Death diving 1-24 meters [2nd angle COMPILATION]

Death diving 1-24 meters [2nd angle COMPILATION]
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NB! This is the second (worst) angle version. The main angle version is a youtube shorts I posted earlier:)

Døds or Death Diving is a sport where you land in a shrimp or the crusher, and I made an advent calendar during 2022, with 24 unique jumps.
To make some stuff clear/some answers:
— I am a professional. Do not attempt death diving from heights like these before years of experience.
— All these spots have been carefully dept checked. They’re also safe from the wall, even though it looks close on some.
— Does it hurt? Yes. Death diving really slaps, especially from the bigger heights. It hurts, but doesn’t cause injuries, and if done right is actually a very safe way to enter the water.
— Aren’t you afraid? YES!
To end on a positive note, this sport is amazing, gives me so much joy. I get to travel around with the best community, test my boundaries and feel so alive! And if you want to see the episode around each jump alone, I recommend going to my instagram or TikTok, where they have English subtitles.

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About the Author: Asbjørg Nesje

28 Comments

  1. There is no slow motion in wideo, but this jumps are so big. They look so beautiful, and on 1 second looks like she's in slow motion when she don't move it the air. The real speed is scary when she prepare to contact with water. Amazing wideo! Than you so much.

  2. I have jumped feet first and hands first off of cliffs after climbing them.

    The potential belly flop-not my choice.
    Had friends break their necks.
    Be careful!

  3. Nice dives. Be Carefull because from 22 meters you can hit the water with 100 km/h. Therefore you need a more vertical degree of entry. Above 85 degrees. Your usual impact is less than 45 degrees therefore risking bone fracture. A painless dive is up to 5 to 10 meters. Above 10 meters you need to go more vertical initially to avoid getting out of the water red and blue from bumps and bruises. And of course depending on the depth of the water to decelerate from hydrodynamic drag or not risking hitting the bottom where most accidents occur

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