gravitysurfer 0 #1 May 21, 2009 I receive a daily newsletter from FlightAware in my web-mail that includes aviation related photos. Here's one from today's newsletter. (attached) Does anyone or the location look familiar? Awesome 'jump boot' in the center! aloha. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
jumpwally 0 #2 May 21, 2009 I'll bet he had to re-cast upon landing !! wow... smile, be nice, enjoy life FB # - 1083 Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
BCA 1 #3 May 21, 2009 They really were tough back then. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
3331 137 #4 May 21, 2009 Those guys are Pioneers of Skydiving. I Jumped with the guys who invented Skydiving. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
lekstrom10k 0 #5 May 21, 2009 I broke an ankle at Salem mi in 1973. I told the doctor kneeling in front of me that he was at just the right height to get his nose broken if he tried to cut off my Frenchie.I replied to his to his assumption it had to be cut off"How well do you like your nose as is?" I took it off no problem, he then said dont ever jump again. I sent him a picture of me landing in the Peas with my caston ,Then 1000 jumps later.It was always mandatory to jump with your cast. I took it off myself with M-1 and M-2 tin snips if anyone is wondering how to do it. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
howardwhite 6 #6 May 21, 2009 Pretty lame. Check out this one.HW Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
JerryBaumchen 1,354 #7 May 21, 2009 Hi Larry, The late Jim Lowe broke his foot in ~ '66 or '67. When they cast it they said it would take 6 weeks. He soaked it off in a bathtub and 2 weeks and never looked back. He did favor it though, JerryBaumchen Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
denete 3 #8 May 22, 2009 Quote Pretty lame. Check out this one. Looks like a Gimp-way.SCR #14809 "our attitude is the thing most capable of keeping us safe" (look, grab, look, grab, peel, punch, punch, arch) Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
skybill 22 #9 May 22, 2009 Hi grav, Aw heck, I thought you might have a photo of some old fart jumping in Fairchild Indiancraft Moccasins ala the early mid 60's!!!!SCR-2034, SCS-680 III%, Deli-out Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
jonstark 8 #10 May 22, 2009 Quote Pretty lame. Check out this one.HW Remember when the injury of the day was a wrist cast from flaring your Para-Plane too high and landing with your hands extended behind your butt? It was pretty popular for awhile. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
howardwhite 6 #11 May 22, 2009 Second from right in the picture is the late Vic Deveau. Jacques Istel fired him from PI several times, once after his picture appeared on the inside back cover of LIFE magazine, identified as a PI instructor in freefall over Orange -- with a cast on his leg. HW (To Vic's right is the late Jim Bates. The picture was taken at a Connecticut Parachutists Inc. -- CPI -- trip to St. André-Avellin in Canada. Might have been the same trip when I got my Canadian 10-way number there.) Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Glitch 0 #12 May 22, 2009 Who's the chap in the center, missing his R leg? A skydiver?Randomly f'n thingies up since before I was born... Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
377 22 #13 May 22, 2009 I still have my French Paraboots. I always though of them as lace up casts. I still jump my Bell 500 helmet once in a while for fun, but the Paraboots? No thanks. 3772018 marks half a century as a skydiver. Trained by the late Perry Stevens D-51 in 1968. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
airtwardo 7 #14 May 22, 2009 Quote I still have my French Paraboots. I always though of them as lace up casts. I still jump my Bell 500 helmet once in a while for fun, but the Paraboots? No thanks. 377 Still got mine (the RW not the Accuracy version) and still USE 'em on demos...haven't found anything better for feet-er protection when wearing pyro on boot brackets! ~ If you choke a Smurf, what color does it turn? ~ Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
howardwhite 6 #15 May 22, 2009 AFAIK, they're all skydivers. There was a Canadian skydiver jumping in Massachusetts last year with one leg. He gave someone his crutch when he boarded the Otter, then did a butt-slide landing, after which someone brought the crutch. HW Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
davepend 0 #16 May 23, 2009 Hey Mark, I get that same FlightAware newsletter, but didn't see that photo. I wonder if everyone gets a different random selection of photos each week. Anyway... reminds me a bit of when I had Henry sew that left-hand-opening pouch on the bottom of my rig (after I landed the Esprit flaring it like a wore out F-111 Manta.) -dp Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
steve1 5 #17 May 26, 2009 QuoteAFAIK, they're all skydivers. There was a Canadian skydiver jumping in Massachusetts last year with one leg. He gave someone his crutch when he boarded the Otter, then did a butt-slide landing, after which someone brought the crutch. HW I knew a one legged skydiver in the 70's. Landings then were too brutal and he had to quit. He kept on kayaking, snow skiing, and bike riding...(all with one leg). He later started calling up all his old friends, saying, "I'm about to go on the ultimate trip." He soon after died of bone cancer. I wish I had guts like that..... I met some skydivers (at Eloy, several years back)who were jumping on stubs....Both of their lower legs were blown off (I think by land mines). There were two or three of them, all doing slide in landings.... Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Glitch 0 #18 May 26, 2009 Interesting... from the pic, it looks like there's little, if any, stump for the leg straps. Any special mods to the harness that you know of? Did he have any stability &/or flying issues and how did he overcome them? The reason I'm asking, is that my dad (D-9053, PRO-90, SCS, SCR, Falcon, etc...) was missing his R leg (100% - no stump) and had a harness custom built and TSO'd. This was back in the mid 80's, and he had (I thinks) a 100 or so paracommander jumps before his first square jump. We also fashioned a scuba flipper for him to wear (acted as a rudder) for flying, which he'd take off under canopy in prep for landing. In addition, all licenses and awards were earned w/no waivers! At the time, we knew of no-one else in a similar situation, and assumed that he was the first. For no other reason than personal curiosity, I'd like to know if he really was, or not. TIA and feel free to PM me...Randomly f'n thingies up since before I was born... Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites