, 99, and 00 were more like 1/30 or 1/70 than 1/4.Green Hand:Jonnythan, your quite correct - my late night typing was very incorrect. As at 1999 the number of people who had summited Everest was 630 and the number who had died trying was 144, equating to a rate of 23% [nearly 1 in 4].
If you account for the total number of people climbing in all the Himalayan peaks of Nepal it drops dramatically [thank God] to 2.9%.
Sourced from Jon Krakauer's book Into Thin Air.