Daily Mail

KING OF THE DAREDEVILS

Thought plummeting 24 miles at 834mph was crazy? Just read what else Fearless Felix has been up to!

- From Tom Leonard

AS A BOY, Felix Baumgartne­r could hardly go past a tree without wanting to climb it. Flick through his childhood photos and more than half of them are of him at the top of one. ‘I wanted to climb everything,’ he says. ‘I loved to get to the top of a building, a house, a tree, whatever. I loved watching the world from above. The air is my element. I like to be up there as much as I can.’

And then, of course, once he had got up there, he had to get down again.

Millions of people around the world watched frozen in shock on Sunday as the Austrian skydiver stepped out of a capsule 24 miles above the Earth. It wasn’t just a question of whether he would get

Tdown alive, but also, who in his right mind would do such a thing?

Who would board a tiny capsule and float up by balloon to the edge of space before hurling himself through the air at up to 834mph, faster than the speed of sound?

For many, it was the first they had heard of ‘Fearless Felix’. But, in fact, his plunge — the highest and fastest yet made by a skydiver — was only the crowning achievemen­t on a career that has seen him make more than 2,600 jumps, most of them utterly terrifying.

Baumgartne­r has jumped from a plane and flown across the Channel with wings strapped to his back. He’s jumped off the Christ the Redeemer statue in Rio de Janeiro, and the 101-storey Taipei Tower in Taiwan.

Nothing in Baumgartne­r’s family background suggests he would become the world’s most adventurou­s daredevil.

He was born in the beautiful Alpine city of Salzburg. Baumgartne­r’s father, a carpenter also called Felix, and mother, Eva, a farmer, didn’t do any sport at all — not even skiing in the surroundin­g mountains.

When Felix announced he wanted to be a stuntman, they pressed him to get a ‘ decent job’ — his brother Gerard, now 41, followed their advice and became a chef.

But there was a parachute club near where they lived and as soon as Felix turned 17 — the legal age for skydiving in Austria — he joined the club. Soon afterwards, he watched a video of a man parachutin­g off a cliff in the Yosemite national park in California and was desperate to do it himself.

He spent five years in the Austrian army, where he served in its parachute display team. He says he loved the army and the discipline it instilled in him for his subsequent career.

After the military Baumgartne­r was keen to break into the highly risky field of base jumping (short for Building, Antenna, Space, Earth) which involves leaping off fixed structures or landmarks and opening the parachute at the last second.

It wasn’t until 1995, when he was in his mid 20s, that he found a Texan named Tracy Lee Walker, who could teach him how to base jump. Within two years, he was the base jumping world champion after plunging from a bridge in West Virginia and had soon earned the sponsorshi­p of energy drinks maker Red Bull. HE king of base jumpers, Baumgartne­r loved nothing better than finding a bridge or building that no one had ever tried to parachute from. He preferred illegal jumps as it was ‘more fun’.

He jumped off anything from the Mandalay Casino in Las Vegas to the Olympic Tower in Munich, but it wasn’t until 1999 that he really grabbed the world’s attention.

In April of that year, he jumped from the 1,479ft Petronas Twin Towers in Malaysia — then the world’s highest man-made structure. And, in December, he proved that when it came to base jumping, low jumps could be even more terrifying than high ones when he stepped off the outstretch­ed hand of Rio’s Christ the Redeemer statue, which is just 95ft high.

It was the lowest base jump ever attempted and Baumgartne­r had calculated that it would take him twoand-a-half seconds to hit the ground. His parachute opened with one second to spare.

It was not only dangerous but illegal in Brazil. Baumgartne­r — who had spent weeks training by jumping from a crane in Salzburg — sneaked through customs by pretending to be an archer travelling to a tournament.

While police detained two of his support team, Baumgartne­r — a master of disguise, it seems — got into the park around the statue dressed as a businessma­n complete with suit, glasses and a copy of the Financial Times.

Once inside, he changed into black clothes from a pack that had been hidden in the park earlier and spent the night hiding at the statue base.

Just before dawn, he fired a cable from a crossbow over the statue’s right arm and climbed up to the hand. A devout Catholic, he left flowers on the statue’s shoulder as a mark of respect. Having successful­ly parachuted into the park’s car park, he managed to escape in a getaway car before police arrived.

‘As I was standing on the hand, no more than 20 centimetre­s wide, looking into the rising sun, I realised that I would never feel anything like this in my life again,’ he said afterwards.

Perhaps he would never again have such a spiritual experience as diving off Christ’s hand at dawn, but Baumgartne­r soon had plenty of new ideas.

The following September he jumped off the Forth Road Bridge, escaping in a dinghy. And in July 2003 — after several years of preparatio­n — he came back to Britain for an altogether new stunt.

Jumping out of a plane at 30,000ft over Dover with a 6ft wing made of carbon fibre strapped across his back, he flew across the Channel without power.

Baumgartne­r had to contend not only with a temperatur­e of minus 40c

and cloud cover that meant he could not see where he was going, but also with the inescapabl­e laws of gravity: for every six yards he flew, he fell one yard. The first person to accomplish the feat, he made the 22-mile trip to Calais in seven minutes, hitting a top speed of 220 mph and deploying his parachute when he was 3,000ft over the French coast.

Waiting for him on the other side was a very relieved-looking German TV presenter Katjuschka Altmann, who for years had the unenviable job of being Fearless Felix’s girlfriend.

‘I couldn’t sleep last night, but I never doubted he could do it,’ she said after the stunt.

Baumgartne­r, who sounds like a man who has never had a sleepless night in his life, said it had been ‘brilliant’, although when his parachute opened, the 26lb weight of the wing caused him to backflip and he was forced to cut his left leg free after it became tangled in the cords of his parachute. ‘It was a hairy moment when I had to reach for my knife and cut the chute, but I knew I had a back-up chute and I’ve trained for every eventualit­y,’ he said later. ‘I felt very alone at times but not really scared.’

His plans have not always come off. In 2004, he and three assistants spent six days in jail in Panama after illegally jumping off the bridge connecting North and South America.

But a few months later he proved that sometimes it’s not just what you jump off but what you jump into that matters. He plunged into one of the deepest vertical caves in the world — the 600ft, pitch- black Mamet cave in Croatia — and endured what he called an ‘exceptiona­lly sharp and uneven landing’.

He wore an MP3 player to give him an acoustic signal so he could open the parachute after precisely 7.2 seconds. ‘Any earlier and I would have bumped right into the wall. Any later and there would not have been enough time for the parachute to open,’ he said.

The cave jump had what he would call a ‘hairy moment’ when the parachute opened and twisted towards the rock wall. At the last minute, Baumgartne­r managed to turn and touch down in the only safe landing spot among the razor-sharp rocks at the bottom of the cave.

He has done dozens more base jumps since then, most notably in 2007, when he jumped off the 1,670ft Taipei 101 Tower in Taiwan, at the time the world’s tallest building. Landing in a busy street, he fled straight to the airport and out of the country before the furious authoritie­s could catch him.

Baumgartne­r is not given to profound insights about why he does what he does — indeed, if he were the type to do that, one suspects he would never have gone down this path.

Instead, he comes up with cliches like, ‘The sky is my second home’ and, ‘Everyone has limits — not everyone accepts them.’

Years ago, he said he wanted to be known as ‘the God of the Skies’, adding: ‘The bit I love most is the second before jumping when you know it can all go wrong yet you still do it.’

The Austrian — whose other passions are boxing, mountain climbing, motocross and rally driving — claims his body is starting to ‘creak’ and that he has plans to ‘retire’ and become a helicopter rescue pilot. We will believe that when we see it.

Felix admits, however, that one thing makes him nervous — his mum fussing and telling him to ‘be careful’ all the time.

One would have thought poor Mrs Baumgartne­r — holding back the tears as she watched his descent from mission control on Sunday — had given up fretting years ago.

But, then, when it comes to a mother’s love, the sky’s the limit.

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 ??  ?? Leap of faith: Felix Baumgartne­r jumps off Christ the Redeemer in Rio. Top, freefallin­g from near space and, below, after his safe landing
Leap of faith: Felix Baumgartne­r jumps off Christ the Redeemer in Rio. Top, freefallin­g from near space and, below, after his safe landing
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