Sign in Welcome! Log into your account your username your password Forgot your password? Get help Password recovery Recover your password your email A password will be e-mailed to you. HomeUncategorized Travis Pastrana 269 ft World Record Jump! January 2, 2010 by mymodernmet Share FacebookTwitterPinterestWhatsApp 2010 starts on a bombshell as Travis Pastrana sets a new world record with his Subaru Impreza WRX STI. He flew 269 feet and broke Ken Block’s 171 ft record from 2006. ftjumppastrana Previous articleGlam Girl Next Door – Harper’s Bazaar Jan 2010 (8 pics)Next articleSoft and Sweet Self-Portraits – Suzy Wimbourne (6 pics) Related Posts Uncategorized Young Pianist Gets Overcome With Emotion While Performing 200-Year-Old Chopin Prelude mymodernmet - Funny Need Help Making a Decision? Do as the Ancient Persians Did and “Drink” About It mymodernmet - Uncategorized Painting Stolen Over 50 Years Ago by Mobsters Is Finally Recovered mymodernmet - Comments LEAVE A REPLY Cancel reply Comment: Please enter your comment! Name:* Please enter your name here Email:* You have entered an incorrect email address! Please enter your email address here Website: Save my name, email, and website in this browser for the next time I comment. Recent Stories How This Artist Transformed the Nobel Prize Banquet Into an Unexpectedly Immersive Journey [Interview] Inaugural Edition of Art Basel Qatar Is Coming in February 2026 Travel Host Rick Steves Saves Seattle-Area Hygiene Center in Amazing “Gift to My Homeless Neighbors” Ancient Math Is Hidden in 8,000-Year-Old Floral Pottery Patterns Intricate and Alluring “Thread Paintings” Use a Sewing Machine Like a Paint Brush Tsuchiya Kōitsu and the Rise of Shin-Hanga Prints in 20th Century Japan How People in the Victorian Era Enjoyed Animation Before Its Modern History Titanic Museum Exhibit Invites Visitors To Feel How Cold the Water Was When the Ship Sank Here’s the Story of Yaoya Oshichi, a Japanese Teenager Who Lost Her Life for Love and Inspired Folklore Rock Art in South Texas Reflects the 6,000-Year-Old Worldview of Indigenous Americans