Human flight.
by Heath, Matthew
For the expat resident Japan has a lot going for it; within a
couple hours in winter there's skiing, in summer the beach and a
variety of interesting weekend excursions, whatever may tickle
one's fancy. What may be less obvious is skydiving in Japan. There
around only 500 active skydivers here so it is still very much a
minority sport. In under an hour from Asakusa one can be at Fujioka
Station in Tochigi Prefecture and five minutes from the drop-zone.
I am used to jumping mainly in Spain and California, where the
infrastructure is well-developed; they have several planes with
sophisticated manifesting and announcement systems, kit shops,
restaurants and lots of skydivers. Advanced Air Sports in Tochigi
operates out of a field with two trestle tables, a couple of tents, a
helicopter with a five jumper capacity and a handful of two-way radios.
That said, safety is up to the highest of standards.
Skydiving as a hobby falls into two categories solo jumping and
experiencing free-fall by doing a tandem skydive. The latter involves a
short briefing and then the jump itself would typically be from 12,500
feet, strapped to the instructor, with around 50 seconds of free-fall
and 5 minutes of parachute ride. The way that most come to it will be
through tandem experiences that leave them hooked. According to the
jumper's wishes the instructor will make the ride as docile or
exciting as required.
The first jump, (and probably the first 20 or so) induces sensory
overload. The plane ride seemed short and I spent much of it asking
myself why I was doing this. Then you jump and remember until the next
time. Skydiving is not inherently dangerous--it is just the image it
has. The kit is designed to fly and experiments with bad packing will
generally still produce a perfectly good canopy after deployment. As
long as kit is well maintained and inspected religiously it should never
cause any problem. However, the more modern high-speed wing like
canopies need speed to generate lift, which allows one to land safely in
the 'swooping' style that has become so popular and slightly
controversial. Too slow and there is no lift--in this sense height and
speed are on our side. This speed is created by turning; doing this
incorrectly is what causes nearly all skydiving accidents. Getting it
just a little bit wrong can make a big difference--either landing at
ground level or setting up to land at one or two meters below ground
level, the former being more comfortable. Tandems are done with very
large low-performance canopies that come down to earth gently, so this
does not apply. I find it worth reminding beginners that the tandem
master would not be doing this if it were not safe and he has done it
hundreds of times before. However, logic is one of the first casualties
of fear!
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The feeling on exit is euphoric. I have completed several hundred
skydives and I still get a thrill out of it. The comfort that comes with
a little experience does not mean that one loses the buzz. Initially,
there is the exhilarating of acceleration and then comes the flight--one
has little sensation of falling, more of flying. After the exit it is
possible to catch a view of Mt Fuji until it goes out of sight at about
9000 feet. For a one-off experience Tochigi is a great place to do it
but I would not bank on remembering much of it. Sensory overload means
your brain does not record. That is why they have a cameraman wearing
both a stills SLR and video camera to capture the moment for posterity.
If you have any inkling that throwing yourself out of a plane might
prove to be good fun then don't hesitate: learn to skydive, have
confidence in the kit and enjoy the experience of 'human
flight.'
COPYRIGHT 2008 Japan Inc.
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NOTE: All illustrations and photos have been removed from this article.