Before a crowd of spectators and media, Evel Knievel strapped into his X-1 Skycycle, preparing to make a leap of approximately 1,500 feet…over a 486 foot deep section of the Snake River Canyon.
He made it.
Sort of.
The rocket car’s parachute deployed
prematurely, dragging Knievel back over the river, then further still to land on
the launch-side riverbank. A few more feet to the north and he wouldn’t have
walked away with minor injuries; he would have drowned. His parachute wasn’t the
only thing to malfunction. His harness failed to release, trapping him in the
Skycycle until help arrived.
Strip away the newsmen and the elaborate
machinery.
Bring on the lower-budget daredevils: the
fishermen. Approximately a quarter of a mile from the site of Knievel’s jump
stands an abandoned platform overlooking those dizzying heights. Feel like
dangling a line in the waters of the great Snake River? Grab your gear and your
pole and join in your mind’s eye the fishermen of yesteryear as they shimmied
down a ladder that hung from this platform in their quest to catch The Big
One.
Funny, but the city of Twin Falls, Idaho
decided to shut that one down…
So Spake Me…
For those of you unfamiliar with the man, Evel
(formerly Evil) Knievel was the stuntman rockstar of his day. His Snake River
Canyon jump has been called Woodstock with out the mud and rain.
Yes, hard to picture that in Twin Falls,
Idaho.
My folks actually saw the jump. They were
stopped on the Perrine Bridge that spans the canyon on their way to pick up some
peaches. They watched him nearly land; they watched the wind sweep him back into
the canyon.
And then there’s me.
Who snaps a picture of the fisherman’s platform
as fast as she can and scurries away from the railing before the vertigo can
pitch her head over heels into a picturesque death on the
rocks…way…down…there.
PS—Did you know the Shoshone Falls
(right next to these two historic sites) is taller than Niagra? Oh yeah, it’s
WAY down there.
PPS—I, obviously, didn’t take the
Knievel picture, having been less than a year old at the time, but I couldn’t
find the name of the photographer who did. So, my apologies. On that note, the
photo of the Perrine Bridge, a favorite haunt of base jumpers, was taken by my
father.