I’m pretty sure you are misremembering. Even with a perfect entry you wouldn’t get anywhere near 40 feet down. I’ve jumped off of bridges over the intercostal canals a lot and never went down more than 10 feet or so.
To the OP, cross your feet at the ankles to protect the jewels (this is from painful experience), keep your elbows tight to your sides and cover your face with your hands. This will keep your chin from taking a whack.
I’ve heard 1/2 the drop distance is what you would like underwater.
I do remember on some high jumps looking up at the surface and other swimmers from below. It does seem far but I think part of that is due to refraction, and the other part is due to time to overcome inertia and water resistance from your stop and start noticeably heading up under your own power. By putting them together it seems logical that the mind would place you ‘deeper’ then you actually were.
I’m skeptical about 40 feet, but I’m also skeptical about not going more than 10 feet. As a competitive diver, I found that it wasn’t difficult to touch the bottom of a 16’ pool when going off the 3 meter, and I’d have to actively avoid the bottom of a 14’ pool.
Since you are most likely past the age of procreation, I see absolutely no downside if you choose to take this totally unnecessary risk of removing yourself entirely from the gene pool.
Given all the personal experiences being posted, I’ll just reiterate my earlier that this is an old, fat guy.
There is no parallel between his chance of surviving this injury-free and a youngster of normal weight with young musculoskeletal integrity doing the same thing.
Not only will the deceleration deformation forces be much higher because he’s so fat; the ability to withstand those forces is substantially diminished, and the ability to heal from them is further reduced. His abdominal panniculus alone being pushed up into his abdominal cavity could easily rupture his liver, for example.
But if he does try it, I hope it gets on YouTube with a link back here.
I jumped off a 50’ cliff at Dale Hollow when I was 18. Water went up my ass. Had the wind knocked out of me, and if I hadn’t been wearing a life jacket, it might have been a bad thing. Back then I was a 135 pound rippling mass of teenage muscle.
I’m 48 now. If I did it again, and was betting, I’d bet on “death” or “serious injury”. Probably death, if I got good odds.
I also want to reiterate that this isn’t a jump from a cliff into a lake with relatively easy access. This is into a hole with a presumably 18 m climb out. That takes things like a broken leg or dislocated shoulder from painful to deadly.
At 265 lbs and 65 years old unless you are 6’7" or taller and in absolutely amazing shape you are WAY too fat (and old) to do this safely. This is one thing that needs not to be on your bucket list unless it’s the very last thing you intend. I speak as a 6’3" 55 year old man in relatively good shape who has been at and over that weight.
This is NOT like a fat teenager doing this. If you get injured you will not heal quickly and may be maimed permanently. There is a 50/50 chance you can complete it OK but one thing out of alignment and you are doubly screwed due to your age and weight.
For someone your age and weight this is sheer stupidity.
Huh? First, two seconds is too long to hold your breath? Seconds, this could be pretty bad advice based on my experience. I’m scared stiff by falling (which is why I love to do it). The first time I jumped more than say 20 feet I discovered that the term “scared stiff” is literally correct. When I finally managed to trick my body into stepping off the ledge my arms went up. On the way down, I tried to pull my arms down to my sides and was unable to, since all my muscles were firing on full. I doubt I’d have been able to take a breath, either. I’d far rather have a full lungs than empty ones.
I’ve been plenty of places where the water is 80 degrees from just under the surface to nearly 100 feet down (scuba diving). I’ve swum in the clear waters of Crystal Creek in FL, which isn’t very deep, but is the same temperature throughout – since it’s flowing water, there are no layers. There may be holes with cold layers at the bottom, but I didn’t notice any.
Silliest thing I ever heard. I would expect the tires to hit the water last, and that would probably be the least damaging outcome.
Thank you for your calculations and the experiences you have related.
My initial fascination was the free fall experience. But when I learned it would only be 1.9 seconds, it surprised me. I wanted more.
My other thought was, I am just gonna land in water. No big deal. Then you folks told me I would hit it at 45 MPH, and some of you related experiences. It was then that I understood that water isn’t so soft.
Thank you for sharing your wisdom. Ignorance fought. I ain’t gonna do it.
Go anyway. Throw a big rock. It will make a nice splash which is kind of gratifying. You might even feel the spray. Then sit back and enjoy the beauty of the cenote.
I normally would encourage just about anyone to jump out of an airplane, but at 120 kg the OP may have difficulty finding a dropzone with a parachute big enough for him. Most DZs have a weight limit of approx. 100 kg.
If he wants to experience freefall that’s the way to do it, but he might have to call around to find a DZ to accommodate him- and then travel a fair distance to get there.
If you just want a freefall, then a tandem skydive (long) or bungee jump (short) should both be a lot safer. Not safe, necessarily, but certainly safer. Please note I am not an expert in any of these disciplines.
There is a much better way to experience free fall. It’s called skydiving. You don’t get much freefall at first, but you can work up to it. And who knows, maybe these days there are tandem freefall jumps for beginners.
There definitely are tandem freefall jumps for beginners, and there are other teaching methods besides static-line progression as well- methods that allow a person to experience freefall from the first jump. Accelerated Free Fall (or AFF) is one such method.
However, as I pointed out in post #53, most skydiving centers don’t have parachutes big enough for someone weighing 120 kg.
There are also those indoor free-fall rides with a huge fan under the base. It might not look like free-fall but the wind/weightlessness feeling is basically the same.
You might need to lose a little weight for those, though. The one in Seattle has a cut-off of 250 pounds if you’re over 6 feet, and 230 pounds if under 6 feet.