grue 1 #1351 July 6, 2013 airtwardo " I don't know who spotted that load, but he's good!" Jesus christ. I pictured Curly from City Slickers, and i'll admit I laughed.cavete terrae. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
airtwardo 7 #1352 July 8, 2013 Ran into the Ranger I wrote about while jumping at the St. Louis Arch again...15 years after our first meeting! ~ If you choke a Smurf, what color does it turn? ~ Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
mr2mk1g 10 #1353 July 12, 2013 airtwardo Ran into the Ranger I wrote about while jumping at the St. Louis Arch again...15 years after our first meeting! Reference this post from 10 years ago: http://www.dropzone.com/cgi-bin/forum/gforum.cgi?post=749053#749053 Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Krip 2 #1354 July 12, 2013 propblastNo..the raiders on operation Ivory Coast did not parachute in. Frankly I have a hard time believing that story. Hi prop I actually read this story in a offical army mag. Same beginning guys in airborn unit as a heavy equipment operator, goes to jump school and returns to his unit. At the wrong time It was aound the time of panama, and the island with the college med students. The equipment operator made his cherry jump onto the runway to move the piece of equipment that was blocking the runway to prevent our planes from landing. He heard the bees buzzing, saw the dirt kick up, exit altitude 300ft reserve opitional. The soldier did his job, when he returned to his unit they presented him with jump wings with the star. Every one in his unit was in envy. ROne Jump Wonder Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Krip 2 #1355 July 13, 2013 Krip ***No..the raiders on operation Ivory Coast did not parachute in. Frankly I have a hard time believing that story. Hi prop I actually read this story in a offical army mag. Same beginning guys in airborn unit as a heavy equipment operator, goes to jump school and returns to his unit. At the wrong time It was aound the time of panama, and the island with the college med students. The equipment operator made his cherry jump onto the runway to move the piece of equipment that was blocking the runway to prevent our planes from landing. He heard the bees buzzing, saw the dirt kick up, exit altitude 300ft reserve opitional. The soldier did his job, when he returned to his unit they presented him with jump wings with the star. Every one in his unit was in envy. R I took my nap and remembered the name of the little Island with the med students. "Grenada" Twardo thanks to your post about all that VN stuff I did a little research on C-130s in the nam. Damn they didn't tell us all that crap was going on when we were there. Now I'm scaredRead about some poor loadmaster got trampled by 150 little people who wanted on the plane before the camp got overrun by Mcnasty's. I would has just been a wet spot on the ramp. twardo your a big dude you would have just been a bigger wet spot.One Jump Wonder Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
chuteless 1 #1356 August 11, 2013 Yes, they were the good old days....a thrill every time we took off in an airplane....even on 1 magneto. lol Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
hcsvader 1 #1357 November 29, 2013 Bumped from page 3 Twardo tell us a story Pleeeeease Have you seen my pants? it"s a rough life, Livin' the dream >:) Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
SCS292 1 #1358 November 30, 2013 This wasn't as scary as my 2 malfunctions and they wouldn't have been that scary if they hadn't happened on the same jump, but I posted this on the Galveston skydivers thread and thought it might fit in here too. I've been having fun looking back at my logbook for the first time in a lot of years. Were any of you old timers, or as John Mincher more politely calls us "Pioneers of the sport", at Doc's on 3-12-'72? It was my first jump in Dickinson. Until then all my jumps had been at Angleton, V-Mills and a couple in Austin. We had a short spot with a 15 knt SE wind and I held as long as I could before I decided the pond north of the DZ was about to be in my future. I made a quick turn to the north, flew over the pond and a bunch of brush and made a hook turn onto a driveway that went to a little house north of the pond. It would have worked out OK but I didn't see the power lines going to the house along the south side of the drive. I went through the power lines and my PC collapsed on the wires causing them to cross and short out. I hit the driveway a little harder than planned and sprained my ankle (thank God for Frenchies). It was a good thing the wires just supplied the one house and were not any higher above the ground. The wires burned in half and fell in the brush starting a nice little fire. Fortunately my PC wasn't damaged by the wires or the fire but the power to Don Gay Pontiac and to the shopping center (which included a grocery store) across I-45 was knocked out. My friends came and got me and we made a hasty retreat. The police came out to the DZ to find me after the fire was out but some quick thinking skydivers told them that it was some guy from California, that nobody knew, was visiting and he was so embarrassed that the last time they saw him he was headed north on I-45 in a green Chevrolet. Thanks to whoever it was who put them off the scent! Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
popeyeughugh 0 #1359 December 9, 2013 my dad owned gift of wings in wny.we had a visting skydiver from some where,had a routine jump till he opened his main and it malfunctined,he cut away, opened reserve,that malfuntioned to, with a may west,he rode that in from about 1500 ft I know the area where he landed, a wooded area about a mile away. me and a buddy jumped in a truck and raced down several tractor paths to help, as we came to the open feild there he was walking with another skydiver (glen) that followed him down,being relieved he was ok, he told us his version. he saw the may west got his knife out started cutting lines then quit cause he was cutting to many,well he looked down spinning saw the woods. figuring,the branches would help his landing,he said he didnt hit a single branch spinnig throw the trees,he landed on the down slop of a steep revine that saved his butt.after telling us the story,we loaded up and as we came down the road there were more firetrucks ,ambulances ,and other rescue vehicles looking for him thinking the worst. well we pulled up to the chief, and said looking for him,he didnt believe us at first, with some convincing we got it straghtened out.that skydiver was flattered at the response of the fire department. but they were'nt looking even close to where he landed,needless to say he had more than a few beers that night. peter siclari Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
jerry9461 0 #1360 December 10, 2013 It looked scary from the plane, too. I don't think I ever brought the 180 down faster than on that jump. Great feeling when I saw Ben walking out of the woods! Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
drjump 0 #1361 December 10, 2013 You are welcome! I remember the transformers popping, and the small grass fire. Made two jumps that day myself, in between trips to Sam's club. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Niki1 1 #1362 December 10, 2013 popeyeughugh as we came down the road there were more firetrucks ,ambulances ,and other rescue vehicles looking for him thinking the worst. well we pulled up to the chief, and said looking for him,he didnt believe us at first, with some convincing we got it straghtened out.that skydiver was flattered at the response of the fire department. but they were'nt looking even close to where he landed,needless to say he had more than a few beers that night. peter siclari Whoffos. I was driving up Marsh Rd. in DeLand and happened to see a cutaway canopy comming down. A few seconds later I come around a bend and lo-and -behold there it is, Right in the middle of the road. (I should have been so lucky with any of my cutaways.) I put my flashers on and get out and start to pick up the canopy. A pickup come screeching to a stop and out jumps a guy about early 20s. He is SCREAMING, "Get away from him. I know CPR." I drop the handful of canopy and back away. The look in this guys eyes said he was going to be the hero here if anybody was. He starts looking under the canopy and is mystified as where the victim went. I told him this was just the canopy and the jumper most likely landed at the DZ. He seemed kind of miffed that there was no one under the canopy. WhoffosMost of the things worth doing in the world had been declared impossilbe before they were done. Louis D Brandeis Where are we going and why are we in this basket? Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
skypuppy 1 #1363 December 13, 2013 popeyeughughmy dad owned gift of wings in wny.we had a visting skydiver from some where,had a routine jump till he opened his main and it malfunctined,he cut away, opened reserve,that malfuntioned to, with a may west,he rode that in from about 1500 ft I know the area where he landed, a wooded area about a mile away. me and a buddy jumped in a truck and raced down several tractor paths to help, as we came to the open feild there he was walking with another skydiver (glen) that followed him down,being relieved he was ok, he told us his version. he saw the may west got his knife out started cutting lines then quit cause he was cutting to many,well he looked down spinning saw the woods. figuring,the branches would help his landing,he said he didnt hit a single branch spinnig throw the trees,he landed on the down slop of a steep revine that saved his butt.after telling us the story,we loaded up and as we came down the road there were more firetrucks ,ambulances ,and other rescue vehicles looking for him thinking the worst. well we pulled up to the chief, and said looking for him,he didnt believe us at first, with some convincing we got it straghtened out.that skydiver was flattered at the response of the fire department. but they were'nt looking even close to where he landed,needless to say he had more than a few beers that night. peter siclari on a broken-down runway a week ago Sunday just as we climbed in our plane there by a car bumper there stood a strange jumper he seemed to be almost insane. He said with a shout can I follow you out but he sure had a strange=lookin rig it was a front mounted pretzel an eddie grimm 'special' while the rest on the load wore a pig.... well after the jump when it came time to dump and the ten man had finally split after cutting away from his first mal today this new guy was starting to shit his reserve wasn't working after lots of hard jerking and just when we thought he was dead in a voice that was splitting' from the bricks he was shitting he looked at his poptop and said you picked a fine time to fail me reserve 400 feet and I'm losin my nerve I've had some sad ones lived thru some bad ones but this one I just don't deserve You picked a fine time to fail me reserveIf some old guy can do it then obviously it can't be very extreme. Otherwise he'd already be dead. Bruce McConkey 'I thought we were gonna die, and I couldn't think of anyone Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
mccurley 1 #1364 December 13, 2013 Most people here wouldn't know Eddie Grim was a manufacturer of gear. I owned a few Niagara Parachute (Eddie Grim) rigsWatch my video Fat Women http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eRWkEky8GoI Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
lodestar 0 #1365 December 13, 2013 Met Eddie on a trip up to Niagara, his workshop was humming with activity and Eddie was hopping around like a grasshopper doing this and that. He was, at the time, one of the few if not the only one producing gear for the Canadians....my being a rigger and having almost non stop reserve packing while I toured Canada, I appreciated the fact that he was a forerunner in Canadian equipment and obviously an innovator of gear and techniques....nice man... Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
mccurley 1 #1366 December 13, 2013 And he gave a shit about his customers. I never had a problem with his service' always turned it around in quick time and didn't overcharge. I was on the load with him and his wife Anne when she went in. A great loss to her family and the skydiving community at the time.Watch my video Fat Women http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eRWkEky8GoI Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
patworks 5 #1367 February 1, 2014 Riggers Delight-- '61 my first rig was a B4 crew bailout rig with reserve rings hand sewn to the Out Side of the harness. A sensitive lad, I glued a wrap of webbing over the stitches so as not to perturb sensitive types. Never did use the reserve 'tho I packed every 60 days in my driveway best I could. No problem, I sold it to my best friend Tommy Foster for $50. It was an all white 28' ripstop with a Double "L" & the cut out gores were trimmed in gold satin ribbon, hand sewn. Pretty. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
patworks 5 #1368 February 1, 2014 Hinckley Dz. Too Windy to jump. Open, I'm running downwind at Mach 3 to the DZ. Clear the Highway; just clear the high tension lines; crank a hook turn. Cough up my gizzard as i swing back into the 80' power lines my open mouth body slithers between two of them and here comes the ground! WhoooBoy! But for luck i'm fried crisp and fall far. My spread lines retard my descent. (High voltage lines are about 3-4 ft. apart); my PC gets squeezed betwixt em. The friction retards my 80 ft. fall. I tip toe land. Awed and twice blessed. (Thinking No One saw my dumb shit stunt). Alas. A car smokes to a stop on the highway and the skydiver driver howls curses at me for a time. I field pack to walk back. However, he didn't rat me out. I kept quiet. Stupid ain't fashionable, but luck is good.Pat Works nee Madden Travis Works, Jr .B1575, C1798, D1813, Star Crest Solo#1, USPA#189, Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Krip 2 #1369 February 2, 2014 Hi pat A lot of us know it not just the high tension lines that can get you. Even those power lines that run next to the roads are bad news. After I left a dz in ks after jumping there for two yrs we had never gave a thought to those little lines on the wooden poles. Later We heard a fj student and her sister also a fj student and their children were at the dz. The first sister made it over the power lines fine, the second sister landed on both wires, and before the electric company could shut of the power the dead students hair caught on fire than her rig. All of this was witnessed by her sister and the little kids, that saw mom laying on the wires and the aftermath I'm a very happy camper that I didn't have to witness that, but I probably would have turned around and walked away after her initial landing. When the power company finally cut the juice, the town down the line was blacked out, until they could remove the remains safely and restore power. I'm not sure when the sport started to require waivers, but the jump master got sued. To bad he didn't own anything. Not sure how far that went once the lawyer realized the jm didn't own anything. Second hand info from the JM.One Jump Wonder Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
steve1 5 #1370 February 2, 2014 The only jumper, that I ever met, who went through the power lines and survived, was Fred Sands. On the old power lines there were three wires. Two were closer together and there was a little wider space for the third wire. Fred went right through that bigger opening under a flat reserve. The spot may have been a little long. Fred had a malfunction and cut away his paracommander. It was just about dark when Fred hit the power lines. The lights went out in the club house and everyone ran outside. He touched one wire but not the other. It shut the power off on one side of Kalispell. Fred survived to jump another day. That's the way I remember it. It's been about forty years. Fred is known as Cosmobuddy on these forums. In the old days most jumpers called Fred "Ferd". I haven't heard that name since. Fred has always been one of the jumpers I looked up to. Fred and Dave Tousey were the first jumpers to break the 1,000 jump barrier in Montana. There's a reason jumpers often didn't survive to make a thousand jumps back then. Maybe Fred can tell what happened better than I can. I'm sure he remembers the details a lot better than I. I knew another guy who went into the power lines. He wasn't so lucky. He was blinded for quite a while from all that electricity. His watch even burned a hole into his wrist. Everyone called him Sparky after that...... Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Krip 2 #1371 February 3, 2014 Hi Steve I consider it a honor to have met Fred on a few occasions, no skysnob attitude just someone who's, been there done that. I dont have a clue what theor training students these days, but we were taught about how to minimize contact with powerlines in the worst case scenario. The large steel tower high tension power lines are a differnt kind of a situation. I'm not even sure if a jumper has to actually come in contact with the lines. I think due to the amount of power going thru the lines they can arc to anything that gets close enough. The same jm mentioned in the thread abovementioned yours was jumping with a group in missouri, where there were was a high tension power line close enough that if a jumper tried very hard they could come in contact with the lines. The jm watched in horror from the air as his girl friend had some kind of a incident with those power lines and wasn't moving after she landed. He landed as close as possible to his girlfriend ran over, and found she wasn't breathing. He immediately started cpr and brought her back to life, and felt ok. When she got to the hospital they hound a small entry point where the electricity had entered the front of her leg and a large exit wound just below her butt. She almost lost the leg. The young lady had been wearing long johns and the elastic waste band on the bottom half had melted, and she had some scaring, above one of her breasts. Second hand info she was not aware of the extent of her injuries until she got to the hospital.Maybe she was in shock (no pun intended) When I talked with her, later she was glad to be alive and really could care less if she couldn't wear a bikini any more. Maybe a high power electrician or a electical engr, can explain the dangers of the really high voltage power lines. Time period mid 70's, most second hand info. Probaby jumping a round. Be well. R.One Jump Wonder Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
SCS292 1 #1372 February 3, 2014 The more I read about it the more thankful I am to have survived my encounter with power lines with only a sprained ankle and a bruised ego. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
ldk 2 #1373 February 4, 2014 Steve...You having me laughing so hard...I have to pull. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Stumpy 284 #1374 February 26, 2014 This thread must need a bump. How's that statute of limitations Airtwardo?Never try to eat more than you can lift Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
hcsvader 1 #1375 February 26, 2014 Fucker, you had me excited. Twardo, tell us a story Have you seen my pants? it"s a rough life, Livin' the dream >:) Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites