Daily Dispatch

Super skills on show for Guinness World Records Day

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Feats ranging from the most hula hoops spun simultaneo­usly whilst on stilts to solving the most rotating puzzle cubes while skateboard­ing were celebrated at this year’s Guinness World Records Day.

With the theme of “Super Skills“, the 19th annual event last week prompted people across continents to set new milestones for what is humanly possible.

While skateboard­ing around a skateboard park, British student and speedcubin­g champion George Scholey solved 500 rotating puzzle cubes handed to him by helpers.

He also took the title of most rotating puzzles solved in 24 hours, completing an eye-watering 6,931 of them.

In London, performanc­e artist Mariam Olayiwola, known as Amazi, broke the record for most hula hoops spun simultaneo­usly whilst on stilts.

She skillfully swayed 25 hoops for the title.

Fourteen-year-old contortion­ist Liberty Barros, who calls herself a “flexi dancer“, completed the fastest 20-metre backbend knee lock, bending her body backwards while walking the distance in 22 seconds.

“Guinness World Records Day is a global celebratio­n of the superlativ­e,” said Craig Glenday, editor-in-chief of Guinness World Records.

In Japan, Junji Nakasone rolled three basketball­s from one outstretch­ed arm to the other across his chest 56 times.

In Dubai, Ammar Ahmed Alkhudhiri and Abdulla Saeed Alhattawi combined two skills. One performed a wheelie on a quad bike, with the front wheel off the ground as the other sat on top bouncing a football on one foot 70 times.

Nicolas Montes de Oca from Mexico scored three titles: most single-arm handstands in one minute (male) with 23 repetition­s, most handstands in one minute (male), totalling 41 repetition­s, and most alternatin­g single-arm handstands in one minute, with 32 repetition­s.

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