Colm 1 #1 Posted June 3, 2022 It might not be Baffin, but definitely some exits out there on the Labrador coast. All you need is a teleporter. https://www.google.com/maps/place/58°00'00.0"N+63°00'00.0"W 1 Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
TomAiello 26 #2 June 3, 2022 Looks like we need a pilot to organize an expedition. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
gowlerk 2,190 #3 June 4, 2022 6 hours ago, TomAiello said: Looks like we need a pilot to organize an expedition. You probably need a boat as well. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
TomAiello 26 #4 June 4, 2022 If it's the right season, would the ice be frozen? That would make a much nicer landing area. 1 Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
riggerrob 643 #5 June 4, 2022 15 hours ago, TomAiello said: If it's the right season, would the ice be frozen? That would make a much nicer landing area. Dear Tom, You are thinking along the lines of Brandywine Falls on the road up to Whistler. B.C. It falls 66 meters (200 feet) into a deeply incised, back-cut stream channel. Brandywine looks like a miniature version of Niagara Falls complete with jagged rocks and fast-flowing water, so Vancouver-area BASE jumpers simply visit it during the winter months when the landing area is frozen over. I am sure there are another hundred similar waterfalls and cliffs up the coast, but few of them have road access and many would need a lumber barge floated in to provide a dry landing area. Now B.C. BASE jumpers just need the assistance of a bored helicopter pilot to scout out all those cliffs. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
TomAiello 26 #6 June 4, 2022 Baffin jumping is pretty much all done in the 'shoulder season' when the ocean is frozen (to provide landing areas) but it's not deep (and super cold) winter. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Colm 1 #7 June 4, 2022 Surely a "shoulder-season" kind of place. I think that is Saglek Fjord. There is a primitive airport near the coastal bay, but not much else. The fjords were still ice-covered but not consistently so. Having had a little more time to googleearth it now, I'm no longer as encouraged for sheer exits. Though the Torngat mountains are quite beautiful. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites