Posts Tagged ‘bridge day rappel’

Rappelling the New River Gorge Bridge

Monday, November 28th, 2011

As far as high adventure goes, leaping off the New River Gorge with a parachute attached to one’s back (aka BASE jumping) is about as extreme as it gets. Over 400 individuals take the plunge each Bridge Day.

But there’s another whole group of thrill seekers that use Bridge Day as a platform (no pun intended) to have their fun too. Rappelling on Bridge Day attracts almost as many participants as BASE jumping.  You may have seen these rappellers raising and lowering flags on Bridge Day.

Here’s the skinny on the rappelling on Bridge Day.

History of Rappelling on Bridge Day

Teams of Rappellers on Bridge Day

Bridge Day rappelling has been organized the same way for 20 years. Benjy Simpson has been the rappel coordinator since 1992 and has seen this part of the festival grow in popularity over the years.

In Benjy’s initial year of coordinating the event, there were 10 teams with 95 total rappellers. The event was opened to anyone who had rappelling experience and was a part of a team with the appropriate gear to participate.

Due to limited space the number of teams has remained capped at 25, but the number of people on each team has steadily risen. Most teams now have between 12 and 16 members.  A blind draw of the eligible teams determines rope positions, as the first position gets the longest rappel and ends up closest to the river.

2011 By The Numbers

Bridge Day 2011 had a total of 23 teams with 311 rappellers. They completed 860 rappels. Only 2009, when there were 25 teams that performed a total of 895 rappels, was larger.

Other Facts

According to registration records, almost a third of the rappel participants each year are first-time Bridge Day rappellers.  The youngest ever participant was 14 and the oldest was 81. These folks have come from approximately 35 different states and 6 different countries.

Benjy relies on a team of volunteers to assist him in putting this event together. Close to 60 people assist in everything, from being part of a safety team to taking registrations and making sure all participants are informed and taken care of while they rappel. Safety is a main priority,  and there has only been one injury in 20 years (in 2002).

The rappel team keeps 2 ropes available just for people who desire to ascend back up from the bottom. These participants must also have their own approved gear; the average ascent takes around 45 minutes. Teams are welcome to ascend their own ropes, but due to time constraints most people use the designated ropes instead.

This feat isn’t for everyone, and the numbers prove it. There were 74 ascents in 2008, 48 in 2010 and 30 on Bridge Day 2011.

Do you want to go ‘on rope’ next Bridge Day?

Bridge Day 2011 By the Numbers

Wednesday, October 19th, 2011

Bridge Day 2011 is history.  Beautiful blue skies and an awesome crowd of BASE jumpers, rappellers, and spectators equaled a pretty amazing day.

A member of the Red Bull Team jumps at Bridge Day 2011

Also amazing?  Some of the numbers from this year’s event:

  • There were 750 BASE jumps by 421 jumpers this year.
  • 11 tandem jumps were made, for the first time ever.
  • $660 was raised by presenting sponsor Subaru for the Fayette County Humane Society.
  • 180 – That’s the number of pick-ups that the Rescue Boat team made this year, more than average.
  • The Fayette County Green Team and the Appalachian State University Outdoors Program collected almost 600 pounds of cardboard for recycling.
  • 82  - The age of this year’s oldest BASE jumper, Donald Cripps.
  • There were 868 Bridge Day rappels.
  • $1,000.  That’s the donation that Subaru made to World Hoop Day on behalf of Stephanie Bercht, the winner of the Bridge Day Tandem Jump Video Contest.
  • BASE jumpers came from 12 countries and 39 states.  9 jumpers were from West Virginia.
  • 1,000 of you downloaded the Official Bridge Day app.
  • 24% of jumpers were making their first BASE jump on Bridge Day.
  • There were 105 trash cans on the Bridge.
Thanks for being part of Bridge Day.  We’ll see you in 2012!

 

Ever Wonder What Happens Under the Bridge?

Saturday, October 16th, 2010

Ever live in an apartment where you can hear the folks which live down below? You can often hear them, but you have no idea what they are doing down there. Same thing happens right here on the Bridge.

Benjy Simpson

Benjy Simpson

Most associate Bridge Day with the vendors, the views and of course the jumpers.

However, there is an entire army of rappellers under the Bridge, doing some very exciting things.

Thursday
For Benjy Simpson, entering his 19th year as Bridge Day Rappel co-coordinator, the preparation for Bridge Day begins on Thursday. Known, respectfully as the “Troll Beneath the Bridge”, Benjy organizes and manages nearly all aspects of the “under the bridge” portion of Bridge Day. It’s quite the responsibility and there is no one better for the job.

Carefully he and his team (holla’ XTR!) rig ropes and braces using knowledge, surgical precision and a variety of knots and attachments.

They prepare the locations for the teams to skillfully slide down rope more than 800 feet.

Friday

On Rope

On Rope

Continued rigging and preparation of Bridge Day highline. Checking, double checking and checking again.
It’s an amazing site to watch this aspect of preparation and watching the team maneuver across beams and perched precariously some 850′ above the river below is enough to make you dizzy. Really dizzy.

Saturday
It’s time to play. Safe. The legions of rappellers, comprising the teams selected via lottery, scurry below the deck of the bridge to prepare for the day. Most try to make as many trips as possible. It is a unique opportunity.

On Saturday at 8:30 am, before the Bridge is open to the general public, a series of flags is raised by a team ascending one of the lines. An United States Flag, a West Virginia flag and a National Park Service Flag all are raised to celebrate the start of the day. At 3 pm, they are lowered signifying the conclusion of another Bridge Day.

While all the action above and on the Bridge is fun and exciting, there is also plenty going on below.

Bridge Day Firsts for 2009

Saturday, October 17th, 2009
What it's all about.

What it's all about.

I’ve been living in West Virginia for a while.  I’m not from here, but I got here as soon as I could.

So I’ve adopted a lot of the state’s traditions as my own.  I hunt and fish.  I’m a big time college football fa.  I eat ramps.

I also do a lot of whitewater rafting.  Well, I did.  Before I started writing, I was a full time, dyed-in-the-rubber raft guide.  That’s how I came to WV in the first place.

As a guide, I had my share of Bridge Days.  But, for each and every one, I was down on the river.  Under the bridge itself.

So this year, my role was a bit different.  I shot video.  I did interviews.  I took notes.

Which means, everything this year, for me, was a first.  I had the access, knew the people, and covered the terrain that makes Bridge Day Run. For the first time.

I love firsts.

For instance, it was the first time I’ve been under the bridge.  Let me clarify:  it was the first time I’ve been right under the bridge.  Like, up in the girders, around the arch, on the catwalk.

I thought I’d be scared.  Usually, I’ve got this thing about heights.  But that wasn’t the case at all.  Maybe it had something to do with the fact that I was out there with the Bridge Day Rappel Safety Crew.  Totally professional and super friendly, they made my first trip on the catwalk a thrill.  It was exciting, not scary at all.

It happened to be the first time I’d ever left the bridge via rope.  No, I didn’t rappel- I didn’t have enough experience for something like Bridge Day.  But I did get on the High Line.  It was a rush, over before it began.  I could have made laps.

Also, it was the first time I ever had the chance to ride along for a river rescue on a BASE jumper.  Now that, I could have done all day.  We’ve said that they are the most experienced river rescue guys for this type of work, and they proved it.  I saw at least 10 water landings, and was up close and personal in two of them.  Let’s just say this-  even for a first timer, it was easy to tell that these guys are the real deal.

Oh, and it was my first time BASE jumping.

Not really.  But maybe next year.

How about you?  Any firsts in your Bridge Day?

The State Of Bridge Day 2009

Saturday, October 17th, 2009
These 3 guys?  They're having a blast.

These 3 guys? They're having a blast.

Well, it doesn’t get much better, y’all.

It sometimes gets a bit warmer, but not much better.

Forecasts for snow turned into a little more than intermitten mist. We reached a normal-for-late-October 42 degrees.  The people who are showing up have been having a great time.

And who is that, exactly?

Well, jumpers have come from as close as Oak Hill, WV to as far away as India.  It runs the gamut age-wise, too.  From 18 to 81, BASE jumping knows no bounds.

Rappel teams have been running up to 6 descents.  Plus, they don’t have to go back up the rope if they don’t want to (!)

Rafters are taking their paddles to the rapids of the New, and, yeah, it’s probably a bit chilly when those waves smack them in the face.  But it’s worth it.

The vendors are out in full force.  They’ve got everything from shortbread to shish-kabobs.  If you like to eat it, someone is cooking it.

The photographers, the families, the Harley Davidson folks, the leaf-peepers, the college kids, the locals, the out-of-towners, they’re all out, as well.

Everyone’s having at least as much fun as me.  Maybe more.

It’s still going on.  There’s still time. Bridge Day 2009 rolls right along…

Bridge Day Weather Update- Friday Morning 10/16

Friday, October 16th, 2009

Morning, everyone!  One more day to go- hope everyone’s ready for Bridge Day 2009.

10 A.M. from the bridge, Friday 10/16

10 A.M. from the bridge, Friday 10/16

Got a weather report for you:  There’s been a lot of clearing up since this morning.

When I got to our Bridge Day HQ this A.M., I made a note in my notebook for this report.  Let’s call it “Accu-Porch” weather.  It was chilly and wet, some mist that threatened here and there to become drizzle.

We left for the bridge shortly after 9, and the gorge was socked in with fog.  The arc of the bridge was visible for at least a couple hundred feet from the north side.

As the rappel safety team briefed under the bridge, things started to clear up in the gorge.  The sky was still overcast (is still overcast).  But the wind, if there was any at all, was very mild.

It was chilly for the first half hour or so on the catwalk, but seemed to warm up after a while.

The weather report right now is reading 45 degrees F and drizzle.  There’s not any noticeable breeze, and really not any drizzle, at least right now.

If I was out in the weather (and I was), I would wear at least 2 warm layers and a waterproof shell.  A hat is a really, really good idea.  Gloves are a good call, too.

What You’ll See On Bridge Day

Thursday, October 15th, 2009
The Bridge Catwalk

The Bridge Catwalk

Bridge Day is West Virginia’s biggest festival.  There’s a reason for that.

People can come to Bridge Day expecting to see things that, really, just aren’t assembled anywhere else.  And, some stuff that you will.  The old favorites.

Here’s a bit of an overview of both…

The big attraction is, of course, the world’s largest BASE jumping festival.  BASE, if you don’t know, stands for Building Antenna Span and Earth.  Those are the 4 catagories of fixed objects that people parachute from in the sport.

The basic setup goes like this: The bridge is open only to pedestrian traffic during the event.  Right in the middle of the span is a large platform- the launch ramp.

Jumpers are lined up around the launch ramp with thousands of spectators around to watch.  The atmosphere is pretty exciting.  After all, these people are about to leap from an 876 foot high bridge.

And then they jump.  One after the other.

Bright parachutes, rescue boats in the river below, and a hot landing zone are all par for the course while the festival is going on.  The jumpers go pretty much non-stop through out the day.

On the southern side of the bridge, 800 foot long ropes are visible, hanging down below the arch.  This is where the rappellers are rigged up and ready.

Rapellers actually kick off Bridge Day by raising the U.S., West Virginia, and this year, National Park Service flags up the ropes closest to the center of the bridge.

Vendors always help to make for a great festival.  But the ones at Bridge Day are… a little different.  Not only will you find eats of all stripes, but there are crafts vendors, musicians, and lots of artisans, as well.

The vendor area is just off the bridge on both the north and the south sides.

You’ll also see a lot going on in downtown Fayetteville.  The shops run specials all weekend, and you can shop for outdoor gear, art, clothes, and music.  After the festival, expect to find plenty of people um in town at the 1st annual Bridge Day Chili Festival.

The bridge is a one-of-a-kind place, and Bridge Day is a celebration to match.  If you’ve never been, you’re going to see a lot more than you’re used to.

Bridge Day Rappel – A Family Story

Saturday, August 15th, 2009
Todd, left, Meghan and Robert Handley performed a three-generation rappel off the New River Gorge Bridge in 2006.  Stephen Bennett / For The Fayette Tribune

Todd, Meghan and Robert Stephen Bennett / For The Fayette Tribune

Can you imagine having the opportunity to rappel 750 feet with your dad and grandpa?

In 2006, Meghan Handley not only became the youngest person to rappel the bridge at the age of 13, but she got to do it with her dad, Todd Handley, and her grandfather, Bob Handley.

Now, that’s a family story.

That had to have been pretty darn cool, and according to Meghan, who is an avid rappeller, it was. Her grandfather nearly invented the sport, her father has done it his whole life and now she’s doing it, too.

They all love to cave and they all love to rappel. She’s very proud of her family and she can’t get enough of this crazy sport that requires her to get as far off the ground as possible, rig into a single, very long rope, and slide down it to the ground. What a thrill.

Meghan and Todd Handley

Meghan and Todd Handley

She is currently preparing for this year’s Bridge Day, as well as a 2650 foot rappel off El Cap in the summer of 2010 when Extreme Rappels (XTR) is going to guide an expedition to Yosemite to do a single-rope rappel off one of the tallest exposed rocks in the country.

You can bet Meghan will be first in line to make that drop, too.

Special Guest Post By:

Wendy Williams, 2009

25 Teams Will Rappel On Bridge Day™

Saturday, June 20th, 2009

Benjy Simpson, the Bridge Day™ Rappel Coordinator, has announced that 25 teams have been selected to rappel off the New River Gorge Bridge on Bridge Day™. Bridge Day™ is Saturday, October 17.

Simpson says that, “Over three hundred rappellers will participate in rappelling off the New River Gorge Bridge this year. They will come from eighteen states, and there are two teams from Canada.”

This will be the 30th Bridge Day™ to commemorate the October 1977 completion of the New River Gorge Bridge. Bridge Day is West Virginia’s largest one day festival and is one of the Top 100 festivals in North America and Top 20 in the southeastern United States.

The New River Gorge Bridge is the 2nd longest single arch bridge in the world. It is the 2nd highest bridge in the United States. The New River Gorge Bridge is 876’ above the New River, the 2nd oldest river in the world.

Please visit www.bridgedayrappel.com for more information about the Bridge Day™ Rappel.

Benjy Simpson, Bridge Day™ Rappel Coordinator
Passages To Adventure
Post Office Box 71
Fayetteville, West Virginia 25840
304 574-1037
www.passagestoadventure.com
www.bridgedayrappel.com
Email benjy@passagestoadventure.com