Zzzip-line
By Shim Hyun-chul In the time it takes for the cable to make the telltale ``zip!’’ through the pulley, your body is already flying through the air. The cord is the only thing keeping your limbs from crashing into the ground, and a lone bird mid-flight the only obstacle between you and a mountainside. The vast, beautiful landscape stretching underneath your feet removes the daily anxieties so typically plaguing your mind, body. The time to take repose in the crisp autumn skies of the weekend is now. Zip-lining is similar to paragliding in that it doesn’t take up too much time, and you’re able to feel at one with the skies above you. Zip-lining is the sport of speeding down thick wires hung from the sides of mountains and trees. The rider, attached to dollies, speeds past wildlife and foliage at great speed over a long distance. The activity is derived from the natives of tropical rainforests such as Costa Rica and Hawaii, who would use the tree-height, thick wires to avoid snakes, insects and other poisonous creatures. They call it ``zip-lining’’ due to the undeniable zippi
