After Grand Canyon walk, Nik Wallenda has next stunt in mind
(CNN) -- Nik Wallenda defied death in his tightrope walk across the Grand Canyon that was televised live Sunday evening, June 23rd, and he is reportedly already thinking about his next stunt!
Wallenda says he wants his next performance to be in New York City, where he's hoping to perform a similar stunt between the Chrysler and Empire State buildings.
The city's police commission says the plan will likely be denied, as it is risky and could put New Yorkers at risk.
His high-wire walk in Arizona on Sunday night didn't start well.
Perched on a 2-inch-thick metal cable, 1,500 feet in the air, daredevil Nik Wallenda spat on his hands and wiped the soles of his moccasins.
"These shoes feel slippery. There's dust on this cable," the lifelong tightrope walker said Sunday as he was just beginning his quarter-mile trek across the Little Colorado River Gorge near the Grand Canyon without the aid of a safety tether.
But an agonizing and an anxiety-filled 22 minutes and 54 seconds later, Wallenda had crossed to the other side, running the final steps to become the first person to traverse the gorge near Grand Canyon Park in Arizona.
The wind was worse than he anticipated, he said at one point. And twice he stopped, knelt and regained his composure.
"I was fatigued until I was three-quarters of the way across, and then it was all adrenaline," he said.
The feat was watched by a worldwide audience, according to the Discovery Channel, which televised the event in the United States.
At the end, the seventh-generation aerialist threw down his balancing pole, kissed the ground and hugged his wife and three children.
"I can finally breathe again," Erendira Wallenda said.
When asked how he planned to celebrate his successful walk, Wallenda mentioned eating a rib-eye steak.
He is a member of the famous Flying Wallendas, founded by his grandfather Karl in the 1920s. But the family's circus roots go back further than that, Nik said.
"My family has done this for seven generations and 200 years, and I'm carrying on a legacy. This is something I've done since I was 2 years old, and it truly is my passion."