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January 10, 2007

Beckhams Try "Indoor Skydiving"

Not very often we get to link to "Hello" magazine - but it looks like "indoor skydiving" is going mainstream - as the Beckhams try it out ....

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The former Spice Girl's husband David Beckham had forked out £1,200 to privately hire out the Airkix centre in Milton Keynes - where a 150mph wind tunnel recreates the exhilarating sensation of freefall parachuting. Sons Brooklyn, seven, and four-year-old Romeo spent 20 minutes with their mum and dad lying face-down on tables to learn the parachute manoeuvres before entering the wind tunnel.

"David and Brooklyn were both really good and were going up and down and forward and back and turning like proper skydivers," revealed an insider. "Posh and Romeo had a great time, but weren't as good."

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January 08, 2007

Skydiving Fatality was friend of dead BASE Jumper

An Icelandic man killed in a parachute jump performance at a North Coast dance festival was a good friend of one of Australia's most experienced BASE jumpers, Anthony Coombes, who died last year jumping from a 1100-metre cliff in Norway.

BASE jumping is a form of parachuting that involves jumping from objects such as cliffs and skyscrapers. It stands for Building, Antenna, Span, Earth.

So close was their bond that the 27-year-old Icelander, known as Benni, travelled to Australia late last year to spend Christmas with Coombes's sister and mother at Goonellabah, near Lismore on the state's North Coast.

But exactly two weeks later, yesterday, Benni was also dead, when a skydiving performance at the Superfreaks dance festival near Bonalbo, about an hour west of Lismore, went wrong.
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January 05, 2007

Skydiving Champion Emma Beyer

Emma Beyer is not Britain’s most famous world champion, but she is one of the most glamorous. Freefall skydiving from 10,500ft has a romance of its own, but the 33-year-old from Beaconsfield, Buckinghamshire, is also a former model and is seeking work high above the Hollywood hills, where few superstars dare to go.

Two of Beyer’s three gold medal-winning team-mates from last summer’s World Championships in Germany have done stunt work. Amanda Kemp was Angelina Jolie’s body double in Tomb Raider 2 and Julia Foxwell played Halle Berry’s more hair-raising moments in the James Bond film Die Another Day.

“The things they got up to on set were far more dangerous than anything we do in our everyday lives skydiving,” Beyer said. “It was a lot of fun and, because we do so much training in California, those sorts of opportunities do come up.”

Just as well because Beyer has remortgaged and let her house to fund her sport. She estimates that her annual skydiving bill exceeds £100,000. “It’s been worth it, but without sponsorship the well soon runs dry,” she said.

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December 12, 2006

Indoor Skydiving

SkyVenture (http://www.skyventure.com) started in Orlando in 1998, when original owner Bill Kitchen decided to create a place where skydivers could train and other people could get the sensation of skydiving without jumping. The company, now owned by a group of investors, has since expanded to Arizona, California, Colorado, New Hampshire, England and Malaysia, with plans for several more in the next few years, including one currently being built in Moscow.

It wasn't a new technology -- wind tunnels have been around since the late 1800s and there were already skydiving tunnels on the market -- but Kitchen wanted something that was safer than previous versions.

What he did was create a 40-foot tower that's shaped like an hourglass, with a large air tank at the bottom, a narrow flying chamber and an expanded area at the top, where large fans suck the air upward. The air underneath gets compressed once it reaches the chamber and the fans help create a vacuum known as the Venturi effect, similar to the way a carburetor gets gas into a car's intake.

November 25, 2006

15,000 Skydives at USPA National Skydiving Championships

he sky was the limit for hundreds of the nation’s most awesome aerial athletes who recently competed at the 2006 United States Parachute Association (USPA) National Skydiving Championships, hosted by Skydive Arizona. 15,500 skydives by almost 1,000 world-class skydivers from across the U.S. made it the largest skydiving competition in its 49-year history.

a href="http://home.businesswire.com/portal/site/google/index.jsp?ndmViewId=news_view&newsId=20061120006088&newsLang=en">Source


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October 25, 2006

Vertical Wind Tunnels Take Off

I'd never heard of vertical wind tunnels until recently - now it would seem they are all over the place.
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SkyVenture Colorado is a vertical wind tunnel that brings the experience of flight to virtually anyone age 3 through 103! You learn to fly in a climate controlled wind tunnel with the world's best instructors. It's a safe, fun and exhilarating experience.

Source


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October 09, 2006

Yet Another Skydiving Record

An Arizona man is claiming a new world record for skydiving with more than 600 jumps in a 24-hour period.

The Indianapolis Star said Jay Stokes of Yuma set the apparent new Guinness World Record in rural Greensburg, Ind., parachuting to the ground "between 635 and 645" times, breaking his old record of 534 jumps in 24 hours.

The Herculean effort required precision and timing. To set the new record, he had to complete a jump every 2 minutes, 24 seconds; at that rate, he needed to jump 26 times per hour to reach the 600-jump mark, besting his old record set in California in 2003, the newspaper said.
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September 08, 2006

Skydiving Briton dies in Spain

Anna Endicott, 31, from Thornbury, Gloucestershire, plunged 12,000ft to her death during the skydive at Toledo near Madrid.

Mrs Endicott, an experienced skydiver, lost consciousness after colliding with her instructor.

Her reserve parachute was activated but could not slow her descent. She died at the scene after suffering massive internal injuries.

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June 23, 2006

Indoor Skydiving

I coudn't believe it when I read it and did a double-take. Indoor skydiving? BASE jumpers jump off big buildings - but I'd never heard of them BASE jumping inside a building ...

Turns out that World Challenge 2007 is taking place in "the world's greatest skydiving wind tunnel" - in Bedford, UK.

There are two categories. The 4-way FS (Formation Skydiving) event sees teams of four following a set routine, flying against the clock. The 2-way FF (Freeflying) comprises teams of two who perform compulsory manouvres and free routines.
Indoor skydiving in a vertical wind- tunnel - who would have believed it!

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April 18, 2006

84 Year Old Skydiver

AP Wire | 04/17/2006 | Skydiving doesn't scare 84-year-old Jamestown woman

More skydiving antics from people who prove that growing old doesn't mean you have to give up doing new and exciting things - this time from 84 year old Betty Taft.

You don't have time to be scared," she said.

"The first minute is kind of bad because you're free falling, and I had no idea it was so cold. I about near froze to death," she said.

"Once the chute opened, of course, we were floating, and it was just beautiful," Taft said. "It was awesome."

Brilliant - maybe if I live to be 84 I'll take up skydiving too ....


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March 28, 2006

Skydiving Granny Makes Birthday Jump

This is a great story about a 80 year old skydiver.

A northern California grandmother celebrated her 80th birthday by taking the jump of a lifetime.

"When you first come out, that wind is ... strong," she said. "Once you're in the parachute, you're just gliding, and that's when you can see everything. ... I would do it again."


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The Launch of Skydiving-School.com

Sky Diving School is a new website dedicated to SkyDiving.

It looks pretty comprehensive - but I guess it needs users to make it work - contributing to the Forums, Blogs and Classified Ads.

If you are into SkyDiving then check it out - it could be really excellent if enough of the SkyDiving community join in.


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March 15, 2006

SkyFlyers of 1931

I found this on a Magazine Cover website and thought it was good enough to share.



Skyflyers of 1931


The combination of skiing and wingflying means that this might be the earliest picture of what would later become an extreme sport - with skiers jumping off of mountains with paragliders.

Are you a Skyflyer?
If so please contact the author to be interviewed for "Extreme Tales"


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February 16, 2006

New Skydiving Record

I saw this on Spanish TV but it was fresh enough that there was nothing on the net - then somehow it slipped my mind.

Now, thanks to Technology Underground blog I am reminded that the world record for number of skydivers in formation was smashed the other day.

Earlier this month, 400 skydivers from 31 countries set a world record for the largest connected formation skydive.
A new world skydiving record - how often does that happen?

Well all the time actually.

As more and more people take up skydiving the pool of people willing to make such attempts, and who can do so safely, will grow and grow.

I don't know what the upper limit for this kind of formation is - I suppose it has to do with time falling vs distance flying to the target link-up space.

There must be an upper limit on how many planes can safely cruise the sky dropping skydivers - and an upper limit of the number of skydivers carried - and there is certainly a limit to the height they can be dropped from unless they use oxygen.

Interesting questions - anyone out there in the skydiving community got any ideas about this?

What is the possible upper limit for skydiving formation team size and what factors most influence these limits?

Will we see bigger and bigger teams in the future?



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SkySurfing

I like the idea of "SkySurfing".

The use of a board to "surf" currents of air in the way that surfers surf waves, snowboarders surf snow-waves and skateboarders board on artifical "waves" brings together many extreme disciplines into one place.




Learning Skysurfing



SkySurfing is more popular in the US than the rest of the world, and it is a challenge for even experienced skydivers and freefallers.

Using a modified "surfboard" as a monoplane wing, the skysurfing enthusiast soon learns how to work the board to best effect.

Tipping the front edge of the board down will increase airspeed - the air flow over the board is fast enough to give some "lift" even though the board surface is quite small and narrow.

It's when the board is tipped up that astonishing things occur - as the the board becomes more resistant to air the skysurfers flip over their centre of gravity - giving rise to the amazing loops and flips that you see on TV and video.

Learning to skysurf is +200 jumps - so it's for hardcore sydivers - not novices.

The great thing is that every year more and more people are attracted to skydiving and less and less people die - the pool of +200 people will grow and grow.

Isn't it time for the first "Sky Olympics".

The sports  could be skysurfing, freefall acrobatics, freefall flown distance, skyflying acrobatics, skyflying flown distance, freefall formation and skyflying formation.

There are now enough competitors and enough different disciplines to make it possible - and there are experienced camera skydivers to make it work .

Enough people jump from all over the world to make it a reality without making it dangerous - the recent skydiving formation record in Thailand had 400 people from 31 countries - a massive undertaking.

If enough people decide to make it happen then the first "Sky Olympics" could be held within the next few years.

If that happens we can expect interesting crossovers as surfers, snowboarders and skaters learn to skydive so they can skysurf as well.

The resulting mashups should be visually spectacular and fun for everyone involved.


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January 16, 2006

The Skyflyers

Ever since mankind looked into the sky and watched the birds at play, the dream of flight has driven dreamers, engineers, scientists, artists and realists alike.

The early renaissance designs of Leonardo Da Vinci, were followed by successful experiments with hot air balloons by the Montgolfier brothers brothers in the 1800's, which in turn gave birth to the first heavier-than-air flight by the Wright brothers in 1903.

If anything, two world wars did nothing to slow down the adoption of flying.

With airplanes widely adopted by all sides in WWI, and thee rapid technological advances between the wars, it was inevitable that the modified and improved airplanes used at the outset of WWII would finally give way to the newer and faster "jet" engines.

When the WWII ended there was a surplus of pilots and planes, and several commercial airlines began their operations in the post war years starting the revolution that would lead to cheap package holidays in Majorca.

It was an age of quick technological evolution, as designs and techniques developed for war were recycled for peace - leading to rapid and fast development of larger and airplanes along with the increased competition.

By the late 1950's or early 1960's the "Aerial Age" had ended - and the "Age of Aviation" had begun.

Huge commercial corporations built the infrastructure of flight we take for granted today - and convinced millions of people that flying really was "as safe as taking the bus" - the world began to shrink and suddenly everyone could be a part of "the jet set".

Yet, even now in the modern "Charter Age" - when vast airliners carrying hundreds of people stream across the globe in a matter of hours - and flying really is as simple as taking a bus into the city, some men and women still dream of flying unassisted through the skies.

Skydiving and parachuting are one step forward into that dream, and ever since skydivers have been jumping out of airplanes they have been looking for ways to prolong the skydiving experience, to spend longer in the air, to forestall that moment when they come back to earth again.

The problem is physics - if you drop anything out of an airplane, it will fall and accelerate until it reaches terminal velocity - it can't go any faster. The only things between the skydiver and physics are (a) the shape of the body and (b) a parachute.

The development of skydiving as a sport has enabled an astonishing degree of bodily control on the trajectory before the point that the parachute is even opened.

This control allows experienced skydivers to speed up, slow down and, to a certain extent , to "fly" towards a designated point to meet up with other skydivers.

That this approach is successful can be seen from that fact that skilled skydivers can work in large teams - enabling such record breaking feats as creating a formation of 672 skydivers over Thailand in 2004.

But freefall is still freefall, and skydivers have been recently been experimenting with ways to fly further for longer - so they have developed the "wingsuit" - a specially adapted freefall jumpsuit with wings of material between the arms and the legs.

By the 1990's experiments with the early wingsuits by the French skydiver Patrick de Gayardon had inspired a generation of skydivers to take this one step further - and create and fly new designs of wingsuits engineered to take the skydiver further and faster than before.

Skyflying had been born and a now a whole new generation could now follow the age old dream of flight.

Wingsuits work in the way that any other wing works - by generating lift. The material between the legs and the folds of the arms works very similar to the folds of flesh on a flying squirrel and thus slowing the rate of descent - allowing the skyflyer to freefall for longer than ever before.

It doesn't matter whether you fly a kite, a glider, a 747 or a wingsuit - the scientific principle is the same - the aerodynamic properties of an airfoil forces air to move faster over the top part of the wing - and that generates "lift".

The faster the forward speed of an object, the faster the air rushing over the top of the wing, and the greater the amount of "lift".

Using a wingsuit creates a situation for the Skyflyer that has a "high glide ratio" - allowing more time in the air - and more time for exploration.

This exploration has paid off - Skyflyers have learned to exploit all the physics they can get - and then some more.

The result is that instead of falling from the sky like a stone - a Skyflyer can glide like a swallow , engage in "flocking behaviour" like a bird, do aerobatics like a plane, or simply cruise along talking to fellow Skyflyers.

This is a not a sport for the casual practitioner - but for experienced skydivers. If you wish to become a Skyflyer you will need somewhere around 200-500 jumps before even strapping on a wingsuit, and even then instruction is recommended.

Skyflying is a new sport, but already there experiments with rockets attached to the boots of jumpsuits - accelerating the Skyflyer and allowing level flight for a limited period. As technology advances we can be sure that Skyflying will become even more advanced, with new types of wing designs, new materials and new techniques.

I love this slogan from a t-shirt from the Bird-man site - it sums up everything I like about this new sport.

The world is made a better place by those who refuse to believe they can't fly.

Are you a Skyflyer?

If so please contact the author to be interviewed for "Extreme Tales"


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January 01, 2006

Towering jump into record book

Some extreme news ...

Gary Cunningham, an Australian engineer, left, rang in the new year by jumping off the 421-metre (1,381ft) Menara Kuala Lumpur tower 133 times.
Cunningham, 34, who set out to break the record for the most BASE jumps performed in 24 hours, started at midnight as New Year’s Eve began and finished as fireworks exploded in the sky above the Malaysian capital to mark the new year. The previous BASE jump record is believed to be 57. (AFP)

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From the "Times Online"

December 31, 2005

Extreme Tales: Call for Contributions

Calling all cave divers, base jumpers, free climbers, surfers, bungee jumpers, zorbers, parkour enthusiasts, skateboarders, kite boarders, free divers, wing-suiters, freefall specialists, wind riders, wake boarders, urban exploration experts, wind surfers, cavers, mountaineers and white water rafters.

Dr. K, author of "Hackers' Tales" is currently researching a new book called "Extreme Tales".

Are you an extreme sports enthusiast?

Do you have tale to tell about your extreme sport?

If so please contact the author.


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