Death defier: Tyler Bradt on his world-record waterfall drop
If you knew someone who had kayaked off a 189.5 foot waterfall, you’d want to have a beer with them and ask them a few questions right? Well we can’t arrange that but we’ve got the next best thing. Outsider’s paddling editor Kipper Maguire recently caught up with Tyler Bradt, the 25-year-old American professional white-water kayaker who holds the unofficial world record for the highest waterfall successfully run in a kayak. Here’s what the kayaker had to say about that fateful paddle off Palouse Falls, Washington, back in April 2009 and a few other things besides. And if you want to watch the video of his record-breaking paddle, scan this code here. Insert qr-tyler.png here Olly. Maybe run the text around it?
“Palouse Falls is about 20 feet higher than Niagra Falls. It’s 189.5 feet tall and quite a phenomenal waterfall. It was created by an ice dam holding back a huge glacial lake which broke and sent a huge volume of water rushing from Montana across the west and into the Pacific Ocean. The Palouse River is one of the many canyons it carved out and so the falls are quite an anomaly because the pool at the base and the canyon it is in are much more dramatic than a river its size could have ever created. It’s the reason it is such a perfect waterfall.”
“Palouse is a picture-perfect waterfall and I ran it simply because I believed it could be done. I assessed it as runable. I knew it was risky but I believed it was possible.
“I was quite anxious when I woke up that morning. I hadn’t slept much the night before.”
“As I paddled towards the waterfall, I was concentrated on the line. There is actually quite a fine line on the waterfall and not hitting it would be disastrous. I was focused and peaking with adrenaline.”
“The last paddle stroke I took before I went over the lip was a left forward draw stroke to bring my bow into the crease of the waterfall. I carried that same stroke through into my tuck.”
“There are many techniques for running waterfalls and it doesn’t matter which one you use as long as it has the same result – your boat dead vertical on the landing. I have watched many people develop their own waterfall techniques but many of the basics are the same; controlling your angle off the lip, tucking forward slowly to maintain the angle and holding that tuck through the impact.”
“More than a thought, it was a feeling as I dropped of the top. I knew I was in the right place and my angle was perfect. I had a great positive feeling in freefall.”
“The impact was hectic. It knocked the wind out of me, sprained my wrist, jack-knifed me out of my tuck, shattered my paddle and left me totally dazed.”
“When I realized I had landed safely, the feeing was incredible. It was a feeling of great relief and sheer joy to be safely at the bottom of the falls.”
“It felt great to have Palouse behind me. After so much time thinking about it, it was just a huge relief. It was a very thought-through and calculated decision which went accordingly. I look back at it with only positive thoughts. I was happy with the result but completely unprepared for all the media and attention it was receiving. I wanted to run it because I knew I could but I had not thought it through to the point of considering the publicity and popularity the drop produced.”
“When it comes to preparation for something like this, mentally, it is just a natural talent you have to have. I run lots of difficult rapids and huge waterfalls and I attribute it as much to my mental stability as my physical ability. Really the two go hand in hand. Physically, I was in great shape at the time having spent the previous month in Mexico living on a sailboat, surfing, swimming and hauling up the anchor multiple times a day. It’s very important to be in the best shape you can when doing a waterfall of that height.”
“I was planning the drop for about three months. I invented a device I name the chastity belt. It clamps the spray skirt on so it cannot implode or explode on landing. Apart from that my kayak was standard.”
“I had two kayakers in the water and one on land at the base of the falls. I also had someone on a rope from the lip of the falls ready to rappel behind it should I end up in the cave. We had the direct line to a helicopter on standby should something have gone wrong. Safety is the most import thing in doing what we do.”
“In essence I had been training my whole life for that waterfall.”
“My family didn’t know of my plans and I didn’t have children. I am sure having kids would affect my decision to do these things.”
“My goals are not to run a waterfall bigger than Palouse. I have numerous goals but just like Palouse I don’t like to talk about them until they are underway. I just came back three days ago from an expedition to run the last un-navigated section of the Congo River. In doing so we ran the highest volume, biggest rapids on the planet. That was a huge accomplishment that I am happy to be on the other side of.”
“I love running big waterfalls but my main area of interest is multi-day creeking and expedition kayaking.”
“I’ve too many favourite moments on the water to choose one but paddling away from Palouse is up there.”
“I am motivated by having fun.”
“Of course I get scared. The scariest thing that’s ever happened to me was breaking my back.”
“For me taking risks is normal but I don’t categorize it as that. If I didn’t do what I do I wouldn’t be happy or satisfied. It’s both who I am and what I do.”
