I’ve never much fancied zorbing, but this about wraps it up.
The video is linked in the article. Who the hell thought it was a good idea to send people down that slope, with just one guy at the bottom to stop the ball, and a long long slope leading to a cliff and a frozen lake 1km away if it rolled off course? :eek:
I just discovered that I knew one of the Zorb inventors when I was a kid - he was the younger brother of a classmate. Rolling people round in a tractor tyre or tube was considered great fun at the time.
However, as for the people who implemented that particular incident, :smack: :smack: :smack: :smack: :smack:
You don’t see them splat, you don’t even see them roll over the edge of the cliff; you just see the ball roll down the mountain chute, out of sight and out of control, while a few people scream the Russian equivalent of “oh shit.”
The scariest part is that this wasn’t just Igor and Boris hitting the vodka and doing something silly. This was an “organised”, supposedly professional outfit taking paying customers. But one look at the video makes me wonder how they could possibly have thought that slope was a good place to do it. The “runout zone” ends in a col where the ball will naturally want to veer off down the slope, which leads to the (out of shot) cliffs. Gravity, dudes, gravity. :smack:
Frankly, it doesn’t even look like that much fun: like if I were strapped into an industrial-size clothes dryer and was told I was rollng down a mountian but had to take your word for it. At least with jet skiing or water skiing (which have high death rates, too) you get the full experience
Imagine a video from inside the zorb, as opposed to this one of an expert paraskiing run. Which would would have the consolation “at least he died happy?”