The Citizen (KZN)

Whole new take on skydiving

SAFER THAN JUMPING OUT OF A PLANE

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Dressed in a white skintight full body suit and helmet, Maja Kuczynska spins furiously before diving into a fast-moving sequence of airborne gymnastic moves with the elegance of a ballet dancer.

Soaring into yet another spin, she then floats, twists and backflips in choreograp­hed manoeuvres akin to acrobatics or ice-skating suspended in midair. Her expressive and dizzying two-minute display is enthusiast­ically applauded by the crowd seated outside the wind tunnel.

At the age of 17, the Polish high school student is one of about 20 top indoor skydiving competitor­s worldwide who are pioneering the solo freestyle version of a sport they call “flying”.

“It’s more of an artistic approach to the subject,” the slender teen told AFP at 3am on a Sunday as she waited to practise at the busy vertical wind tunnel in the Polish capital, Warsaw.

“It’s such a fast-paced discipline, right now there’s no one to teach me,” she adds.

Vertical wind tunnels, where air moves up a column that stands 20 metres high, were first developed for aerodynami­c tests. Their recreation­al use has gained in popularity among skydivers seeking a safer alternativ­e to jumping out of a plane.

Wind speeds in the tunnel can reach up to 300 kilometres per hour and staying in control requires enormous strength, flexibilit­y and precision.

But there are no limits on creative freedom.

“It’s really different from, let’s say, ice-skating, because it’s been around for such a long time that now it’s really hard to create new moves, while in the tunnel I can go in and play and create something nobody has ever seen before,” Maja adds.

She won the bronze medal in solo freestyle at a major internatio­nal indoor skydiving competitio­n, the Wind Games 2017, last month in Empuriabra­va, northeaste­rn Spain.

Competitio­ns have rounds involving compulsory moves and others where anything goes.

A video posted on Facebook of Maja’s performanc­e, choreograp­hed to Major Lazer’s song Powerful, has gone viral, gathering 30.5 million views in just over a month.

She was only outdone by Singapore’s 14-year-old indoor skydiving sensation Kyra Poh, who won gold in the freestyle category, and Czech competitor Jakub Harrer, who took silver, according to the Wind Games 2017 official website.

Although there are still just a handful of people worldwide competing at the top level in the solo freestyle category, there is already talk of the sport making it to the Olympics. – AFP

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