Extreme Ironing
Extreme
Ironing (also called EI) is an extreme sport and a performance art in which
people take ironing boards to remote locations and iron items of clothing.
According to the Extreme Ironing Bureau, extreme ironing is "the latest danger
sport that combines the thrills of an extreme outdoor activity with the
satisfaction of a well-pressed shirt."
Part
of the attraction and interest the media has shown towards extreme ironing
seems to center on the issue of whether it is really a sport or not. It is
widely considered to be tongue-in-cheek.
Some
locations where such performances have taken place include a mountainside of a
difficult climb; a forest; in a canoe; while skiing or snowboarding; on top of
large bronze statues; in the middle of a street; underwater; in the middle of
the M1 Motorway; during a keirin race; whilst parachuting; and under the ice
cover of a lake. The performances have been conducted solo or by groups.
Categories
- Aircraft Ironing
- Base jump Ironing
- Cave Ironing
- Cliff Ironing
- Taxi Ironing
History
Purists of the sport claim that it
was started in 1997 in Leicester, East Midlands, and England by resident Phil
Shaw in his back garden. Shaw came home from what he recalls as a hard day in a
Leicester knitwear factory. Preferring the idea of an evening out rock
climbing, he decided to combine the two activities into a new extreme sport. In
June 1999, Shaw, who uses the nickname "Steam", embarked on an
international tour to promote the activity. The stops included the United
States, Fiji, New Zealand, Australia and South Africa. An encounter with German
tourists in New Zealand led to the formation of a group called "Extreme
Ironing International", and the German Extreme Ironing Section or GEIS.
As extreme ironing has branched
off, the conditions can gain in extreme activity. For example, a branch of
ironing has been developed that includes both bungee jumping and well-pressed
clothing. Bungee ironing is what some would call the ultimate in the thrill of
extreme ironing.
The "sport" gained
international attention after a documentary entitled Extreme Ironing: Pressing
for Victory, was produced for Britain's Channel 4 by Wag TV.
Extreme Ironing World
Championships
The program
followed the British team's efforts and eventual Bronze and Gold placing in the
1st Extreme Ironing World Championships in Germany. A side-story looked at the
rivalry between the EIB (Extreme Ironing Bureau) and a breakaway group called
Urban Housework who were trying to establish their own extreme sport based
around vacuum-cleaning. The film later aired on the National Geographic
Channel.
In 2003 the
Rowenta Trophy was won by a group from South Africa by ironing across a gorge
at the Wolfberg Cracks.
In 2004, the EIB
traveled to the US on the Rowenta Tour to recruit additional ironists and
ironed at Mount Rushmore, New York, Boston and Devils Tower.
In March 2008, a
team of 72 divers simultaneously ironing underwater set a new world's record
for number of people ironing underwater at once.
On 10 January 2009,
128 divers including 6 freedivers, attempted to break the previous world
record, managing to confirm 86 divers ironing within a 10 minute period. The
event took place at the National Diving and Activity Centre (NDAC) near
Chepstow, Gloucestershire, UK and was organised by members of the Yorkshire
Divers internet forum. In addition to breaking the world record, the event
raised over £15000 for the Royal National Lifeboat Institution.
On 28 March 2011
Dutch diving club De Waterman from Oss set the new (official) World record
extreme underwater ironing. A group of 173 divers set the new world record in
an indoor swimming pool in Oss in the Netherlands. Because of their 40 year
anniversary the De Waterman organized this event.
On 18 April 2011,
tenor Jason Blair was filmed ironing on the M1 motorway in London, UK, a
section of which had been closed following a fire.
In 2011, Extreme
Ironing enthusiast William Hinton brought a new interest to the sport along
America’s East Coast ironing many hikes along the Appalachian Trail as well as
ironing numerous water activities including surfing and wakeboarding.
In 2012, Extreme
Ironing founder, Steam, came out of retirement to take on a new challenge and
run the Hastings Half Marathon in March wearing an ironing board, pressing
garments on the way. In May, the mayor of Whit church, Hampshire pressed a
ribbon before cutting it to open a newly built bridge over the railway line.
Extreme Ironing
has inspired other forms of unusual extreme activity, such as Extreme Cello
Playing.
On March 24, 2013
Extreme Ironing came to the United States with the formation of the first-known
American chapter of Extreme Ironing. Founding members Mike Kelsey, Matt Hicks,
Caysey Herschaft and Erika Weinbacher (all of the meet-up group Hudson Valley
Hikers) hosted an Extreme Ironing Inaugural Event in Ellenville NY. The group
immersed themselves in ironing while hiking, caving, rock climbing, and
bouldering amid snow, ice, and rock overhangs. Extreme Ironing America spread
to Canada when club members ironed on rock and water while on a trek in Quebec
in September 2013. They appeared on the radio on Hot 101.7 FM in San Francisco
in April 2013 to explain Extreme Ironing and on NBC's TODAY Show on October 1,
2013 where TODAY show host Matt Lauer learned to Extreme Iron in various
locations in Central Park, NYC including on a double-decker bus, row boat and band
shell.
1st Extreme
Ironing World Championships
The 1st Extreme
Ironing World Championships was the inaugural championship for the quirky British
sport of extreme ironing.
The first event,
held in mid-September 2002 in Valley, Bavaria, a small village near Munich in
the district Miesbach, was host to competitors from ten nations, comprising 12
teams (three were from Britain).
Competing countries:
- Austria
- Australia
- Chile
- Croatia
- Great Britain; three teams called GB1, GB2, GB3
- Germany
Ironing championship sections
- Urban- Involved ironing in/on/around a broken down car.
- Water- A fast flowing river was the location for this station. Competitors could use surfboards, canoes or rubber rings to help them.
- Forest- Ironing at the top of a tree did not suit all the competitors.
- Rocky- A purpose built climbing wall, which ironists had to climb and iron a t-shirt.
- Freestyle- The section where "anything goes".
No comments:
Post a Comment