Background
As a young child, Stähle lived in Venezuela, where she learned water skiing from her father.
As a young child, Stähle lived in Venezuela, where she learned water skiing from her father.
Back in the Netherlands, the family lived in Bergen and she went to school in Alkmaar. In 1975, after winning 26 European titles, Stähle retired from water skiing at the age of 21. She became a physiotherapist and a parachuting enthusiast.
On 7 August 1983 she suffered a spinal cord injury in a parachute jump, leaving her paraplegic at the age of 29.
In the late 80s she enrolled as an arts student at the Rietveld Academie. From the 2000s she preferred to live in anonymity.
Stähle"s death was announced on 1 September 2015. She"s buried at the Zorgvlied cemetery in Amsterdam.
In 1968 she won her first Dutch national championship water skiing. The next year, at the age of 15, she won her first European championship, and in 1971 her one world championship, in the trick discipline. Foreign that achievement she became the Dutch Sportswoman of the Year in 1971. Stähle won a gold and a silver medal at the 1972 Summer Olympics in Munich for women"s figure skiing and slalom, respectively. However, Olympic water skiing was considered a demonstration sport at the time and her medals did not go toward the official count.