GettingtoknowTLMwinter12v3

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getting to know n Western Canada

getting to know n Western Canada

The great outdoors

remember seeing the 1988 Calgary Winter Olympics on TV at home and laughing, like everyone else watching around the world, at the antics of Britain’s clown prince of ski-jumping, Eddie the Eagle, as he hurtled down the ramp, only to plunge like a stone instead of soaring like his namesake. Fast forward some 20 years and I am standing on the very spot where hapless Eddie launched himself into history at the top of the 90-metre ski-jump tower at

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Calgary’s Olympic Park, looking down that same slope. And I am anything but laughing now. A sit-in harness is being put on a safety helmet-clad colleague a few steps down from me and hooked to a grab handle slung on wheels from a suspended cable that runs from the top of the tower and all the way down the length of the ramp to another tower 550 metres away and 100 metres below us. On the other side of the track, a fellow Brit is undergoing the same procedure…and I would be following suit moments later. We are about to take on Skyline at the Park (http://skylineziplines.ca/calgary) – North America’s fastest zipline, which emulates the speeds and sensations of the 90-metre ski jumpers. So fast do you travel, reaching speeds of between 120kph and 140kph, that the harness incorporates a parachute, which is deployed as you leap to help slow your descent. For me, climbing the tower was ordeal enough. I am not merely scared of heights, not even petrified; I have a morbid dread of them, probably not helped by a wellmeaning PR friend in New Zealand who thought she could help me overcome it by tricking me into doing a bungy jump off a bridge when I thought I was only getting a behind-the-scenes tour.

n Ready to fly: Calgary's Skyline

Peter Ellegard

Encompassing everything from rugged Pacific coastline and verdant rainforests to vast lakes and glaciercloaked mountains, the outdoors doesn’t come any greater than in British Columbia and Alberta. Peter Ellegard explores Western Canada’s natural wonders and takes in some adventure on the way

adventure Yet here I am, about to throw myself into nothingness again, and I can feel the panic levels rising. All too soon, the moment arrives and I am hurtling down to a yell of “Geronimo!”, the force of the wind trying to pull the skin off my face and the fear replaced by pure adrenalin. With a thump, my miniature cablecar hits the buffers, sending arms and legs flailing. As I dismount,

n Forest in Queen Charlotte Islands National Park Tourism British Columbia

6 tlm n the travel & leisure magazine

www.tlm-magazine.co.uk

Winter 2011/12

Winter 2011/12

tlm n the travel & leisure magazine www.tlm-magazine.co.uk

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