830m 높이 절벽에서 한손으로 매달리다 Living on the edge! Stunning images show daredevil couple clinging on to 2,769-foot peak to 'feel alive'(VIDEO)

Living on the edge! Stunning images show daredevil couple clinging on to 2,769-foot peak to 'feel alive'



  • Leonardo Edson Pereira, 23, and Victoria Medeiros Nader, 18, fearlessly hang off 2,769-foot-high Pedra de Gavea 
  • They climb up the rock and dangle off it in a series of breathtaking images with Rio de Janeiro in the background
  • Leonardo said they do it for a thrill: 'I know people think it's dangerous and crazy but it makes me feel alive'

by Ki Chul Hwang 

Conpaper  Editor Distributor 

황기철  콘페이퍼 에디터


While some people live life on the edge, here's a daredevil couple who take the concept to a whole new level.


Leonardo Edson Pereira, 23, and his girlfriend Victoria Medeiros Nader, 18, are fearless as they hang off Brazil's 2,769-foot-high Pedra de Gavea in a series of breathtaking images.  

Only their strength and bravery keeps this dynamic duo in place on the cusp of the rock in this spectacular setting in Tijuca Forest near Rio de Janeiro. 


They dangle, cling and generally risk their lives, with Leonardo in just shorts and Victoria in a pink bikini top and hot pants, in the pursuit of a rush with the deep blue sea and iconic city of Rio as their picture perfect backdrop. 


Scroll down for video 

Victoria Medeiros Nader, 18, hangs off  Pedra de Gavea with her left hand on the rock and boyfriend Leonardo Edson Pereira, 23, holding on

Victoria Medeiros Nader, 18, hangs off Pedra de Gavea with her left hand on the rock and boyfriend Leonardo Edson Pereira, 23, holding on

This is how Victoria and Leonardo hang out
Leonardo risks his life for a thrill as he dangles above Rio

This is how Victoria and Leonardo hang out with her smiling for the camera while her boyfriend risks his life for a thrill

Fearless Victoria wears a pink bikini and hot pants as she poses on the edge of the rock with Rio de Janeiro serving as her backdrop  

Fearless Victoria wears a pink bikini and hot pants as she poses on the edge of the rock with Rio de Janeiro serving as her backdrop  

Victoria and Leonardo take a moment for a selfie in the relative safety of flat rock with the South Atlantic shimmering behind them

Victoria and Leonardo take a moment for a selfie in the relative safety of flat rock with the South Atlantic shimmering behind them

'I love living on the edge! I know people think it's dangerous and crazy but it makes me feel alive,' Leonardo says.  

'It is really high and I do just hang on using my arm strength. I have to trust myself not to fall.'


This isn't the first time Leonardo has climbed up Pedra de Gavea, which looks over the expansive Atlantic Ocean.

'The first time I did it I was really scared. I didn't hang off, I just sat on the rock,' he recalls. 

'The second time I was more relaxed and hung over the edge. Once I did cut my arm having to pull myself up. That was the only time I've been worried.'


Leonardo, here giving a double peace sign to the South Atlantic Oceans, admits his daredevil exploits can be seen as  dangerous and crazy

Leonardo, here giving a double peace sign to the South Atlantic Oceans, admits his daredevil exploits can be seen as dangerous and crazy

The 23-year-old from Rio says 'it makes me feel alive', and his girlfriend is more than happy to join him for some life-endangering exploits

Calm and composed on the edge of the rock, Leonardo admits the one time he was worried was when he cut his arm pulling himself up

Calm and composed on the edge of the rock, Leonardo admits the one time he was worried was when he cut his arm pulling himself up

 

Pedra da Gavea was the first mountain in Brazil to be named in Portuguese, with its literal translation being 'Rock of the Topsail'.


Sailors during an expedition led by Captain Gaspar de Lemos in 1501 believed the rock, which from some angles looks like a human face, resembled the top sail of a carrack - a three or four-masted ship used widely in the 16th century - when they first saw it in 1502.


That same expedition saw the naming of Rio de Janeiro Bay, which later became what the city was known as with the bay itself changed to Guanabara. The rock gives its name to the Gavea area in Rio.


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