| Alastair Galpin | |
|---|---|
November 2009 |
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| Born | April 1974 East London, South Africa |
| Education | National Diploma in Forestry (Port Elizabeth Technikon, South Africa) BSc in Human Geography (University of Auckland, New Zealand) |
| Occupation | Breaking World Records, Environmental supporter |
| Notable credit(s) | Second Biggest World Record Breaker of the Decade 2000-2009 (Guinness World Records) |
| Relatives | Ernest Edward Galpin |
| Family | Norman Galpin, father |
| Website | |
| http://www.worldrecordchase.com | |
Alastair Galpin (born East London, SA, 1974) is the 2nd biggest Guinness World Records breaker of the decade (2000–2009),[1] breaking 38 World Records, behind Ashrita Furman. He immigrated to New Zealand in 2002, and says that his career in Record Breaking was inspired when he met champion rally driver, Simon Evans, in Kenya in 1998.
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Alastair Galpin has broken over 75 world records for feats including having the most snails on the face (eight in 10 seconds[2]) and the most rubber-bands stretched over the face (62 in one minute). He also holds the most stamps licked (57 in one minute)[3] and the fastest time to peel and eat three kiwifruit.[4][5]
Galpin is also the holder of the Guinness World Record for the most hugs in one hour in Civic Square, Wellington, New Zealand on 13 July 2007 (624 hugs)[6] and achieved three new Guinness World Records at the Guinness World Records Day 2009 for Champagne-cork spitting, coin blowing, and Malteser (malt ball) spitting.[7]
Along with New Zealander Don Purdon, Galpin commenced an attempt at the longest hand-shake at 8pm EST on Friday 14 January 2011 in New York Times Square. After 33 hours, three minutes, they had smashed the existing record by more than 17 hours[8][9][10][11] and shared the record with Nepalese brothers Rohit and Santosh Timilsina.[12]
| Event | Record | Location and Date |
|---|---|---|
| The loudest clap | 113 dBA | University of Auckland, New Zealand, November 2, 2008[13] |
| The fastest time to butter 10 slices of bread | 52.42 seconds | Pt Chevalier, Auckland, New Zealand, on 3 December 2009[14] |
| Tallest silverbeet plant | 363.5cm | Auckland, New Zealand in 2008 |
| The most high fives in one minute | 76 | Trusts Stadium, Waitakere, Auckland, New Zealand, on 14 November 2009[16] |
| The most lit candles in the mouth | 8 | Lo Show dei Record, Milan, Italy, on 15 March 2011[17] |
| Largest bottle cap sculpture (shared) | 19,205 caps | Auckland, New Zealand in 2010 |
| The most gloves put on one hand in one minute | 13 | Britomart Transport Centre, Auckland, New Zealand, on 12 November 2009[19] |
| The most baseballs held in the hand (palm down) | 4 | Old Homestead, Auckland, New Zealand, on 28 April 2007[20] |
| The most side jumps (alternating each leg) achieved in a minute | 90 | The Warehouse shop in Sylvia Park, Auckland, New Zealand, on 27 October 2007.[21] |
| Most M&M pretzels moved with a straw in 1 minute | 60 | Auckland, New Zealand, on 14 January 2012 |
| Largest cartoon (shared) | 862.8 square metres | Auckland, New Zealand in November 2006 |
| The farthest coin flick | 12.11 m (39 ft 8 in) | Britomart Transport Centre, Auckland, New Zealand, on 12 November 2009[23] |
Galpin seeks to raise awareness - and sometimes raise funds - for social and environmental causes.[24] He uses various methods to spread knowledge of environmental issues, including referring to issues of global concern in his website’s stories[25], and during his motivational storytelling in schools[26].
Among his more noteworthy charitable efforts are the greatest height to drop gambling machines as a statement against gambling harm[27], the largest bowl of soup (shared) to show healthy eating in disadvantaged communities[28], and the most radio interviews in a suspended cage to bring media attention to the issue of problem gambling.[29]
His activities were played down by some US websites covering "most ridiculous" and "least impressive" world records[3] and he has also attracted US television coverage for similar reasons.[30] Among other print media, The Citizen has featured his work.[31]
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