The day a daredevil high-wire walker crossed Cheddar Gorge blindfolded

Wearing a red hood, Rudi Omankowsky negotiates the 300 yard span of Cheddar Gorge on a tightrope
-Credit:Mirrorpix


When 22 year old Rudi Omankowsky declared his intention to blindfold himself and traverse Cheddar Gorge on a high wire without any safety measures, observers were torn between labelling him as insane or a prodigy.

The audacious challenge was something no one had dared to undertake before, but the intrepid Czech-born acrobat was resolute in his decision to attempt it. As part of a European group known as Les Diables Blancs - the White Devils - Rudi and his team were participating in a variety show at Goram Fair, Whitchurch Airfield, Bristol in 1959, when they learned about the deep limestone ravine in close proximity.

Rudi had initially considered performing the daring act over the Avon Gorge, but his request was denied. However, there were no objections from the police regarding the Cheddar location, and the landowners - the Marquis of Bath, the National Trust, and the Bristol Waterworks Company - all gave their consent.

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On September 12, 1959, an audience of 20,000 people gathered to witness the spectacle, resulting in traffic mayhem in the vicinity. It marked the culmination of tense preparations for Rudi and the White Devils team.

Just two days prior, they realised that their own wire was insufficient to span the valley, despite having used it to cross major ravines across France and Germany.

A report of Rudi Omankowsky's 1959 walk across Cheddar Gorge
A report of Rudi Omankowsky's 1959 walk across Cheddar Gorge -Credit:British Newspaper Archive

They had to get one urgently from a Bristol firm, but this new cable was protected by a thick layer of grease to stop it from rusting. Rudi led the team across the wire with a cleaning cloth, but it made little difference. After a public appeal, Bristol University supplied litres of special cleaning fluid, but even that couldn’t disperse all the grease.

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For his trial walk on the first Saturday, Rudi wore six pairs of thick socks, taking off a pair at a time as it became too greasy. Almost safely across the wire sloped upwards and he kept slipping. He had to hold out his balancing pole so a member of the troupe could grab it and help him to cross the last 20ft or so.

Highwire walker Rudi Omankowsky crosses Cheddar Gorge blindfolded in July 1961
Highwire walker Rudi Omankowsky crosses Cheddar Gorge blindfolded in July 1961 -Credit:Mirrorpix

Before changing for his grand performance the following day, the acrobat spent eight hours on a sling underneath the wire, refusing food and drink, then insisted on carrying out his challenge in spite of the dangerous state of the cable and a blustery cross-wind.

At one point he slipped and the crowd gasped in unison, hearts in mouths. Rudi crashed down with one leg each side of the wire and for 10 seconds he was seen sprawled forwards, clutching his balance pole. Then he moved to a kneeling position before rising back to his feet and completing the walk in his bare feet. It took him 21 minutes to cross the gorge.

He later told journalists: “The height didn’t bother me. It was the grease and the fact that I was very tired. The Cheddar Gorge had never been crossed before. It was a challenge I couldn’t resist.

A Daily Mirror report and photos of Rudi's 1961 walk across Cheddar Gorge
A Daily Mirror report and photos of Rudi's 1961 walk across Cheddar Gorge -Credit:British Newspaper Archive

It was clearly such a memorable experience that Rudi chose to do it all again two years later in 1961 with a cable weighing 700lb that took four days to erect. This time the crowd, who had travelled from all over the Westcountry, was estimated at 30,000 with people arriving up to three hours early to secure a good view of the feat taking place high above their heads.

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Local newspaper reports from the time say that some spectators walked four miles to get to the show, after parking at the top of the gorge. Rudi donned his red blindfold and stepped out onto the wire, stopping halfway to salute the crowd. There were no reports of greasy wires on this occasion but Rudi once again slipped a little further along, catching the tightrope between his legs, perhaps this time for dramatic effect.

A voice came over the loudspeaker saying: “He is fighting for his life. Only a split-second reaction could have saved him.” Rudi quickly completed the course and was soon down on the ground signing hundreds of autographs and posing for photos.

Wearing a red hood, Rudi Omankowsky negotiates the 300 yard span of Cheddar Gorge on a tightrope
Wearing a red hood, Rudi Omankowsky negotiates the 300 yard span of Cheddar Gorge on a tightrope -Credit:Mirrorpix

The following night he repeated the stunt without the blindfold - a task he said he found much more difficult - while troupe members Roger and Berti Deguges took to the wire on an adapted motorcycle with a trapeze slung under it. All the excitement became a bit too much for some people. The local St John Ambulance Brigade said its volunteers were kept busy with people who had “fainted with fright”.

Rudi was already a big circus star in France and his career went from strength to strength after that, not only as a performer but also as a teacher of young daredevils. He was portrayed by Sir Ben Kingsley in the 2015 film The Walk, as Papa Rudy, mentor to young tightrope walker Philippe Petit who walked between the Twin Towers of the World Trade Center in 1974.