0
leandercool

Why did you start?

Recommended Posts

Quote

Until that one day, when one of my teachers told me about himself as a skydiver.


Went vice versa with me. One of the students of the form I had been form teacher with for 6 years was a skydiver (you can start at 14 in Germany and get your licence at 16) and he persuaded them to cough up the money for a tandem jump as their "Thank you for being our teacher" present. I was overwhelmed, excited and very very grateful. Really nice students, still in contact with some of them. They came to watch me jump so I had to (just kidding).
I had seen parachutes in the air before but having grown up behind the Iron Curtain parachuting still was the sport of young, bold, strong and extremely healthy men to me. I had thought about tandem jumps, but considered them "too expensive". I was a little tight with money at this time so the present came handy, so to say. Well, so I entered the AN-2. I didn't like the freefall that much (instructor stood in the door for about 1 minute with me awkwardly hanging in the pax harness, yelled "Head up!!!" into my ear when I wanted to look down in freefall and the opening was a cracker - got me bruised all over) but I liked the canopy ride. Folks there told me that everyone could become a skydiver nowadays (provided this and that) and so I got hooked up. Had to hassle with my GP (parachuting with ASTHMA?) and had to beg to get into the "mini course" (2 S/L jumps) because they wanted me to wait until next year to start a "real course". Did 5 S/L jumps with a round so I'm still pretty good at doing a PLF B| but I changed the club once I got to know about this AFF thing :P Spent money worth a Beamer (but like my Skoda Octavia) since and had a lot of fun. (Pain, too. But that's another story :P)

Edited for typos and elaborating
The sky is not the limit. The ground is.

The Society of Skydiving Ducks

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
Quote

Hi agent,

Quote

there's chicks in this sport?



Don't ask me, ask Shah. :P

JerryBaumchen


HAHA!!! maybe i should :P
Life is not a journey to the grave with the intention of arriving in a pretty and well preserved body, but rather to skid in broadside, all used up, and loudly proclaiming: Wow, what a ride!

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
Quote

Quote

Until that one day, when one of my teachers told me about himself as a skydiver.


Went vice versa with me. One of the students of the form I had been form teacher with for 6 years was a skydiver (you can start at 14 in Germany and get your licence at 16) and he persuaded them to cough up the money for a tandem jump as their "Thank you for being our teacher" present. I was overwhelmed, excited and very very grateful. Really nice students, still in contact with some of them. They came to watch me jump so I had to (just kidding).
I had seen parachutes in the air before but having grown up behind the Iron Curtain parachuting still was the sport of young, bold, strong and extremely healthy men to me. I had thought about tandem jumps, but considered them "too expensive". I was a little tight with money at this time so the present came handy, so to say. Well, so I entered the AN-2. I didn't like the freefall that much (instructor stood in the door for about 1 minute with me awkwardly hanging in the pax harness, yelled "Head up!!!" into my ear when I wanted to look down in freefall and the opening was a cracker - got me bruised all over) but I liked the canopy ride. Folks there told me that everyone could become a skydiver nowadays (provided this and that) and so I got hooked up. Had to hassle with my GP (parachuting with ASTHMA?) and had to beg to get into the "mini course" (2 S/L jumps) because they wanted me to wait until next year to start a "real course". Did 5 S/L jumps with a round so I'm still pretty good at doing a PLF B| but I changed the club once I got to know about this AFF thing :P Spent money worth a Beamer (but like my Skoda Octavia) since and had a lot of fun. (Pain, too. But that's another story :P)

Edited for typos and elaborating


Interesting story.
Experienced jumper - someone who has made mistakes more often than I have and lived.

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
I received a Tandem as a 40 birthday present. As a very independent women YES there are chicks in this sport! I could not get over the fact that I was powerless to save my self during that jump. I was totally drawn to the the ground and how it did not appear to get closer and forgot about everything had I been in charge I would have died. I then thought I will do this long enough to safe my self. Only on my 6th jump coming up now I want to do it all I want to dance in the air.

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
My girlfriend (at the time) literally dragged me to the dropzone because she wanted to jump. Sadly, she got freaked out because the jump plane was a Cesna 182 and not a twin like she was used to and decided not to jump, but insisted that I should still do it since we had driven so far.

That little voice in my head told me not to do it because she might not take it well but looking back on it **** what she thought about it. Now I have 50 times as many jumps as she does. Muh ah ah ah ah...
_______________________________________

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
My uncle was in airborne when I was a kid. I recall playing “paratrooper” and PLFing off of the shed and out of the barn loft. In my early 20’s I saw the movie, The Gypsy Moths and thought skydiving (wing suit) would be so cool. In my late 30s I got to ride at the exit door with the Golden Knights. I still thought I wanted to do it. Getting a house and raising the kids as always higher up on the list. So I never took any action.

I am in my 50s now. A few months ago I saw some current wingsuit videos and thought it would be great to do that. One of the things that tipped the scales was my mother (now in her late 70s) telling me that daily life was just so much harder now than when she was in her 50s and 60s. My thought was “Do it NOW”. So I started just a couple of months ago.

Yes, I know you can’t jump a wingsuit until sometime after 200 jumps.
Will that keep someone from posting that great revelation? Likely not.
Instructor quote, “What's weird is that you're older than my dad!”

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
I was away from home for the first time having just graduated high school and moved to Pittsburgh for trade school. A classmate took me out to a very rural Cessna DZ, Beaver Valley, on a Wednesday afternoon to watch. As soon as I saw and heard a lone body in freefall I was in for it hook line and sinker. Prior to this I had never even remotely considered jumping.

I was a terrible student but was there every weekend rain, wind, snow it didn't matter I was there with my eyes open and my gaze skyward. Back then everybody would invariably stop what they were doing to look up to watch their friends jump. A high load was 7500'. There was so much to learn just by keeping my eyes and ears open.

jon

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
For a dare 3 of my mates did static line in 1981 I was the most reluctant.. you guessed they left I stayed for a while did 40 jumps/ came back in 2008 did a few tandems then 5 AFFS.

Now total of 66 jumps. Got banned at my drop zone from continuing aff AS THE CI thought I posted to much on the aussie forums. (safety and gear ) So spend $6000 and then stabbed in the back (banned from AFF despite no problems with my AFF)

Sort of wonder why I bothered coming back really. (Yeah I am hurt by it)
I tend to be a bit different. enjoyed my time in the sport or is it an industry these days ??

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

0