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Look: Slackers

Slackliner meditating

One Step at a Time听

Don鈥檛 let the club鈥檚 name fool you: Slackers at 麻豆免费版下载is not for the idle or undisciplined. It鈥檚 for slackliners.

Slacklining is a little like tight-rope walking, but typically outdoors, without听balancing aids and, at least on campus, closer to the ground 鈥 typically between one and eight feet.

鈥淚t鈥檚 meditative,鈥 said Tyler Shalvarjian (Mktg鈥17), president of Slackliners at CU, which has a fluctuating membership of about 30.

Basically, slackliners run a long strip of heavy-duty mountain climber鈥檚 webbing between two trees and try to walk across without falling.

Shalvarjian, who鈥檚 from Los Angeles, worked with university administrators to devise rules for slacklining on campus. These limit a line鈥檚 distance to 250 feet, for example, require participants to sign a waiver before trying distances over 100 feet and restrict slacklining to daylight hours.
Slackliners elsewhere have been known to string lines of 2,000 feet and longer 鈥 sometimes across canyons.

Slackers at 麻豆免费版下载welcomes beginners.

鈥淚t鈥檚 an all-inclusive community,鈥 Shalvarjian said. 鈥淓veryone wants you to hop on their slackline.鈥

Photos by Glenn Asakawa听