Fierljeppen

Fierljeppen (West-Frisian compound of fier—"far" and ljeppen—"leaping") or polsstokverspringen is a traditional sport of the West Frisian people in the Dutch province of Friesland. The sport is nowadays also popular in the province of Utrecht which produced record holder Jaco de Groot.

Fierljeppen in Heerenveen
Fierljeppen in Heerenveen

Description

The sport involves a long pole and a body of water. The pole is between 8 and 13 metres (26 and 43 ft) long and has a flat round plate at the bottom to prevent it from sinking into the muddy river or canal bottom.

A jump consists of a sprint to the pole (polsstok), jumping and grabbing it, then climbing to the top of the pole while trying to control its forward and lateral movements over a body of water, and finishing by landing on a sand bed opposite to the starting point.[1]

History

Due to considerable parts of the Netherlands being under sea-level, it has many waterways. Fierljeppen originated as a way for Frisian people to get around the waterways easily.[2] Over time it turned into a competition with the first official match in 1771 but the sport was not properly structured until 1957.[2] The sport is believed to have originated with farmers who used poles to leap over small water drainage channels to access different plots of land. In the German region of East Frisia this sport is known as Pultstockspringen. Today the sport is primarily practiced for fun or to entertain tourists, but there still is an official annual National Fierljepping Manifestation (NFM) in the Netherlands, and championships are contested in six leagues and numerous clubs.

Record holders

The current Dutch record holders by category are:[3]

  • Seniors: 22.21 metres (72 ft 10 in), Jaco de Groot from Woerden, Utrecht (12 August 2017, Zegveld)
  • Veterans: 20.60 metres (67 ft 7 in), Theo van Kooten from Haastrecht, South Holland (31 July 2013, Linschoten)
  • Juniors: 20.41 metres (67 ft 0 in), Joris de Jong from Dokkum, Friesland (9 August 2016, Dokkum)
  • Boys: 19.81 metres (65 ft 0 in), Reinier Overbeek from Benschop, Utrecht (30 Juli 2017, It Heidenskip)
  • Ladies: 17.58 metres (57 ft 8 in) Marrit van der Wal from It Heidenskip, Friesland (16 July 2016, Burgum)

There are 532 registered active jumpers in the world; of those, 190 are from the Netherlands.[3]

Fierljeppen throughout the world

International tourists who have visited Friesland and who have observed this sport have helped to spread its popularity across the globe. Competitions in other locales now take place, albeit at a less competitive level due to smaller numbers of athletes and the lack of suitable locations.

Many Americans were first introduced to the sport, here referred to as "ditch-vaulting", on Season 12 of The Amazing Race. This same task would be performed 9 seasons later as a "Switchback" task.

The Japanese reality TV Series called Sasuke (also called Ninja Warrior) has also featured this obstacle.

gollark: "yes just imagine some sort of structure containing memory requiring things so you can remember them by location" - apipspipids.
gollark: I literally cannot visualise things so people talking about how I should do so is bees.
gollark: That's not the code, that's the output.
gollark: It was not.
gollark: Ugh, this file used to exist and was good?

See also

References

  1. "Fierljeppen Netherlands". Pbholland.com. 2013-10-12. Archived from the original on 2012-10-02. Retrieved 2013-10-19.
  2. "Fierljeppen Netherlands". Pbholland.com. Archived from the original on 2014-02-22. Retrieved 2014-02-14.
  3. Dutch official records in fierljeppen Archived 2012-02-07 at the Wayback Machine from pbholland.com
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