I don't know when or how I will die. However I do know that it won't be from jumping out of a plane or from being eaten by a shark.
Yes it is.Is that the tank farm in Cushing?
edit; just checked their web site
Yeah, the first 10,000 feet were definitely windy. BUT, they went by so fast that I could barely tell that it was.Very cool! I did about 25 solo jumps back around 1990; at that school if you went solo you started static line at 3,000 ft then worked your way up without the static line.
I was jumping from 12.000 ft when I decided to quit while I was ahead.
Nothing like it. And it's really windy, right!?
I had never heard of that. And, more importantly, neither had my wife. And I'm not going to tell her about it either.If you remember the skydiving group years ago here in Ok. that had the plane crash before they all jumped out. A friend of mine here in Ponca was the first one out of the plane. He said it ain't a good feeling to see your plane crashing as you're floating down. He said never again.
I made sic civilian jumps at Elsinore and Perris Field in CA in 1967 before deploying to RVN. After a short class and practicing falls, we jumped, repacked our own main chutes, jumped again and again repacked our own chutes (this time on the ground which collected dirt and leaves that blasted out of the chute when it opened). I was 20 years old then and single.I had never heard of that. And, more importantly, neither had my wife. And I'm not going to tell her about it either.
I can only imagine how traumatic that must have been for your friend.
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