Most Extreme Tight Rope  Daredevils 
  
  
     Dean Potter's solo walk at  Taft Point in Yosemite by Photographer Jeff Cunningham.
  
  
     
Crossing a 100ft drop  without any safety equipment would make most normal people more than a  little anxious. But you might say tight-rope walker Andy Lewis takes  the high-risk dardevil stunt all in his stride. 
    Not satisfied that his  high-wire act – a 45ft crossing of a 100ft deep ravine over  an area called the Flat Sands in California – was risky  enough, at one point he even strikes a pose on the line balancing on  his ankles. 
  
  
     Daredevil Olivier Roustan  performs the highest ever tight rope walk in Europe and crosses the  250ft high rope over the River Usk in Newport, South Wales. 
  
  
     An extreme tightrope failed  his attempt to walk along a one-inch thick ribbon suspended 500ft above  Cheddar Gorge when he lost his footing. Jon Ritson, a leading sportsman  in the field of slacklining was saved by his harness and spent three  hours trying to finish the 95ft walk. He set off along the 95ft long  slackline but lost his balance and tumbled through the air. After three  hours of further attempts, he reached "a physical block" and decided to  call it a day. 
  
  
     Yes, that's a bear driving a  motorcycle on a tight rope with a guy hitching a ride beneath him.  (Yangshuo Bear Zoo). 
  
  
  
  
     Frenchman Philippe Petit  stunned the world in 1974 when he strung a cable across New York City's  twin towers and walked across. 
  
  
     In October 2010,  World-famous tight rope walker Mustafa Danger failed in his World  Guinness Record attempt at crossing a steel cable hanging from the  Great Bali Hotel to the Monte Tossal overlooking Benidorm's Poniente  beach. The motorcycle tightrope attempt failed only a few meters short  of the hotel after he had travelled more than one kilometer in distance  and at a height of 186 meters. Mustafa and his assistant were  eventually pulled to safety. 
  
  
     One slip and he would  plummet 10,000ft to the ground below. Yet Freddy Nock took his most  hair-raising stunt nonchalantly in his stride. These stunning images  show 45-year-old Freddy Nock completing his latest feat - walking more  than 5,200 feet down a mountain cable car wire - without a safety net  or a harness in the Swiss mountains. Using only a balancing stick, he  walked down the wire of a cable car line on Mount Corvatsch - which is  9,908 feet above sea level. 
  
  
      
A priest performed a  dangerous tight-rope stunt with no safety equipment 80ft above ground  after a last minute hitch in plans for his charity fundraiser. Father  Jerome Lloyd was supposed to be carried along the rope on the back of a  circus performer in scenes reminiscent of Frenchman Charles Blondin in  1859. Blondin made it across a high-wire suspended 160ft above the  Niagara Falls with his manager on his back. 
    
Unfortunately, Father  Lloyd's stunt had to be adapted at the last minute after professional  tight-rope walker Chico Marinhos was unable to lift the 12.5st priest.  Father Lloyd, 43, a missionary priest from the National Catholic  Apostolic Church, carried out the stunt wearing his traditional soutane  and saturno. 
    
He was raising money for the  Sussex Beacon charity, which provides specialist care and support for  people living with HIV.
           
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