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My wife Shelly and I run a
small Drop Zone, sky dive Key West, just outside of Key West, Florida.
My name is Christian, I do the tandem sky diving and my wife does
the video jumps. Our daughter Skylar was born 12-22-98 and ever
since, she has been the center
of our lives.
Both of us being passionate skydivers with over 10.000 Florida sky
diving jumps between us, it was a natural desire to take Skylar
up with us on a sky diving jump as soon as we felt she was ready
for a Florida sky diving experience.
We
agreed on that fact, that we wanted her to ask for it, rather then
being pushed into it at all. We also felt that we could prepare
her for her jump by slowly introducing several somewhat related
things to her. Since my wife is a pilot, we had taken Skylar up
in a Cessna 172 to fly
around Key West when she was as little as four days old. In fact,
I kept a little log book on her flights, and she now has about 50
hours in single engine aircraft and helicopters. So we were very
confident, that the flying part of our adventure would come very
natural to Skylar. But we also tried to do other things like driving
convertibles to get her used to the wind; we took her to vertical
windtunnels, where she didn't fly herself but where she got to experience
the wind and a similar noise level then in an aircraft.
We've have always included
her in everything we did, so she was used to the 'tandem' type attachment;
I have rollerbladed and skied with her in a harness in front of
me ever since she was a few months old. The most important part
in the preparation though, was to take her
parasailing tandem repeatedly, which is very similar to at least
the canopy ride. The months before her jump we went parasailing
numerous times and she was always very comfortable with it and asked
to go again.
Skylar was raised at the sky dive Key West Drop Zone; we had a friend
watch her when we were skydiving, so she has been around sky diving
literally all of her young life and has shown great interest in
watching the freefall Florida sky diving videos, especially in the
past year. She must have seen a couple thousand jumps on TV by now.
On 7-11-01 after 18 years, the FAA finally recognized tandem sky
diving by including it in the federal aviation regulations. There
is no reference to a minimum age of the tandem passenger anymore,
so the eleventh of July would be the first day where we could legally
take Skylar up on her first sky dive Key West jump.
We felt that Skylar was well
prepared, she expressed that she wanted to go with us and we were
confident that she was ready. When we got up in the morning of the
11th, it wasn't a perfect day; it was overcast and we decided to
wait for a better day - everything had to be just
perfect. Just because the 11th of July was the first day that we
could legally jump with our daughter, it was certainly not the last
and so we put it off to an unspecified time in the future.
A few days later, I learned that a Dutch tandem instructor by the
name of Herman Landsman had made a jump with his 2 ½ year-old daughter
Demie. Let me briefly explain our motivation to go sky diving with
Skylar. My first thought was, that if I was going to get run over
by a car tomorrow and would never be able to skydive again, I would
always regret not having jumped with my daughter. My wife and I
also felt strongly, that an experience like this would greatly benefit
our daughter's self esteem; when she is an adult, she'll always
feel how important she was to her parents and having been the world's
youngest skydiver, certainly wouldn't hurt her self-confidence.
So while the most important reason for the jump was Skylar, it was
also a nice vanity that she would be a world record holder. So I
was a little upset to learn about Demie's jump, but then decided
to make the best of it. I called Herman in the Netherlands, because
who in the world would be able to provide me with better information
about sky diving with such a young child then him?
Herman was very helpful and informative on the telephone. We spoke
for about 40 minutes and I gained even more confidence about jumping
with Skylar. I also learned that Demie would turn three in September,
which makes her three months older then Skylar and would buy us
some time, where Skylar could still be the youngest jumper in the
world. In hindsight, I was happy for Demie, her mother Karina and
Herman that I hadn't jumped on 7-11. This way Demie at least held
the world record at some point, our daughter could then take it
over and who knows who is going to sky diving next, that's even
younger then Skylar.
Anyway, after this unexpected event and the added information that
I had gotten from it, we were finally ready to do sky dive Key West
on 7-21-01. I had made six tandem sky diving jumps that day, the
winds hadn't changed all day, they were light and out of the south.
My wife also felt good about the conditions and we made a decision
to go.
Skylar had tried on the harness that we had prepared for her at
home a number of times, so gearing up was pretty uneventful but
of course Shelly and I were slowly getting nervous, even though
we had planned this day for such a long time.
We had agreed on jumping from
8000 feet and I was going to deploy the drogue after only a five
second freefall and the canopy immediately thereafter. We weren't
sure of Skylar's reaction to the wind of 120 miles per hour, so
we would take it easy on her first jump and then on future jumps
increase the freefall time. Shelly was to climb out before us in
order to take pictures
and video the jump.
So we geared up and I hooked Skylar up before we even boarded the
aircraft. The way up to altitude was a walk in the park. We are
so used to flying together, we were talking, laughing, looking out
the window.
All of a sudden it hit me
at about 5000 feet - I got nervous! Having made 5500 Florida sky
diving jumps to date, this was unquestionably the most important
one of my life. What if she wouldn't like it? But Skylar sat in
my lap so relaxed, I tried to hide my feelings, so that she wouldn't
sense them.
When we opened the door, it was windy and noisy suddenly; Skylar
didn't like that at all and I had a doubt as of whether I wanted
to go through with the jump.
At this point, Shelly
had already climbed out and could see our daughter's face much better
then I could. She was waving at me to go, so I just moved into the
open door. We rolled out of the plane and what came next was just
the most amazing experience for me. Skylar relaxed instantly. My
wife said later that she could see it, too. I felt so good about
everything, I decided to change the plan: instead of opening the
parachute right away, I kept on freefalling for
about 20 seconds. We later regretted only having gone to 8000 feet.
Next time we would certainly go higher for Skylar to have a longer
freefall and sky diving experience.
Skylar sensed that something was different when I opened the parachute
and tensed up for just a couple of seconds. It was absolutely beautiful
and amazing to me, that she then relaxed immediately when the canopy
was open. When we had gone parasailing together, she had always
been a bit tense when we launched, but mellowed out about a minute
into the ride. Here she was comfortable instantly.
I pointed out her Mom's parachute which she had seen so many times
from the ground. I showed her Key West from the air, our house and
other landmarks that she was familiar with. Then I did a 360 degree
turn and asked her where she thought our house was. She had no trouble
finding it. She gave me a kiss and together we watched her Mom's
landing.
I was a little apprehensive about our landing, but with her only
weighing 32 pounds and a 5kts breeze, it turned out to be beautiful.
Shelly ran up to us and Skylar gave her a high five and a kiss.
Apart from opening the door, she was never upset. And think about
it: most any normal person is nervous when that door opens!
She now talks about her experience much like she talks about parasailing
or driving in a Jeep - it's something enjoyable to her that she
would like to do again. She wanted to jump again today, but it is
raining, much to her dismay. Shelly and I decided that we would
like to take her up every year on her birthday, but I'm not sure
whether we can wait that long.
Sky
dive Key West - Click Here for More Information - Key West,
FL
See the Keys from two miles up, at 120 MPH or more! USPA
Certified Instruction, 100 % Safety Record, 10,000 Jump, 40 Second
Free-Fall, 5.5 Minute Canopy Ride, Video & Still Photos of your
jump are available!
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