Thursday, December 15, 2011

Skydiving Duck: Solo Time!

The sun was out. The winds were down. Time for my first solo.
My inner critic played dirty.  He split into two and heckled me from different angles:

 Compared to the AFF jumps, things were simple.  No routines, no exit practice in the mock-up.
I felt like a kid riding the bike without training wheels when I grabbed the rental parachute and put it on by myself.  Within  a half hour I was at altitude, in the doorway, looking down.
Okay, there's the airport.  No clouds--Holy geez! am I really doing this!?--no planes, no peeps.  One, two, three, go!

The first few seconds out are still a bit overwhelming...
...then there I was- back in the alternate universe of freefall.  I rolled over by mistake but righted myself.  Then I played "watch the altimeter and practice your turns."
The chute opened without trouble and soon I was in my landing pattern.  Would I flare too high?  Too low?

I know I'm supposed to flare when I get about ten to fifteen feet above the ground, but it's hard to measure when it's zooming at me like a freight train.
Toggles up, toggles up, I thought, mimicking  what had squawked through the radio on my earlier jumps, not yet, not yet, feet together...  I could see individual weeds zipping by ...Flare half way... all the way, hold it... 
I planned a PLF but when my feet hit the ground they slid like I'd landed on a Slip 'n' Slide.  I came to rest gently on my back (I'll have to ask an instructor how to prevent that, since a less gentle landing like that would be trouble).
My solo wasn't fearless or flawless, but I'd done it.  I couldn't believe it.
Traditionally you're supposed to bring beer after your first skydive solo. I bought a bunch of it.  My instructors had earned it: If they could teach a high-strung, easily frightened, pain-in the-neck student like me how to do this, they can teach anyone.  

To find out what happened on my second solo, click here

7 comments:

  1. These adventures continue to be just great.

    I particularly like illo #3 (with the watch) and #4 (with the feet flying up).

    What a great series!

    ReplyDelete
  2. Thanks, Linda.
    Duck feet are defiantly fun to draw. The watch gizmo is more of a challenge. (It actually tells you how high you are so you know when to activate the parachute.)

    ReplyDelete
  3. Anita9:47 AM

    Jennifer, you are so very brave, and totally wacko to jump out of a plane! ha ha! Love the illustrations, as usual, they always make me laugh!

    ReplyDelete
  4. Anita,
    Truth be told I was scared silly when I started doing this and still get kinda nervous. So brave, no, (but wacko, yes!)

    ReplyDelete
  5. Anonymous6:09 PM

    Bravery is not the absence of fear, but what you do even though you are afraid.

    ReplyDelete
  6. Anonymous10:29 PM

    Congrats on the solo! It's a huge psychological accomplishment. It's good that you got the priorities straight here, in the correct order:

    1. Buy beer
    2. Pull before you auger in

    :-)

    ReplyDelete
  7. It is amazing that you share your knowledge with us.
    adultwork london

    ReplyDelete

I dislike typing the quasi-legible words too, but without them it's Spam City, Sorry!