NickD

Members
  • Content

    58
  • Joined

  • Last visited

    Never
  • Feedback

    0%

Community Reputation

1 Neutral

Gear

  • Main Canopy Size
    135
  • Main Canopy Other
    Reactor
  • Reserve Canopy Size
    170
  • AAD
    Cypres

Jump Profile

  • Home DZ
    Earth
  • License
    D
  • License Number
    8904
  • Licensing Organization
    USDA
  • Number of Jumps
    4000
  • Years in Sport
    30
  • First Choice Discipline
    BASE Jumping
  • Second Choice Discipline
    Formation Skydiving

Ratings and Rigging

  • AFF
    Instructor
  • Tandem
    Instructor
  • Pro Rating
    Yes
  • Rigging Back
    Senior Rigger
  • Rigging Chest
    Senior Rigger
  • Rigging Seat
    Senior Rigger
  1. It's kind of an old rig now, but if airworthy it's okay. If you get one made from Antron material they're cool, because if you spill beer on the rig it just beads up. Also if the Antron looks a little fuzzed up you can take an electric razor to it and it cleans right up. (You may want your rigger do this as it takes a light touch.) BTW, also go to the Rigging Innovations website and check to see if there are any outstanding service bulletins on the Flexon . . . NickD
  2. There could be a wives, husbands, boyfriends, girlfriends club too . . . NickD
  3. One of my favorites from 1966. And it's over Elsinore . . . http://www.collectmad.com/madcoversite/index-covers.html NickD
  4. Nothing, and I do it when ever the urge strikes . . . regardless of anyone else's whims . . . NickD
  5. But, if we really wanted to, and if we had the gumption, we could take skydiving back . . . We actually don't need Ben and Larry and the others, they need us . . . NickD
  6. Also, go back and look at the original title of this thread, he unintentionally got it right. "What Do Do." Our innocents are crying out for help . . . NickD
  7. >>Do you think the five thousand bucks is important in that equation?
  8. NickD

    Problem

    You did the right thing. Floating ripcord handles kill people. I would have just smiled and told the pilot to shut up and just drive the bus . . . NickD
  9. I don't know, Tom. I run hot and cold on legal sites . . . There are many issues to be addressed, but the most important one is this; we are right now in the midst of a BASE fatality spike that coincides with the leap in BASE participation that began between 1999 and the year 2000. Why? If it's a simple matter of more BASE jumps equals more deaths, we are doomed. Or, is it more a product of our own actions over the last 15 years? By this I mean the mainstream advertising by BASE gear manufactures the availability of BASE first jump courses, the BASE competitions, and the airing of BASE videos once held very close to the vest. (BTW, I'm guilty as anyone of all those things). We are, in a way, sending the message to the uninitiated that BASE is an "everyman's" sport. Even as we know in our hearts it isn't and never will be. I'm trying to be careful here and weigh whether I'm an old fart lamenting past glory days, or someone capable of comparing then and now because I've been to both places in time. Regardless of what caused the upsurge in BASE participation (and I think it had a lot to do with Madison Avenue getting kids to buy into the whole "extreme" thing) we are handing out BASE like candy to children when it used to be the kids had to search out the candy for themselves. Those not resourceful enough, not self reliant enough, or not wanting it bad enough, were excluded right off the bat. In terms of progress and safety, I know our biggest leaps in those areas came long before the advent of their being so many legal sites. Bridge Day notwithstanding, tailgates, pin rigs, vents, and so forth were products of an earlier time. Since then we have become more spectacular with aerials, tards, and wing suits, but any safety advances are being cancelled out by people doing too much too fast. Of, course this could be one big growing pain that will pass in time, and I hope it is, but I also think we are paying a terrible price for access. I think legal sites have their place. I like the way the Go Fast Games are run. This is not a come one, come all event. In a sense it's a reward for those experienced jumpers who've paid their dues. The flip side is a legal bridge were you pay your money, make your jumps, promise to get a mentor once back home, and then get turned loose. Are we fooling ourselves into a believing a "skydiving" type of training program is even applicable to BASE jumping? In skydiving, student status used to be so difficult it weeded out those who couldn't hack the program. This was considered a good thing but it ended when we allowed profit to trump safety. Are we going down that same road? Then there is the chicken and egg thing. Do we jump so much in PotatoVille because its not so much allowed, but not disallowed? The current PotatoBridge was built around 1973. I remember someone showing me photos of it back in the late 1980s. When I asked that person if they jumped it, the response was no, as it was too exposed. There is no thought of whether it would be legal or not, it was more a matter the secret was not to be exposed. The big sea change in BASE is when we got away from that idea. Of course, this all makes for interesting discourse, but it's academic in the sense we can never go back to what was. BASE has grown to the point where it has a life of its own. However, we'd be remiss if we don’t figure out a way to take what worked in the past and blend it into what's happening now. BASE jumping is a priceless thing in my opinion. Now that the cat's totally out of the bag we need to make it harder to participate. Someone always says if we don’t teach they will go out and do it themselves. I find that wrong on many levels. After all you can’t automatically say that's a bad thing. It's the way an entire generation of BASE jumpers learned the sport. Second, I think the number of people willing to go it alone these days is smaller than in BASE's earlier days. So I have a bold suggestion. (And before you crap your pants, remember this is us jawing over a couple of beers.) Let's stop training 3 or 4 students at a time for free or for a few hundred bucks. If you want to be a true BASE mentor take one person at a time, charge them five thousand dollars, and take them all the way to a BASE number. Get them to the point where you can let go with a clear conscious. Make that commitment to the sport or stop doing it because it's not working . . . NickD
  10. NickD

    BASE dytter

    >>many won't trust it until it proves it's value. that won't happen unless it hits the street
  11. He is . . . USPA is us NickD BASE 194
  12. >>Do you know if the archives will still be available somewhere?
  13. NickD

    Finding Break Cord

    Buy it from Apex or some other BASE gear manufacturer. When Para-Gear was last asking for photo submissions for their new catalog cover they made a big stink out of saying, "We don't accept photographs depicting BASE jumping." NickD
  14. 1000 feet above the ground is "high" NickD