As a retired Navy EOD tech/parachutist I get asked what it’s like to jump out of a perfectly good aircraft, I tell them my first 50 jumps were night jumps, then on my 51st I opened my eyes, LOL. Glad you safely made it through your MFF training.
Went through jump school at EODMU ONE in HI. The Lakehurst instructors came to us. I won't mention his name, but an Officer on my stick unhooked and sat back down. He didn't like the view from standing on the edge of the ramp of the C-130.
Man you're not kidding about the skydiving world being full of old hippies. I civilian skydived from 1988 to 2004. Man at the fun we had before 911. With all the things we did I can't imagine going through what you guys did. Much respect
Chad, thank you for these videos. Your demeanor and personality alone make these videos worth watching, aside from all the great content. Thank you again.
I got 3-400 jumps before I got married. That first freefall is a life changer. I was a spinner. Master of line twists. Then one day, BAM. Maintained heading and life was good. I loved jumping.
I completed my Civilian USPA A, B, & C licenses at 20 years old. I worked at the Dropzone as a parachute packer packing student and tandem rigs to pay my way. I have taken a long break. But I do plan to get my D license. I have alot of great stories. It is a good time.
My first (and only) jump was from 15,000 ft. I did it for a Charity. 60 second freefall before my Tandem Instructor pulled the chord. We came out in a somersault. I remember looking down at birds circling below us. ❤ It was great 🎉
Not a hippie, but I am a skydiver. I second that motion that everyone should try it at least once. You’ll fall to the ground and your confidence in yourself will skyrocket.
Hey Chad. I was a Navy Test Parachutist in the early 90's. My 1st jump was a static line water jump. I've got about 900 jumps (military & civilian). 40-ways killed it for me bro. Too many canopies in the air and everyone is shooting for the same target (no bueno). I'm 54 and quite content on the ground these days. Love the stories and the way you tell them. Thanks for your channel.
My 1st jump was 10k my 2nd was 14k feet .. I was an 8 year 11B infantrymen and I had never went airborne.. so I was hell bent on jumping .. and you are exactly right when that door opens and that cool air hits you in the face the shit gets real .. real fast ..
I was never airborne in the Marine Corps but I did get into jumping for a while afterwards as a civilian. My Jump Master was a prior active Marine and his 2 sons were as well. They assisted him and were about my age. The comradery made the experience even better. Anyway, I always wondered why there were active Seals jumping with civilians. Now I know why. Thanks for the video.
Great video! I went through the Army jump school at Ft. Benning back in 2003 and that was about the most fun I had while in the Army. The first jump had me a bit nervous when the doors opened and I saw just how close 1,250 feet is to the ground but man...what a rush that was! I am only a 5 jump chump but have always wanted to try actual sky diving. Thanks for you service Chadd!
My 1st jump - 12500 ft - 20 degrees at altitude - jumped out, same thing tunnel vision and lack of awareness till 8000 ft so about 25 seconds, I was awakened by my main AFF jumpmaster shaking me by my leg and arm grips like i was some kid who got caught smashing his pumpkins on his porch at 2am holloween night... I did a practice touch checked main and reserve jump masters went for my second practice touch and wham! I was under my main at 4500 ft and watched my instructors peel off and track away.... Crazy experience.... Went on to jump over 330 civilian jumps, 12 night jumps, 2 🎈 jumps, halo training, and my 1st base jump in Moab last Oct. Thanks for sharing it brought back those memories like they were yesterday.
I was a PR in the Navy. Allegedly, the old school before Pensacola, there was Lake Hurst NJ. When A school graduation, you jumped with your rig that you packed.
In preparation for skydiving training, to get used to the height and to overcome our fear, we had to jump from the 3m and later also from the 5m tower every Friday after swimming in 10-weeks-programme. From week to week new jumping tricks like somersaults were added. We got three types of men: 1. „The ones who did perfectly jumps without any fear.“ 2. „Some guys who had some fear because of the height, standing 10min on top of the springboard and then finally to crash into water“ 3. „The fearless ones who gave all their will and passion they have to finally crash also into water.“ When they emerged from the water they looked like someone had beaten them up with a wooden slat in their face. That was a nice spectacle for the instructors. Good times! :) Greetings from the „Schwarzwald“ GER
My best friend died in a parachuting accident about 15yrs ago. He was in the army and they made them jump despite high winds. When he got near the ground he got caught in a sustained wind gust that blew him sideways where he hit the ground knocking him out and was dragged several hundred feet in a grass field that had small boulders in it. Why the army didn’t take all the boulders out of the field where people are landing is beyond infuriating as is the fact they made him jump in a bad weather situation.
My daughter wanted to go skydiving for her high school graduation present. It was her and her best friend, both adrenalin junkies and myself. The experience was absolutely amazing and yes, I would do it again. My profile picture is my daughter and I pre-jump.
You hit the nail on the head… I was a jump pilot back in 2014 and flying seals out of Eloy AZ having flown those jump planes in those situations has made me a better pilot today now flying med evac heart transplant teams in a much nice jet
I’m starting my AFF later this year, I’m a former Army Paratrooper with 31 static line jumps but I’ve always wanted to free fall. Looking forward to progressing up to my C license. 🤘🏼😎🍻
Back in the day I did a static line jump. I had line twist. They were yelling over the radio to me, but I didn't realize I was the blue and white canopy! I snapped out of it and rocked my risers, so I was ok. The scariest thing was being thousands of feet off the ground, riding in a harness. Jumping out was abject terror, but I loved it! Got a great picture too... Thanks Chad 👍
I had anaphylactic shock from a "siete del mar" (7 of sea) soup from a Mexican restaurant. I couldn't breath, I broke out in hives, I couldn't even speak to the hospital staff. Benadryl and Epi are life savers but the upper/downer effect is hell.
I know! I have never even been drunk before so when I started feel that way after they started the IV/injection, I turned to my husband and said “oh hell no, I’m not going through this!” And closed my eyes and went to sleep. 😂 Craziest feeling ever for me! I wondered if that’s what it feels like to take recreational drugs.
I jumped freefall after military did a halo from 30,500 at freefall conversation.250 jumps total, 2 cutaways etc. Puked in my jump suit once, against the rules to puke on plane Ur right about the jump sene it's crazy. I loved it .
My dad's philosophy was unless the airplane is burning or breaking up, why jump out of a perfectly good airplane. He worked over 40 years as Boeing engineer until 2007
Guy on the flight before me had the static line pull between his legs and had to cut his primary to get to his reserve. (It was his first or second jump.) Then the guy in front of me froze going out the door. I did make it out the door but don't remember any of it until the canopy opened. Went toes, knees, nose and was dragged through a blackberry batch before coming to a stop:)
I think what I remember the most was exactly what you mentioned...tunnel vision and it was extremely loud from the air whipping past my big ears. Definitely fun as hell.
I jumped out of a little plane, I didn’t experience tunnel vision, I could see for miles and was so amazed how a itty bitty, smaller than my pinky fingernail, tractor trailer looked going down the interstate from way up in the sky; it was amazing, didn’t even seem like I was falling…UNTIL I got closer to the ground, then wooosh! It was not a graceful landing…rolled with the instructor that was attached to me on top of me. I agree, everyone should do it at least once. It was fun. Love these short clips and now I know why the epi pen is part of your ‘go bag’ …pumpkin head lol Thank you 👊
Thank you. Mental toughness seems to be at the core of your discussions. It's an attitude. But it doesn't kick in until it's required. Thank you for that discovery. I'm getting that we all have it in the tool bag. We have to learn how to use it. I'm learning.
I’ve had the honor of skydiving with SEALs in Siloam Springs, Arkansas. They would come to our DZ on their time off from training at Fort Chaffee Arkansas. Always a fun time in the sky!
I just realized you posted this on the day of my birthday and my first ever skydive jump was a birthday gift to myself 22 years ago. Haven't jumped for a while now but it is fun indeed and totally agree, you have to do it at least once in your life. Peace.
Death by Sandwich, sounds like a 90s rockband. I've jumped 3 times. The last one was 17 years after the first 2. Panic set in when I got to the door. When my instructor and I jumped out, it was awesome. Still got the taste at almost 50.
Man what a tale! Ive been through a bad allergic reaction, it was so miserable, but to add to that, being chutted up, standing up in a stick shuffling out the door thinking "omg what am i going to do!" because i cant breathe!! Ive never felt any fear greater or more urgent than that feeling that comes over you when you realize your oxygen supply or ability to breath has been cut off, nor can I imagine any more panic inducing moment than that even being possible!!! Man I love your shared experiences that youve acquired through your years of service in the Teams! Thank you Chadd for sharing them with us!!!
Do you have video of your AFF1? I had all of mine videoed, but I guess they don’t do that in the military. But it’s good to be able to go back to the tape in case the instructor thought you didn’t do something and you did. Glad you posted this video and explained your experience! You’re right about the culture too! It’s like time slows down with those jump zone people! They’re on their own schedule for sure! Thank you for your service!
Been there my brother. I would curl the nose when I packed my chute. My SF Career was ended on a Halo Jump in Eloy AZ during team certifications. I was jumping a brand new chute with 0 jumps on it on a Wall Locker Jump Turn Pull. It was the opening that did me in. It crushed my entire spine...I ended up fused 4 levels in my neck and 2 levels in my lower back. 6/14/14. Thew end.
Great experience Chadd. Eye opening too. Like the saying goes, as a pilot, why jump out of a perfectly good plane, but I'm a helicopter pilot, so it wouldn't make sense anyway.
chadd i enjoy your videos serious you are my hero thank you from the bottom of my heart i did 25 in the air force reserve and three active duty field artillery army at ft hood texas
Thanks for your service. I’m not a military guy but my dad was. I agree with your view of skydiving. I’ve done two jumps so far. It’s certainly thrilling. I also scuba dive too.
I learned how to fly a huey outta Oaxaca, MX. I always wanted my own helicopter. At Benning, we static line jumped, quite easy, fast drop. Free falls is lots of airtime, thinkin' about chow time 🌮 I took so many hits to my head, concussions as a kid, I scared the F outta my commanders. Wasn't til I was in South Korea I first skydived. Only time I was ever afraid in the military was riding MAC back stateside, no chute. I'm very accident prone, but seeing friends getting caught up atop a chute or falling into trees is funny.
Golden Knights, 1986 thru 1991. Jumped with a few seals. Over in England for the 50th anniversary of the airborne forces, 1989. Jumping all over the island with all the British high speed guys. Having tea and sausage rolls. Key word, sausage. Fighting for altitude due to the typical weather. Bouncing around in a loaded C130 scraping the clouds at 1800 feet. I was going to lose it from one end or the other. "Mike", our safety officer, "please let me jump no matter the low altitude". We jumped free fall from 1500 feet-ish and I zeroed in on the Porta poties at the end of the parade field. Shortest distance between two points is a straight line. Made it without incident. It was an honor to have been part of that and an honor to have been around some really high speed guys.
GK are kick ass…I only have a few jumps one of my instructors was Tom Sanders before he became famous. He videoed my first clear and pull… next step after static line, you have to pull your own shoot. I chickened out he told the plane to go up another thousand feet and try it again. He said to me can you pull on 2 handles to save your life and I said yes and he turned the camera on. I wish I would’ve bought the tape…..
I was fortunate to have my first of 2 dives being solo (not tandem) about 20 yrs ago. Had the goal to get my own chute and jump everyday. I loved it. Understandably not for everyone but I highly recommend it. I believe that it’s all tandem now if that is a consolation for the hesitant.
@7:58 - That's why that dude jumped out over Raleigh with damaged landing gear and without a parachute! (The pilot landed the damaged aircraft safely).
Skydiving was offered on weekends for a dollar a jump when I was in the 101st. After packing my chute for the 3rd time on a hot sticky day I came within a second of releasing my chute as it wasn’t inflating. Luckily it did but I remember my heart pumping so fast thinking I was going to need my reserve
Never did skydiving but of my first six plane rides, I only landed with the plane once. Army Airborne School as a 18 year old. Total of 15 jumps. Last one was 49 years ago.
I wonder if my ticker would be strong enough to take the excitement of jumping of a plane. I am truly getting a kick watching this videos and hearing your story.
Indeed a fantastic feat you have gone through, and nobody will truly understand your heart & desire. Heart to become what your mind was set on. Only a tiny percentage of people will accomplish your experiences and only a fraction of that! So much dang heart!!
Ignore the other reply. Seems a new kind of scam that will ask you to send a delivery fee for the give away stuff. This scammer usually pretend as the youtuber alt account.
When I was active duty navy in mid 70s... I had a beard about long as Chad's. Regulations said it had to be well trimmed, and that was it! Today, I'm 70 yrs old and shave 2 to 3 times a week. Just thought I'd mention it. Go Chad!
I'm from the UK military and we used to go to Yuma every year for the weather. Let me tell you how much better it is jumping in beautiful weather day or night than jumping anywhere in the UK. We used to do bundle jumping and learnt how to do tandems and qualified as jumpmasters. Still I was never totally fine with jumping but it's how we might have to get to work some day so I figured I'd better be proficient at all forms of airborne insertion
Now that's a ferocious story! You had the good sense to get medical attention but the same sandwich lady, same allergic reaction, damn! Thanks for making the video.
I did a tandem jump, I must say that was one of the best emotional feelings that I personally expierenced. I agree, normally everyone should jump at least 1 time in their life, it´s a blast, and at the same time the emotional high is unexplainable.
As a skydiver, the reason it’s run by civilians is because civilian skydivers have more experience than 99% of any one in special operations whos military free fall qualified. I’ve seen it first hand, guys think there tough shit because they went to military free fall and they think there a bad ass spec ops skydiver, well most of them absolutely suck, and they’re wreckless. Who’s going to know more, the operator who does 50-100 jumps a year to stay current, or the civilian instructor with 5,000 plus jumps. Just saying
Chad, I’ve made three AFFs. You are right about the hippy community. They’re a bunch of really strange guys. It is because of the community that I discontinued my skydiving career.
Ft Lewis WA 1980 CH-47. I remember getting thumbs up on the bird, I remember landing good, had to be good I wasn’t hurt. Ha How was it? Repack and out a couple lifts later. Good stuff. Have an all the way day. 🇺🇸
When I was 19 I quit college and ended up on a chainsaw crew on the Canadian border. Just for the hell of it, I went skydiving twice at a tiny airfield out of an old Cessna 152 with no doors and oil leaking down the side. I'm glad I did it and it was an experience, and I can confirm the culture of the regular skydivers that were there as Chadd describes them.
I feel you. You were lucky to make it to the ground. I have the allergy experience with Arugula, Celery and Lettuce. If I look at Arugula my throat and tongue start swelling. I got one on you. If I eat anything with any form of celery, my balls swell to the size of softballs. Epi-pen and Benadryl are the only hope, and they are a horrible combination. Take care.
Thanks for the video. I was on a live fire range at ft Lewis Washington. I was maneuvering through the range and was attacked by by yellow jackets the medics gave me epinephrine and benadryl, I was out it for the rest of the day.
Thanks for sharing Chadd. Glad you made it through your allergic ordeals. Keep sharing and influencing for Christ. You are affecting so many with your example. Godspeed
Ive hauled jumpers in the past. One guy asked me where he was going to land? I told him to look for the boat, i told him that's if you missed it! Another guy told me to slow down so he didn't roll down the side of the plane! Told him if i slowed down more, wed fall out of the sky
As a retired Navy EOD tech/parachutist I get asked what it’s like to jump out of a perfectly good aircraft, I tell them my first 50 jumps were night jumps, then on my 51st I opened my eyes, LOL. Glad you safely made it through your MFF training.
Navy EOD? 😆 GET outta here weenie were talking about actual Special Operations
Navy EOD some of the most UNDER-RATED BAD-ASSES in the world!!
Went through jump school at EODMU ONE in HI. The Lakehurst instructors came to us. I won't mention his name, but an Officer on my stick unhooked and sat back down. He didn't like the view from standing on the edge of the ramp of the C-130.
Man you're not kidding about the skydiving world being full of old hippies. I civilian skydived from 1988 to 2004. Man at the fun we had before 911. With all the things we did I can't imagine going through what you guys did.
Much respect
Chad, thank you for these videos. Your demeanor and personality alone make these videos worth watching, aside from all the great content. Thank you again.
I totally agree. So collected, and brilliant too.
I got 3-400 jumps before I got married. That first freefall is a life changer. I was a spinner. Master of line twists. Then one day, BAM. Maintained heading and life was good. I loved jumping.
Thanks Chad, your stories are a inspiration to all of us old broken down guys.
I completed my Civilian USPA A, B, & C licenses at 20 years old. I worked at the Dropzone as a parachute packer packing student and tandem rigs to pay my way. I have taken a long break. But I do plan to get my D license. I have alot of great stories. It is a good time.
My first (and only) jump was from 15,000 ft. I did it for a Charity. 60 second freefall before my Tandem Instructor pulled the chord.
We came out in a somersault.
I remember looking down at birds circling below us.
❤
It was great 🎉
Not a hippie, but I am a skydiver. I second that motion that everyone should try it at least once. You’ll fall to the ground and your confidence in yourself will skyrocket.
Hey Chad. I was a Navy Test Parachutist in the early 90's. My 1st jump was a static line water jump. I've got about 900 jumps (military & civilian). 40-ways killed it for me bro. Too many canopies in the air and everyone is shooting for the same target (no bueno). I'm 54 and quite content on the ground these days. Love the stories and the way you tell them. Thanks for your channel.
My 1st jump was 10k my 2nd was 14k feet .. I was an 8 year 11B infantrymen and I had never went airborne.. so I was hell bent on jumping .. and you are exactly right when that door opens and that cool air hits you in the face the shit gets real .. real fast ..
were you paid for your jumps and how much did they pay you?
I was never airborne in the Marine Corps but I did get into jumping for a while afterwards as a civilian. My Jump Master was a prior active Marine and his 2 sons were as well. They assisted him and were about my age. The comradery made the experience even better. Anyway, I always wondered why there were active Seals jumping with civilians. Now I know why. Thanks for the video.
I was there it was awesome. We have the same hair bro. Thanks for always having my pack bro, I got yours too. Gotchu. -Boku
Great video! I went through the Army jump school at Ft. Benning back in 2003 and that was about the most fun I had while in the Army. The first jump had me a bit nervous when the doors opened and I saw just how close 1,250 feet is to the ground but man...what a rush that was! I am only a 5 jump chump but have always wanted to try actual sky diving. Thanks for you service Chadd!
Airborne all the Way! And then some!
My 1st jump - 12500 ft - 20 degrees at altitude - jumped out, same thing tunnel vision and lack of awareness till 8000 ft so about 25 seconds, I was awakened by my main AFF jumpmaster shaking me by my leg and arm grips like i was some kid who got caught smashing his pumpkins on his porch at 2am holloween night... I did a practice touch checked main and reserve jump masters went for my second practice touch and wham! I was under my main at 4500 ft and watched my instructors peel off and track away.... Crazy experience.... Went on to jump over 330 civilian jumps, 12 night jumps, 2 🎈 jumps, halo training, and my 1st base jump in Moab last Oct. Thanks for sharing it brought back those memories like they were yesterday.
Thank you Shipmate for the continued conversation!
I was a PR in the Navy. Allegedly, the old school before Pensacola, there was Lake Hurst NJ. When A school graduation, you jumped with your rig that you packed.
In preparation for skydiving training, to get used to the height and to overcome our fear, we had to jump from the 3m and later also from the 5m tower every Friday after swimming in 10-weeks-programme. From week to week new jumping tricks like somersaults were added. We got three types of men:
1. „The ones who did perfectly jumps without any fear.“
2. „Some guys who had some fear because of the height, standing 10min on top of the springboard and then finally to crash into water“
3. „The fearless ones who gave all their will and passion they have to finally crash also into water.“
When they emerged from the water they looked like someone had beaten them up with a wooden slat in their face.
That was a nice spectacle for the instructors.
Good times! :)
Greetings from the „Schwarzwald“ GER
My best friend died in a parachuting accident about 15yrs ago. He was in the army and they made them jump despite high winds. When he got near the ground he got caught in a sustained wind gust that blew him sideways where he hit the ground knocking him out and was dragged several hundred feet in a grass field that had small boulders in it. Why the army didn’t take all the boulders out of the field where people are landing is beyond infuriating as is the fact they made him jump in a bad weather situation.
You should see the DZs at Ft Bragg, NC. Studded with 100' pine trees for your pleasure...
I’m just amazed you have kept all your certificates. If all else fails you have a future in scrapbooking for sure.
My daughter wanted to go skydiving for her high school graduation present. It was her and her best friend, both adrenalin junkies and myself. The experience was absolutely amazing and yes, I would do it again. My profile picture is my daughter and I pre-jump.
Thank you for your service and to all those who served.
Skydiving is the best experience I've had besides my kids. But with military gear is such a next level. ☝️🤙
You hit the nail on the head… I was a jump pilot back in 2014 and flying seals out of Eloy AZ
having flown those jump planes in those situations has made me a better pilot today now flying med evac heart transplant teams in a much nice jet
1126 jumps personally, in service and retired. I won't stop until my brain tells me it doesn't want to. 😁. Love yer vids Brother. ❤🇨🇦
I’m starting my AFF later this year, I’m a former Army Paratrooper with 31 static line jumps but I’ve always wanted to free fall. Looking forward to progressing up to my C license. 🤘🏼😎🍻
Back in the day I did a static line jump. I had line twist. They were yelling over the radio to me, but I didn't realize I was the blue and white canopy! I snapped out of it and rocked my risers, so I was ok. The scariest thing was being thousands of feet off the ground, riding in a harness. Jumping out was abject terror, but I loved it! Got a great picture too... Thanks Chad 👍
Thank you for your service Chad!
I had anaphylactic shock from a "siete del mar" (7 of sea) soup from a Mexican restaurant. I couldn't breath, I broke out in hives, I couldn't even speak to the hospital staff. Benadryl and Epi are life savers but the upper/downer effect is hell.
I know! I have never even been drunk before so when I started feel that way after they started the IV/injection, I turned to my husband and said “oh hell no, I’m not going through this!” And closed my eyes and went to sleep. 😂 Craziest feeling ever for me! I wondered if that’s what it feels like to take recreational drugs.
I jumped freefall after military did a halo from 30,500 at freefall conversation.250 jumps total, 2 cutaways etc.
Puked in my jump suit once, against the rules to puke on plane
Ur right about the jump sene it's crazy.
I loved it .
I've only jumped three times but I can attest to it is absolutely the most fun you can have with your clothes on. Nothing beats that sensation.
My dad's philosophy was unless the airplane is burning or breaking up, why jump out of a perfectly good airplane. He worked over 40 years as Boeing engineer until 2007
So very sorry for the loss of your be beloved friend and devoted teammate...my condolences to all of his family and friends...
Food trucks could always find military guys wherever they were. In the Army we referred to them as the roach coach or the gut truck.
Gut Truck ! Roach Coach !
I ate more off the trucks than mess hall, when not at sea that is.
I enjoyed your telling us about your experiences!
Guy on the flight before me had the static line pull between his legs and had to cut his primary to get to his reserve. (It was his first or second jump.) Then the guy in front of me froze going out the door. I did make it out the door but don't remember any of it until the canopy opened. Went toes, knees, nose and was dragged through a blackberry batch before coming to a stop:)
Only got 55 jumps , nerves on all of them ! Free fall is great, landing safely is better.
Love your content, brightens my day . Laughing my ass off !
I think what I remember the most was exactly what you mentioned...tunnel vision and it was extremely loud from the air whipping past my big ears. Definitely fun as hell.
I jumped out of a little plane, I didn’t experience tunnel vision, I could see for miles and was so amazed how a itty bitty, smaller than my pinky fingernail, tractor trailer looked going down the interstate from way up in the sky; it was amazing, didn’t even seem like I was falling…UNTIL I got closer to the ground, then wooosh! It was not a graceful landing…rolled with the instructor that was attached to me on top of me. I agree, everyone should do it at least once. It was fun. Love these short clips and now I know why the epi pen is part of your ‘go bag’ …pumpkin head lol Thank you 👊
I’m a U.S. NAVY vet and I really enjoyed watching this mate! I was stationed in NAF Atsugi Japan with VFA-102 F-18 Superhornets. Thanks brother
Thank you. Mental toughness seems to be at the core of your discussions. It's an attitude. But it doesn't kick in until it's required. Thank you for that discovery. I'm getting that we all have it in the tool bag. We have to learn how to use it. I'm learning.
I’ve had the honor of skydiving with SEALs in Siloam Springs, Arkansas. They would come to our DZ on their time off from training at Fort Chaffee Arkansas. Always a fun time in the sky!
Great story!!! I did a tandem jump a few years ago at SKYDIVE OBX (Outer Banks, NC)! SERIOUS ADRENALINE RUSH!!
Chad, thank you for sharing these experiences! From Navy vet to Navy yet, I thank you!
A couple hundred is a lot. You definitely got your sky time in👏
Intense! I’m petrified of heights.
I just realized you posted this on the day of my birthday and my first ever skydive jump was a birthday gift to myself 22 years ago. Haven't jumped for a while now but it is fun indeed and totally agree, you have to do it at least once in your life. Peace.
Wow, anaphylactic shock is no joke, glad you made it through. Now I just need to find a jump school to do my first jump at 63, yippie!
I've never jumped from a plane but the health issues you describe are real. In my job is see serious orthopedic injury from skydiving.
Death by Sandwich, sounds like a 90s rockband.
I've jumped 3 times. The last one was 17 years after the first 2. Panic set in when I got to the door. When my instructor and I jumped out, it was awesome. Still got the taste at almost 50.
Another excellent video. What a story! Skydiving Hippies training SF. Awesome!
Man what a tale! Ive been through a bad allergic reaction, it was so miserable, but to add to that, being chutted up, standing up in a stick shuffling out the door thinking "omg what am i going to do!" because i cant breathe!! Ive never felt any fear greater or more urgent than that feeling that comes over you when you realize your oxygen supply or ability to breath has been cut off, nor can I imagine any more panic inducing moment than that even being possible!!!
Man I love your shared experiences that youve acquired through your years of service in the Teams!
Thank you Chadd for sharing them with us!!!
Do you have video of your AFF1? I had all of mine videoed, but I guess they don’t do that in the military. But it’s good to be able to go back to the tape in case the instructor thought you didn’t do something and you did. Glad you posted this video and explained your experience! You’re right about the culture too! It’s like time slows down with those jump zone people! They’re on their own schedule for sure! Thank you for your service!
Been there my brother. I would curl the nose when I packed my chute. My SF Career was ended on a Halo Jump in Eloy AZ during team certifications. I was jumping a brand new chute with 0 jumps on it on a Wall Locker Jump Turn Pull. It was the opening that did me in. It crushed my entire spine...I ended up fused 4 levels in my neck and 2 levels in my lower back. 6/14/14. Thew end.
Great experience Chadd. Eye opening too. Like the saying goes, as a pilot, why jump out of a perfectly good plane, but I'm a helicopter pilot, so it wouldn't make sense anyway.
thoroughly enjoy hearing your experiences and how you turn a rigorous and strenuous situation into a real life memory that has meaning behind it
Blue sky’s! Made 934 jumps over ten years. Lost my friend and hung it up. Always cool hearing first jump stories.
chadd i enjoy your videos serious you are my hero thank you from the bottom of my heart i did 25 in the air force reserve and three active duty field artillery army at ft hood texas
Thanks for your service. I’m not a military guy but my dad was. I agree with your view of skydiving. I’ve done two jumps so far. It’s certainly thrilling. I also scuba dive too.
I learned how to fly a huey outta Oaxaca, MX. I always wanted my own helicopter. At Benning, we static line jumped, quite easy, fast drop. Free falls is lots of airtime, thinkin' about chow time 🌮
I took so many hits to my head, concussions as a kid, I scared the F outta my commanders. Wasn't til I was in South Korea I first skydived. Only time I was ever afraid in the military was riding MAC back stateside, no chute.
I'm very accident prone, but seeing friends getting caught up atop a chute or falling into trees is funny.
3 Of 7, you're the best thing on the internet.
Crazy story. Man that is the deffinition of stress! Thank you!!!
Always enjoy your channel. Awesome stories
Golden Knights, 1986 thru 1991. Jumped with a few seals. Over in England for the 50th anniversary of the airborne forces, 1989. Jumping all over the island with all the British high speed guys. Having tea and sausage rolls. Key word, sausage. Fighting for altitude due to the typical weather. Bouncing around in a loaded C130 scraping the clouds at 1800 feet. I was going to lose it from one end or the other. "Mike", our safety officer, "please let me jump no matter the low altitude". We jumped free fall from 1500 feet-ish and I zeroed in on the Porta poties at the end of the parade field. Shortest distance between two points is a straight line. Made it without incident. It was an honor to have been part of that and an honor to have been around some really high speed guys.
GK are kick ass…I only have a few jumps one of my instructors was Tom Sanders before he became famous. He videoed my first clear and pull… next step after static line, you have to pull your own shoot. I chickened out he told the plane to go up another thousand feet and try it again. He said to me can you pull on 2 handles to save your life and I said yes and he turned the camera on. I wish I would’ve bought the tape…..
I was fortunate to have my first of 2 dives being solo (not tandem) about 20 yrs ago. Had the goal to get my own chute and jump everyday. I loved it. Understandably not for everyone but I highly recommend it. I believe that it’s all tandem now if that is a consolation for the hesitant.
Love your channel man keep it up
@7:58 - That's why that dude jumped out over Raleigh with damaged landing gear and without a parachute! (The pilot landed the damaged aircraft safely).
Skydiving was offered on weekends for a dollar a jump when I was in the 101st. After packing my chute for the 3rd time on a hot sticky day I came within a second of releasing my chute as it wasn’t inflating. Luckily it did but I remember my heart pumping so fast thinking I was going to need my reserve
Never did skydiving but of my first six plane rides, I only landed with the plane once. Army Airborne School as a 18 year old. Total of 15 jumps. Last one was 49 years ago.
I wonder if my ticker would be strong enough to take the excitement of jumping of a plane. I am truly getting a kick watching this videos and hearing your story.
Indeed a fantastic feat you have gone through, and nobody will truly understand your heart & desire. Heart to become what your mind was set on. Only a tiny percentage of people will accomplish your experiences and only a fraction of that! So much dang heart!!
Anaphylaxis and skydiving seems like a bad mix. Glad you realized what was going on before you jumped!
You share your experiences vividly, it is informative and entertaining.
Thanks for sharing! Love these episodes. Feels like I'm talking with good buddies. I am suprised yall did not use the Army free fall school.
Ignore the other reply. Seems a new kind of scam that will ask you to send a delivery fee for the give away stuff. This scammer usually pretend as the youtuber alt account.
Yea...Make more sense to send them to Ft Benning, Ga...
When I was active duty navy in mid 70s... I had a beard about long as Chad's. Regulations said it had to be well trimmed, and that was it! Today, I'm 70 yrs old and shave 2 to 3 times a week. Just thought I'd mention it. Go Chad!
Chad love the content . Stay alert.
👍💪 I did one…a tandem jump out of Marana, Az. SUPER FUN! Glad to hear you made it through your medical emergency.
I'm from the UK military and we used to go to Yuma every year for the weather. Let me tell you how much better it is jumping in beautiful weather day or night than jumping anywhere in the UK. We used to do bundle jumping and learnt how to do tandems and qualified as jumpmasters. Still I was never totally fine with jumping but it's how we might have to get to work some day so I figured I'd better be proficient at all forms of airborne insertion
Now that's a ferocious story! You had the good sense to get medical attention but the same sandwich lady, same allergic reaction, damn! Thanks for making the video.
I did a tandem jump, I must say that was one of the best emotional feelings that I personally expierenced. I agree, normally everyone should jump at least 1 time in their life, it´s a blast, and at the same time the emotional high is unexplainable.
I’ve enjoyed your channel and watched/listened to several videos back to back! I really enjoy your format also, I wish you all the best!
As a skydiver, the reason it’s run by civilians is because civilian skydivers have more experience than 99% of any one in special operations whos military free fall qualified. I’ve seen it first hand, guys think there tough shit because they went to military free fall and they think there a bad ass spec ops skydiver, well most of them absolutely suck, and they’re wreckless. Who’s going to know more, the operator who does 50-100 jumps a year to stay current, or the civilian instructor with 5,000 plus jumps. Just saying
Great Job Chadd,Thank you for sharing your experience it is inspiring Brother!
Great job brother
May God bless you and yours and God bless America 🇺🇸
Chad,
I’ve made three AFFs. You are right about the hippy community. They’re a bunch of really strange guys. It is because of the community that I discontinued my skydiving career.
Luv ya brother thank you for your service keep ‘Em coming.
When I'm watching these videos...it's like I'm sitting there with a group of people enjoying a cup of coffee listening to your experiences.
Ft Lewis WA 1980 CH-47. I remember getting thumbs up on the bird, I remember landing good, had to be good I wasn’t hurt. Ha How was it? Repack and out a couple lifts later. Good stuff. Have an all the way day. 🇺🇸
Great story Dude....I enjoy your experiences
When I was 19 I quit college and ended up on a chainsaw crew on the Canadian border. Just for the hell of it, I went skydiving twice at a tiny airfield out of an old Cessna 152 with no doors and oil leaking down the side. I'm glad I did it and it was an experience, and I can confirm the culture of the regular skydivers that were there as Chadd describes them.
This is so much fun to listen to your stories!!!
I feel you. You were lucky to make it to the ground. I have the allergy experience with Arugula, Celery and Lettuce. If I look at Arugula my throat and tongue start swelling. I got one on you. If I eat anything with any form of celery, my balls swell to the size of softballs. Epi-pen and Benadryl are the only hope, and they are a horrible combination. Take care.
Thanks for the video. I was on a live fire range at ft Lewis Washington.
I was maneuvering through the range and was attacked by by yellow jackets the medics gave me epinephrine and benadryl, I was out it for the rest of the day.
Thanks for sharing Chadd. Glad you made it through your allergic ordeals. Keep sharing and influencing for Christ. You are affecting so many with your example. Godspeed
Thank you man ! Injoy as always !
Ive hauled jumpers in the past. One guy asked me where he was going to land? I told him to look for the boat, i told him that's if you missed it! Another guy told me to slow down so he didn't roll down the side of the plane! Told him if i slowed down more, wed fall out of the sky
Love hearing your stories.
I agree..! Everyone should at least do 1….such a wild ride..!
Canopy open faced into the wind the other day, on my second tandem.
Hung up there like one of those big jet airliners waiting to land.
I was deployed 2× and almost collected all 2 DD 214s
I guess life went full circle now your a cool hippy great video thanks man you are one cool dude.