Home
School
Experienced
Facilities
Exhibition
Prices
Buy Jumps
Booking
Forum
Hours
Hotels
Contact
Photo
Contact

Events
My Space
Newsletters
































Events

August 2008 > »
M T W T F S S
28 29 30 31 1 2 3
4 5 6 7 8 9 10
11 12 13 14 15 16 17
18 19 20 21 22 23 24
25 26 27 28 29 30 31
    
Newsletter Issue 6
 
 Newsletter Header 
IN THIS ISSUE
What's Up This Week
Safety First!
DZ Happenings
NSL News
START SKYDIVING WEB LINKS
JOIN OUR LIST
Join Our Mailing List
OUR FRIENDS
  Jump Institute
 
Air Rage
 
ZooDive
 
 Warren County 
FEATURED ARTICLE

Team Fastrax and
Start Skydiving
 

Offer Wounded Veterans
Tandem Skydive
Opportunity

"Blue Skies for the Good Guys and Gals" Honors our Nations Hero's

Team Fastrax Professional Skydiving Team and Start Skydiving is proud to announce their new program, "Blue Skies for the Good Guys and Gals", to say THANK YOU to the men and women who serve our country.   The program will provide a tandem parachute opportunity for those Soldiers, Sailors, Airmen, Marines and Coast Guard (active duty, reserve or guard) who have been wounded in combat and received a Purple Heart.  Team Fastrax has partnered with the Wounded Warrior Foundation and The Thank You Foundation to reach out to Veterans around the country. 

"These are our nation's finest and brightest and we have an obligation to do whatever we can to lift their spirits and show them how much we care, said John Hart, founder of Team Fastrax and owner of Start Skydiving.  "As a Gulf War veteran and 20 year Army service member, I am honored to sponsor an event that will have a special impact on these men and women." 

The program will kick off at Start Skydiving in Lebanon, Ohio on Memorial Day Weekend as part of the Thank You Foundation Boogie.  Selection.com, the nation's premier background screening service, is spearheading the corporate charge to raise the funds to make these skydives happen.  For more information on how to help and participate you can contact Start Skydiving at This email address is being protected from spam bots, you need Javascript enabled to view it or call 513-934-3483. 

The Thank You Foundation is a non-profit organization whose mission is to show appreciation and express gratitude for those who have served in the U.S. Armed Forces both past and present.   The Foundation accomplishes its mission though several programs and activities such as sending care packages, visiting Veterans in care facilities, providing complimentary tickets to sporting and entertainment events, and presenting Thank You Cards and Certificates of Appreciation to those who have served or are serving our military.  Donations can also be made direct to: www.thethankyoufoundation.org

 

 

 

 

 

Issue: #6February/2008
Dear John, 

At Start Skydiving we place our customers first in everything we do.  This newsletter is meant to keep you informed about the latest events and occurences at our Professional Skydiving Center.  Please take the time to email or call us with any comments that will improve the services we provide at Start.
What's Up This Week
 
Week ending 23 February 2008

If the weather is good we are flying this weekend.  Our friends from Michigan will be down, so let's start the season early. 

Safety First!
 
Things you need to know

Safety Day at Start Skydiving is March 15 beginning at 9:00am.  Please confirm your attendance as soon as possible at This email address is being protected from spam bots, you need Javascript enabled to view it .  We will have the grills fueled up, so bring your burgers and brats and we will have a barbeque for lunch.

Last weekend I observed a lower jump number skydiver in Florida perform a low turn and injured his back.  It is better to land cross wind or down wind versus making a turn low and injuring yourself.  Locate your primary landing area. If you can't make it, locate your secondary landing area and safely land there.  Landing priorities are, land with your WING LEVEL, LAND IN A CLEAR OPEN AREA AND FLARE TO AT LEAST HALF BRAKES. 

Cloud clearance; Remember when you are spotting, to observe the cloud clearance.  Above 10,000 ft AGL, 1,000 ft above the clouds, 1,000 ft below the clouds 1,000 ft cloud separation and 3 mile visibility.  Below 10,000 ft AGL, 1,000 ft above, 500 ft below, 2,000 ft cloud separation and 5 mile visibility.  If you are in a cloud stop all movement and pull on time, once your canopy opens fly a straight line until clear of the cloud.  Intentional cloud flying is not permitted; remember we are considered VFR by the FAA.

DZ Happenings
 
Here is the scoop!
There is a mandatory staff meeting for all people interested in working at Start Skydiving for the 2008 season on March 1st beginning at 8:30am. Remember all staff members need to bring your physicals and all your USPA paper work. 

Mike has posted the MESL dates on the Start calendar and they are listed in this newsletter in the NSL section. Check it out and go compete.  Regardless of your experience level you will have a great time and learn a lot.

Remember to send us cool photos to be considered for the photo of the week and placement on the Start Web site. 

We are busy booking students and beginning our marketing promotions.

Remember to avoid the mad rush and get your rigs to Greg for repacks.
 

Picture of the Week 

take your child to work 
Our pilots take your child to work photo.

National Skydiving League
 
NSLFour Way Tips 
John Hart, Team Fastrax

Greetings, All!

Below is the third in a series of Four Way tips Team Fastrax is providing at the April Skills camp. 

Walking and Creeping

 

Goals:

·         See the picture of each formation

·         Learn each transition between points

·         Reinforce cross reference

·         Work out grip plan

It is important to learn and use correct creeper technique. You want to reinforce good habits and not bad ones. The idea is to make your creeping session feel the way you want your skydive feel.

Purpose


Creeping is great for learning the visuals of each formation.  Stand-up dirt dives don't fully give a realistic view of the formations or the transitions between points.  On the creepers, you can see the specific distance of the moves, angles, and shape.

You can't practice the specific body movements nor vertical transitions.  Many piece moves can feel awkward on creepers and can require more muscling on the ground than in the air.

Moving


Place both hands on the ground and move to the next position. Stop the creepers once you have reached where you need to be.  Maintain your cross-reference through the entire move.  Look away only once you have stopped yourself on the creeper and are ready to take the grip.

To stop, place both hands firmly on the ground.  You may also stop by planting the toes of one foot, but be aware of your teammates.  If somebody is behind you, you will need to use only your hands to stop.

Once the creeping is stopped, look at the grip and take a solid grip.  Use the grip to shape the formation if necessary. Specifically, it the grip you have has been presented to closely, box it out. If it's too far, bring it in. This communicates to your teammate that he needs to make an adjustment in his move. Conversely if you feel somebody shaping you, then you know that you need to make the adjustment.

Suggested Procedure


Walk the skydive to get the puzzle. Once everybody has a feel for the sequence, lay down on the creepers. Go through the dive to again get familiar with the puzzle.

Now break down each transition (random to random, random to block, block to random). This is commonly known as angling. Move from the first point to the second point. The object is to the make the transition efficient, reducing everybody's movement as much as possible.
Do this transition two more times. If everybody agrees that the transition is correct, then move to the next transition. Continue this process until you have done all the angles.

The idea of repeating each transition is to allow you to learn the precise movement that is required. In this way, you will be more likely to do that move, no less and no more. As you perform each transition try to really see the details of the move.

Is it a long translational move or is it very short? Do you not move at all? Does it require you to rotate? Exactly how much do you have to rotate?

Communication


Creeping give you a great opportunity to practice your communication. You should be really staring down your clone the vast majority of the time.  Eye contact is usually possible for center flyers. Outside flyers will have less opportunity for eye contact. But they should still be looking through the center at each other.

Grips are an important way of communicating with your teammates. When you take a firm solid grip, you will be communicating confidence. If you feel a teammate shape the formation, you know that an adjustment needs to be made for that transition.

Final Creeping

Once everybody has worked out their jobs on every transition and knows the key and grip plans, the team is ready for a final creeping session. This final session should be treated like a skydive.  That means once there should be no talking.  If errors occur, fix them and then continue, just as you would on a real skydive.

Start with an exit count and go through several pages of the skydive. A good creeping session will feel calm and mechanical with good key and grip discipline and great communication.


Other Tips

 

An aid to effective creeping is to make it as realistic and comfortable as possible.  To do this:

1.       Purchase or build good creepers.  The most important parts of a creeper are the wheels.  Colson Hi-Tech Performa 3 X 7/8 are the best on the market.

2.       Use a good creeper pad.  It should be very smooth and at least 12 feet square, preferably 16 feet or more.

3.       Stretch before getting on creepers.  Stretching is one of the first recommended steps in a training day; this is covered elsewhere in this document.  The most important muscles to stretch for creeping are the neck and the lower back.

4.       Find a comfortable, balanced position on the creeper.

5.       When building a formation, place yourselves a realistic, comfortable distance apart, the same as you will be in freefall.  Don't force your teammates to stretch to reach grips; place your grips within comfortable reach.  Don't reach for grips; move your center point to make the grips convenient.  Also, don't get so close to your teammates that your shoulders are crowded against the grips.  Remember, the watchword is comfortable!

6.       During transitions, move your center point to the proper place and stop, using hands and/or feet, before taking grips.  This will hold true in freefall as well.  When building formations (not when completing blocks), you should always stop moving as or before you take grips.

7.       When necessary, take short breaks to stretch.

8.       If a teammate is a few inches from where you would like them to be, tell them how you would like them to move, or move them gently.  Similarly, be attentive to your teammates' needs, and be light on the creeper so they can move you if necessary.

MESL Schedule

Meet-n-greet - April 12

Meet 1 - May 24

Meet 2 - Jun 21

Meet 3 - July 19

Meet 4 - Aug 16

NSL Playoffs - Sept 20 - 21

 

Rain dates are the Sundays. If good weather prevails and the meets complete in one day, we'll have organized big(ger) ways on the Sundays.

If anyone has an interest in doing some 4-way this summer, feel free to contact me directly at This email address is being protected from spam bots, you need Javascript enabled to view it . We're here to serve.

Here's to a great season in 2008!

-Mike

 
Thank you for making Start Skydiving the place where great people become skydivers and skydivers become great!
Blue Skies,
The Team at Start Skydiving