In a recent video it was brought up that Dan Osman died due to a damaged rope.
Dan Osman — or “Dano” to his friends — was an American rock climber, free soloist, and extreme sports pioneer best known for his jaw-dropping, high-risk feats in the 1980s and 1990s.
Born in 1963, Osman became famous for free soloing and for inventing a style of controlled “rope jumping,” which was essentially bungee jumping’s much wilder cousin — using dynamic climbing ropes and massive pendulum swings off cliffs.
He had a reputation for being both a philosopher and a thrill-seeker — a guy who saw life and death not as opposites, but as forces that define each other. He worked as a carpenter by day and pushed human limits on granite walls by weekend.
Some of his most legendary climbs include:
- “Atlantis” (Yosemite, CA): a near-vertical route he soloed with effortless grace.
- “Bear’s Reach” (Lover’s Leap, CA):immortalized in a short film showing him sprinting up the rock in about four minutes — and making a flying leap mid-climb between holds. (It’s still one of the most-watched climbing clips ever.)
Tragically, Osman died in 1998 at age 35 during a rope jump gone wrong in Yosemite’s Leaning Tower area. One rope crossed another, and the friction caused the rope to fail. You can read a breakdown of this here.
He’s remembered as a legend — part artist, part madman, part poet — who pushed the edge of what “living fully” could mean. In short: the kind of guy who made gravity nervous.
Following is the insanely famous video of Dan Osman completing a free solos speed ascent of Bear’s Reach (5.7) at Lover’s Leap, California.