JumpUpMyAss 0 #1 September 27, 2007 Mansfield about 1979 or 1980. When I think of DZ's this is how I picture them: trailer, trash, beer, 182 door, etc. Check the the names on the Manifest board. L-R. Paul Wangler, Anita Wangler, Kyle, Me. Webb, you were the only guy i remember taking pictures back then - thanks(??) Fuller Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
JumpUpMyAss 0 #2 September 27, 2007 Heres another one Webb took of Mansfield in 1977. The fence was electric so Don Stephens and I persuaded Ron Nichol's little son to piss on it. It shocked his little pecker. He screamed so load the jumpers heard it on jump run. I talked to Ron several years ago in Gainesville and he said his son is 6'5" /240 and on a mission to find us. Seems he can't get an erection unless lightning strikes. Hey kid...... is it too late to say 'we're sorry'? Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
bozo 0 #3 September 27, 2007 Man o man...that last pic brought back some memories of the old North Las Vegas drop zone. Packing on the grass under the trees....blankets laid out with the wives/girlfriends and kids. No bullshit, very few rules. What a grand time it was. I miss it. bozo Pain is fleeting. Glory lasts forever. Chicks dig scars. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
efs4ever 3 #4 September 27, 2007 Quote Heres another one Webb took of Mansfield in 1977. The fence was electric so Don Stephens and I persuaded Ron Nichol's little son to piss on it. It shocked his little pecker. He screamed so load the jumpers heard it on jump run. I talked to Ron several years ago in Gainesville and he said his son is 6'5" /240 and on a mission to find us. Seems he can't get an erection unless lightning strikes. Hey kid...... is it too late to say 'we're sorry'? I can't take credit for that one Kim. I did take the B&W, however. I have volumes of B&W photos that I took back in the day: mostly of folks on the ground. It's interesting to see the "kids" today who are pushing 40! Any survivors of this bunch? Bob Swainson, a Brit, was the DZO. I hear he's still in the business in OK somewhere. His reserves didn't have pilot chutes on them. Students were taught to hand deploy the reserve in the event of a function. Russell M. Webb D 7014 Attorney at Law 713 385 5676 https://www.tdcparole.com Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
JumpUpMyAss 0 #5 September 27, 2007 I agree brother. I'm not sure we recognized it then but it was some care-free times for sure. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
NickDG 23 #6 September 27, 2007 >>His reserves didn't have pilot chutes on themAlso known as, "Pull, Punch and Pray." NickD BASE 194 Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
JerryBaumchen 1,252 #7 September 27, 2007 Hi jump, Ironically, just yesterday I happened to be driving by the now-defunct airport where I made my first jump in early '64. The 'loft' was just an old lean-to with a dirt floor, some very poorly built packing tables, that was nailed to another building. We jumped about nine miles away, into whatever field someone would let us land in. There was no such thing as a 'manifest,' you just started talking and a 3-4-5 of us would load into the V-77 and head for altitude. Most of the day was spent driving out to the 'dz' to pickup people who had jumped. JerryBaumchen Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
usedtajump 1 #8 September 27, 2007 >>His reserves didn't have pilot chutes on themI made two jumps (ninth & tenth S/L jump) at the "Limey's" place in Mansfield. Having been trained elsewhere on a spring loaded pilot chute reserve system I wasn't even aware that there was any other type. Wasn't until after I got down from the second jump that he asked me if I'd ever been trained on a shake and bake reserve system.Wow!!! Paul, Anita, Kyle and you. Good times. The older I get the less I care who I piss off. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
JumpUpMyAss 0 #9 September 27, 2007 The three static line students don't look too enthusiatic do they? Stevens Cutaway System - guaranteed to slap the side of your face or knock out a tooth if you cut away! Yep, I learned on the old military method of hand deploy too. Makes sense on a slow speed malfunction like a line over or Mae West. I wonder what it was like on a tumbling, terminal pull? Can you say 'accidential opening'? Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
efs4ever 3 #10 September 27, 2007 QuoteThe three static line students don't look too enthusiatic do they? Stevens Cutaway System - guaranteed to slap the side of your face or knock out a tooth if you cut away! Yep, I learned on the old military method of hand deploy too. Makes sense on a slow speed malfunction like a line over or Mae West. I wonder what it was like on a tumbling, terminal pull? Can you say 'accidential opening'? That's the static line over the shoulder. No Stevens b/c of NO CUTAWAY training.Russell M. Webb D 7014 Attorney at Law 713 385 5676 https://www.tdcparole.com Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
jerry9461 0 #11 September 27, 2007 When I saw the thread about the Mansfield DZ, I thought, "Hey, I have pictures from there!" The Mansfield, MA DZ was open in (help me Howard) the late 60s - early 70s, and then again in 77-79. Here are some pics from the later DZ - unless I can't figure this stuff out! Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
jonstark 8 #12 September 28, 2007 In the first pic Allen Gencarelli is the guy with the beard. He's also in the third with the same big beard. Who are the others? jon Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
howardwhite 5 #13 September 28, 2007 Well, in the first picture, leaning against Al Gencarelle, that's me. I don't remember the dates of the Mansfield, MA, DZ for sure, but it was also open much earlier (late '50s and early '60s) as the home of the Cambridge Parachute Club. Lots of the early mostly non-PI jumpers hung out there. Ted Strong would know about those days. The rest of the folks are basically locals from the Boston South Shore area; I don't think any of them still jump. HW Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
efs4ever 3 #14 September 28, 2007 QuoteWhen I saw the thread about the Mansfield DZ, I thought, "Hey, I have pictures from there!" The Mansfield, MA DZ was open in (help me Howard) the late 60s - early 70s, and then again in 77-79. Here are some pics from the later DZ - unless I can't figure this stuff out! Uh, TEXAS!!!!!Russell M. Webb D 7014 Attorney at Law 713 385 5676 https://www.tdcparole.com Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
JumpUpMyAss 0 #15 September 28, 2007 I guess I can't be a jump master until I can recognize what the hell I'm looking at. I was thinking of GCSPC -I forgot Bob trained that way at Mansfield. I better go check my reserve for one of those springy things. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
howardwhite 5 #16 September 28, 2007 Yea, I knew it was Texas, But be nice to my old buddy Jerry. It's only his second post here in the six years since he registeredHW Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
JumpUpMyAss 0 #17 September 28, 2007 Russ, This is what I was thinking of. When Jack Shelley and McBride ran it in 1977, before Bob was there. If you pulled low he made you do a static-line line jump on a T-10 with all the trimmings. Ingo Patella and Me. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
efs4ever 3 #18 September 28, 2007 Quote Russ, This is what I was thinking of. When Jack Shelley and McBride ran it in 1977, before Bob was there. If you pulled low he made you do a static-line line jump on a T-10 with all the trimmings. Ingo Patella and Me. Great! Plane is "Death Express" the one I made my first FF from with Forest McBride telling me that he smelled BONE MARROW.Russell M. Webb D 7014 Attorney at Law 713 385 5676 https://www.tdcparole.com Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
drjump 0 #19 September 28, 2007 Howard--Roger "Bud" Creekmore was running the Mansfield, Mass. DZ with a C-205 in 1976.--Doc Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
CazmoDee 3 #20 September 30, 2007 West Point, now Skydive the Point, about 1976.... HEY that's ME!I'm behind the bar at Sloppy Joe's....See ya in the Keys! Muff 4313 Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites