Essential Magazine June 2018

Page 168

h THE LEISURE travel

I

t’s the latest fix satisfying the cravings of the most hardened adrenalin junkies. You climb to the highest point at the edge of the deepest crevasse you can find and keep walking into the sky until the ground disappears beneath your feet. As you step into the void, you look down. Fortunately, you are standing on several layers of reinforced glass so you don’t fall into the abyss although you can see it clearly, between your knocking knees. You are over the edge, ‘walking on air’ and on a high as every muscle in your body slams on the brakes while your brain struggles to figure it all out. That is, if you haven’t fainted. Just thinking about it sends shivers up the spine and there’s a scientific word for the sensation – kinaesthesia – the

famous sixth sense discovered by 19th century psychologists who realised muscles are capable of receiving sensations from the spinal cord and should therefore be considered sentient. And while some of us are squeamish about heights, others get a massive kick from the risk associated with dizzying altitudes, and the perception of ‘walking in the sky’ only increases the buzz. Hence, the trend for glass-bottomed highaltitude platforms is sweeping the world, tapping into our thirst for new sensations through the ‘thrill of transparency’. Today no city or resort calling itself a tourist destination is without its see-through aerial attraction. Toronto’s CN Tower was the forerunner with its 342-metre high transparent-floored observation

deck. Now they are everywhere from Asia to the Alps, built into suspension bridges and rickety mountain paths, jutting from rooftops and hovering over gorges in some of the world’s most spectacular landscapes. China is the world leader in extreme glass walkways. They grace many of its 225 national parks and wherever there are mountains high enough, the Middle Kingdom is building them. Even historic landmarks like the Eiffel Tower in Paris and London’s Tower Bridge have had glass viewing platforms retrofitted to cash in on the lucrative trend for frightening the pants off tourists. Belinda Beckett set off on a vicarious search of the world’s scariest skywalks. Two of them are in our very own backyard.

LOOK DOWN IF YOU DARE! LOCATION JASPER NATIONAL PARK, CANADA VERTICAL DROP 280 METRES OPENED 2014

© Glacier Skywalk

The World’s Scariest Skywalks

168 / JUNE 2018 ESSENTIALMAGAZINE.COM

226 TrI.indd 168

21/05/2018 15:28


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.
Essential Magazine June 2018 by Essential Magazine - Issuu