Posts Tagged ‘wendy williams’

The Bridge Builder

Monday, October 5th, 2009
Last year I was walking across the catwalk with a friend who suddenly said, “My dad built this bridge.”

Last year I was walking across the catwalk with a friend who suddenly said, “My dad built this bridge.”

Last year I was walking across the catwalk with a friend who suddenly said, “My dad built this bridge.” I thought he was kidding, but nope, Elwood Zornes did indeed help build that bridge 30 years ago and a whole lot of other structures we take for granted in cities across the U.S.A., and now his son, Terry (TZ), hangs off those same beams rigging ropes for the crowds of participants who want to ride the ropes for the day each October during Bridge Day.

Of course, we have all seen the famous pictures of the men eating lunch on the steel beam hundreds of feet in the air, but until I actually walked out on those same beams, I wasn’t able to actualize how casual they were acting over what really is a very precarious situation. For the most part, they had no protection, nothing much from keeping them from falling and not a whole lot of safety regulations. Nowadays, people have a fit if a person doesn’t safety in during every second they are above the ground under the bridge, and that’s the way it should be.

It sort of makes me proud to be a part of an event that so aptly commemorates their work.

Special Guest Post By:

Wendy Williams, 2009

The One-Eyed, One-Armed Rappeller

Tuesday, August 18th, 2009
phil-lilly-bd08

Phil Lilly a Bridge Day Inspiration

In 2007, Phil Lilly lost an eye, a hand and a few other body parts in a freak explosion while he was preparing chemicals for a fireworks display. It was a tragic accident that nearly took the life of him and his girlfriend.

Phil has been rappelling long ropes for some years now, and he was determined that a little thing like an eye and an arm missing would not hold him back. He worked hard during that year to fight his way back both mentally and physically. He had a goal. He was going to rappel the bridge in 2008. He practiced with his friends  at Extreme Rappels (XTR), and figured out ways to handle the long and complicated rappelling rack without fingers on one hand. He devised a system that would allow him to slow his pace or speed it up without having to move rack bars down with his fingers. Naturally, he also had to learn to balance and maneuver with only one eye.

At the XTR training session at Whitesides Mountain in the North Carolina Highlands a month before Bridge Day, he made the 600+ drop on rope, first tethered to another rappeller on the team, and eventually alone. With the exception of minor glitches, things looked pretty good, so he was set for the big day in October. Phil says he could never have made it that far without the help and moral support of all his XTR friends and teammates.

Bridge Day, 2008, arrived and Phil was put to the test. With nerves exploding and mind concentrating on the routines he had committed to muscle memory, surrounded by the team he knew he could count on, he clipped his safety to the 750-foot long rope, racked up his bars, released the safety and began to slide down the rope just as smoothly as could be imagined. He did it. He met his goal to rappel Bridge Day one year after the accident. How that is possible, I’ll never know.

I’ve told him before and I’ll say it again, he’s my hero.

Special Guest Post By:

Wendy Williams, 2009

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