Six of the world's best disc throwers gathered at Fort Funston
today to try for a new open throwing record. The old record of
1,257 feet was set at the same location in 1986 by Scott Zimmerman,
throwing an Aerobie flying ring, invented by Stanford Engineering
lecturer Alan Adler.
Erin Hemmings of Mendocino, California threw his Aerobie an
amazing 1,333 feet. Hemmings had practiced many hours and made
two trips from his Mendocino home to Fort Funston to better prepare
himself for today's event.
Adler
had offered a $1,000 prize for a new world record and was thrilled
to witness the achievement. He said, "The
winds today were much weaker today than they had been for the
1986 record. If you had asked me about the chances of a new record
one minute earlier, I'd have said that they were extremely slim.
Then Hemmings launched the perfect throw -- right along the cliff
edge. It was beautiful to follow in binoculars, floating along
absolutely straight and level. It looked like it was levitating".
The distance was measured four times (just to be sure) with
a Leica Laser Rangefinder by Rich Neuschaefer, a prominent Bay
Area astronomy observer.
|