Dick McMahon
of the first 19 jumps
Skydiving

  

August 28, 1999  JUMP-1:  A tandem jump over Coos Bay, Oregon, sends a rush of adrenaline into my blood.   Freefall is windy!   After parachute opens I saw tiny airplanes taking off & landing at the airport a MILE straight down between my feet! Unbelievable view of the ocean and of the coastline!   I've got to learn how to do this BY MYSELF without some guy strapped to my back.

April 22-29, 2000  JUMPS 2,3,4,5:      AFF (accelerated free fall) training begins at Creswell, Oregon.  No one is attached to me now except an invisible guardian angel (who was probably reluctant to go).   Scary, but Great Fun!

April 30, 2000  JUMP-6:  Freefall 45-secs.  Pulled ripcord at 5,000 feet. Line-over malfunction, parachute won’t open!  Shit, I'm gonna die!  Everything seems in slow-motion.   Cutaway main, back into freefall again, pulled reserve. Survived ... God was with me.   Had to buy beer for everyone. (I still don't understand that tradition).  But, now I know there really is a RESERVE chute packed in there somewhere.


April 30, 2000  JUMP-7:  Sunset jump. Getting dark, lights of Eugene glowing below. Bad spotting, unable to get back to the dropzone.  Lots of trees beneath me.   See a small open field, pray there are no power lines or barbed wire. Land on a dairy farm.  Surrounded by hungry cows who seem surprised at someone falling from the sky.   They begin nibbling at my parachute. Told them, "I'll be back later with food" (I lied).  Hiked to highway for a ride to the airport.

May 1st - 7th, 2000  JUMPS 8,9,10:   OK, but still unstable.  JUMP 11: Uncontrolled spinning in freefall, almost lost my left ear when riser deploys.  Cottage Grove hospital for stitches.

May 14, 2000  JUMP 12:  Beautiful!  Got my confidence back!

 

May 20, 2000  JUMP 13:    VERY BAD  Lost stability on pull.  Rolled over on my back.  Chute opens beneath me, lines wrap around my right leg. Suddenly yanked upside-down when canopy fills with air.  Leg hyper-extended, hurts like hell!  Little strength to guide canopy.   PLF landing. Survived, but passed-out after being carried to the hangar. Sacred Heart Hospital - Morphine!   God was with me again (could have passed out in mid-air).


A year passes filled with pain, sleepless nights, doctor visits, physical therapy and acupuncture. Maybe I died in that jump and I’m now in Hell.


July 4, 2001  JUMP 14:    In the hours leading to this jump, fear demons were working overtime.  No longer innocent of how easy it is to get hurt, I felt physically sick anticipating this jump.  WTF am I doin' here?  When they said the plane was ready for take-off all I wanted to do was drop to the ground into a fetal position and cover my head with a blanket (which would probably have spoiled the macho image I'd been working on).  Well, the 14th jump is now history, and it went great!   54-secs of freefall from 12,000 feet.  Nothing feels better than conquering fears.

Wind tunnel in Orlando


July 8-Sep 2, 2001 
JUMPS 15,16,17,18,19:
    Wind tunnel practice in Florida.  Now back in Oregon still learning.  Love hanging from the strut of the airplane, then letting go and tracking across the sky in freefall (the Superman thing).   And, today I'm officially off "student status".      Hallelujah!     

Convinced this was the sport for me, I bought my own rig for Jump-30 ... then was nervous about using it. Everything was NEW, which means the main & reserve parachutes had never been used on a jump!   How in hell does anyone know if brand new parachutes work?

Jim Evonuk, a veteran skydiver, said I shouldn't worry ... that if both parachutes fail to open on my jump he'd call the manufacturers and get my money back.  (It might help to pay for my funeral.)

 Number of skydives now = 82
Freefall time:  65-min 19-secs
Freefall:  113.6 miles   (182.9 km)
Under canopy:  62.2 miles   (100 km)
Plane to planet:  175.8 miles   (282.9 km)
Cutaways = 1

       You know you’re a skydiver when 
                 

                 ... whenever leaving a drinking establishment, you yell, “DOOR”
                    before stepping out into the street.

 

                ... you analyze every flag you pass to see which direction you should land.

 

                ... you catch yourself FLAKING the bed instead of making it.
 

               ... you wear a skydiving T-shirt to a job interview.

 

                ... when buying a house seems like a terrible waste of jump money.

 

                ... you see an incredibly beautiful woman and think, 
                   
“Hmm … I wonder if I can talk her into skydiving”.

 

                ... you try to convince the flight attendant on a commercial flight
                    that you really WOULD be more comfortable
sitting on the floor.

 

                ... you fall off a roof and put the freefall into your log book.

 

                ... you jump off the high diving board at the local swimming pool
                    and try to flare before hitting the water.

 

                ... you break a femur and ask the paramedics if you can jump out
                    of the chopper on the way to the hospital.

                ... when you used to have a savings account, but now you have friends,
                    a log book full of entries and a new attitude about life.


 
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Thanks for visiting this web site.  It's dedicated to my son and daughter, my grandkids, and especially to a very understanding wife.  
 
Being called an ADVENTURER is "cool".  INSANE has an ugly sound to it.

Dick McMahon