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Man claims world record cliff jump at Wyoming ski area
Associated Press

JACKSON - A Utah skier says he has set a world-record cliff jump at the Grand Targhee Resort in Wyoming, dropping 245 vertical feet of the back of Fred's Mountain.
Jamie Pierre, 32, of Salt Lake City, said Friday he made his record-breaking jump on Wednesday as a way to spread the Christian word. He has previously dropped 180 feet and said he had been calculating this jump and waiting for perfect conditions for years.
"It wasn't some yahoo stunt," Pierre said. "I chose to do it so it would open up doors so I could witness my faith in Christianity."
Pierre said he had evaluated the jump for at least seven years before determining that his ability and conditions were right. Teton Gravity Research, a company that specializes in filming radical ski feats, measured the distance from the cornice to the landing hole with a range-finder to confirm the world record, he said.
The previous world record was set by Paul Ahern of New Zealand, who jumped 225 feet in 1995, according to an article in Skiing Magazine that mentions Pierre's jumping exploits.
Five photographers and three cinema shooters recorded the event, said Josh Nielsen of Teton Gravity Research.
"It was a really, really heavy and intense experience for all of us," Nielsen said.
He said Pierre managed the event and that the others were "kind of along for the ride."
Observers were solemn before the jump, Nielsen said, adding that Pierre said a prayer before taking off and clocked four full seconds of air time.
About 100 feet into the jump, Nielsen said Pierre couldn't keep his skis under him and went upside down. He landed headfirst and blew a hole 6 feet deep into the snow.
Nielsen said a photographer rushed in and dug Pierre out of the snow.
"Jamie pretty much walked away with a cut lip," he said.
Pierre said he was lucky to be alive.
"I'm lucky I didn't get hurt," he said.
Pierre said he landed in the perfect spot.
"I hit the nail on the head," he said. "The fact that I came out unscathed and landed where I planned _ faith played a role in it."
Pierre said he took grief from his wife and parents for his jump. He was born in Minnesota and moved first to Crested Butte, Colo., and then to Salt Lake City to ski.
Pierre works with his father as a custom furniture maker and for a lawn irrigation business.
Susie Barnett-Bushong, spokeswoman for Grand Targhee, warned anyone against trying to duplicate Pierre's jump.
"This is nothing that an average recreational skier or snowboarder should consider doing," she said Friday. Even for elite skiers, she said, "we would never recommend anybody try this."
In January 2005, skier Brent "Newt" Newton died after jumping off a 50-foot cliff at Jackson Hole Mountain Resort.
Paul Ruff, a former world-record holder with a cliff jump of 110 vertical feet, died in 1993 on a 160-foot attempt.

Copyright © 2006 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Copyright © The Billings Gazette, a division of Lee Enterprises.
 

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I can't wait to see the footage... but I admit that for a dude with a wife and kiddies, it's not the wisest choice he could have made.
 
Jonny D":2s7tlfwm said:
I admit that for a dude with a wife and kiddies, it's not the wisest choice he could have made.

Seems like a good thing he landed on his head...probably doesn't use it much anyway.
 
That picture was on the front page of Jackson's local paper Friday. It took place the day I skied Targhee Wednesday Jan. 25, but of course I had no idea at the time. Some of the NASJA pro photographers lamented missing the scoop. But of of course that was the point. TGR kept it under wraps so they would have the exclusive footage. Susie Barnett-Bushong didn't know about it either. She was out of town that day, at the SIA convention in Las Vegas I think.

Most of the NASJA people and Jackson locals were not that impressed. The prevailing opinion was: if you don't stick the landing, it's not skiing. When Adam and I attended the Crested Butte extreme comp in 2001, the athletes were doing 30 to 70 footers, usually sticking landings even if they busted a pole on impact.

The key to Jamie Pierre's survival was careful study of the snowpack, waiting for several layers of progressively denser snow to form to cushion his impact.
 
World record...

The discussion in the Jackson Hole Tram line the next day wasn't WOW, but more like :roll: .

What next? A jump from a plane at 30,000 feet?

If someone kills himself, is it a world record?

Jamie Pierre didn't even ski away, he needed to be extracted from the snow. If I remember correctly (either from the Jackson paper or from someone in the Tram line), someone did the same thing last year, jumped a 50ft cliff and landed on his head. But this dude die, mainly beware no one got him out of the snow on time.
 
while jamie pierre is a decent skier when he is actually skiing, i can't help be reminded of the quote by the reverend glen plake in the greatest ski movie of all time- fistful of moguls- when plake asks when analyzing non mogul x-treme skiing " is that guy skiing or does he just happen to have a pair of skis on"
 
Ok so he got the world record crater impact cliff huck.

Still at 245ft I don't see how you could stick and ride away from that landing. He's lucky he didn't suffocate. Different than a regular cliff jump yep. Still ballsy as all hell. That cliff is bigger than a lot of the stuff I rockclimb on. Pretty crazy.
 
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