Atlantica - 01.09.2007, Blaðsíða 12

Atlantica - 01.09.2007, Blaðsíða 12
Champion of Champions If you could still set a record for having the most Guinness world records, Ashrita Furman from Brooklyn, New York would surely claim it. He currently holds 65 records and has set 157—across all seven continents—since 1979. Furman has traveled the furthest distance—37 kilometers (23 miles)—on a pogo stick, balanced milk crates weighing 42.5 kilograms (93.7 pounds) on his chin, and pushed an orange with his nose for a mile in only 24 minutes and 36 seconds. In June 2006, Furman managed to catch 77 grapes with his mouth in one minute, and five months later he balanced 700 eggs vertically on end simultaneously. Furman is a devout follower of Sri Chinmoy, the Indian philosopher and religious teacher, and maintains that meditation is the key to his bizarre feats. When you have somersaulted 20 kilometers (12.3 miles), as Furman accomplished in 1986, or hula- hooped underwater for 2 minutes and 20 seconds, like he did in May this year, a serene yet focused mind must certainly be an asset. BaBy Boom Two not-so-little lads born in Latin America earlier this year seem to be anything but average when it comes to weight. On 28 January a woman in Cancun, Mexico gave birth to a boy who weighed 6.4 kilograms (14 pounds, 1.4 ounces), exactly twice the weight of the average newborn. During the first weeks of his life, Antonio Cruz, or “Super Tonio” as he was immediately dubbed, guzzled 0.14 liters of milk every three hours and was squeezed into nappies intended for six-month-olds. However, it turns out Super Tonio was not the real heavyweight. Ademilton dos Santos, born in Salvador, Brazil on 19 January 2007, is currently the heaviest new- born according to Guinness World Records. He tipped the scales at a massive 7.57 kilograms (16 pounds, 9.5 ounces) on the date of his birth. But these fellas are dwarfed by the 10.2-kilogram boy (22 pounds, 8 ounces) born to Anna Bates in Ohio, USA, in 1879. Sadly, the heaviest newborn ever only lived for 11 hours. a siCkening ColleCtion When it comes to collections, quantity matters more than quality to Guinness. Ms. Petra Engels from Germany boasts a collection of 19,571 erasers, her fellow country- man, Manfred Klauda, owns 9,400 chamber pots of various sizes and shapes and Frenchman Michel Pont can choose between 110 jet-fighters if he ever wants to take to the skies. Yet it is Niek Vermeulen from Holland who has dedicated himself to perhaps the most bizarre collection. Since the mid-1970s, he has amassed a whopping 5,006 airsickness bags from about 1,000 different airlines. Some are even artistic; Finnaviation’s sickbag is decorated with pictures of a vomiting reindeer. According to Vermeulen, who never gets sick while flying, almost 300 people around the world collect air sickness bags. You can join the group by checking the seat pocket in front of you. sky’s the limit Bao Xishun from China was more than fifty years old when people realized that he was the world’s tallest man. In January 2005 he measured 2.361 meters (7 feet, 7 inches) tall. Since his “discovery”, Bao has rarely been out of the headlines. In December 2006 he saved two dolphins at an aquarium by using his long arms to reach into their stomachs and pull out dangerous plastic shards they had swallowed. And after a global search, Bao finally got married in March this year to a saleswoman from his hometown. She is half his age and two-thirds his size. The world of records is a fickle one, however. Bao’s reign came to a sudden end in August when Guinness World Records finally acknowledged the claims of the veteri- narian Leonid Stadnyk who stands at a staggering 2.57 meters (8 feet, 5 inches). This gentle giant who lives with his mother on their farm in Ukraine had to quit his job six years ago after suffering frostbite in his feet because he couldn’t afford to buy the specially designed size 64 shoes he wears. With all the fame that follows the title of being the world’s tallest man, cold feet will hopefully be history for Stadnyk. 10 a t l a n t i c a Fantastic Feats – on Four Continents No book contains as many superlatives as Guinness World Records. Prepare for a jaw-dropping read of some of the oddest feats that anyone has undertaken, all over the globe.
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Atlantica

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