From his perch on the 3,000-foot wall of El Capitan in Yosemite National Park, Charles Winstead heard the unexpected whoosh of a BASE jumper’s parachute and looked up.

“I turned on my camera, and, sure enough, there was a couple more, and then a couple more and a couple more,” said Winstead, 57, a rock climber who has been ascending El Capitan for much of this month.

And that was just on Oct. 1, the first day of the government shutdown. In a cellphone interview Friday from about 1,000 feet up, he said he had seen roughly 20 jumps so far.

BASE Jumpers Seize the Opportunity

BASE jumping, in which participants parachute off fixed objects such as buildings or cliffs, is illegal in Yosemite and all 62 other national parks because of “the significant safety risks it poses to participants, th

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