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Trivial_Trekker

Training Books

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"Parachuting: The Skydiver's Handbook", by Dan Poynter and Michael Turoff

"Jump! Skydiving Made Fun & Easy", by Tom Buchanan

"The Parachute and its Pilot" by Brian Germain

"Getting the Best Performance from your Canopy" by Scott Miller

All excellent books - must-haves on the bookshelves of every skydiver, IMHO. Don't buy one of them, buy all of them.

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I think both of these are great:

"Parachuting: The Skydiver's Handbook", by Dan Poynter and Michael Turoff

"The Parachute and its Pilot" by Brian Germain

You will probably find the Skydiver's Handbook more useful at the beginning but the Germain book becomes more useful as you progress. Some of the things you read in them may not tally exactly with what your instructors tell you, remember to always check with your instructors before trying out anything you read in a bool (or in these forums).
Skydiving: wasting fossil fuels just for fun.

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Try this one, it is what you be learning from when you start.

SIM 2006

Sparky



If you want to put the poor guy to sleep...:)
I know the SIM is a more fun read than the IRM, but as passionate as I am about skydiving, I have had to clean the drool out of both after finding myself asleep with my head in them. Seriously, the SIM is full of good info, but is dry when it comes to expressing the big picture of our sport, as it really is so procedure specific.

To the guy who first posted this...

I would go to skydivingmovies.com and down load some videos of great skydives (think the year end videos for DZs)... You will learn about all the disciplines and ways to fly... You will see how much fun this sport can be...

If you are looking for info on skydiving before your first jump course, be VERY careful on what you read... Not that learning is bad, but it can come off very overwhelming and intimidating, and the more you read, the more overwhelming it can seem... Maybe find one book and read it, like the Jump one by Buchanan.

I entered the sport well after I should have/wanted to, because I read a lot and researched a lot and I kept thinking, "I am a dork when it comes to athletics, there is no way in hell I can do a front flip and nail it, I am going to fail these AFF jumps. From what they tell me I have to do, only a super hero can do THAT..."

I mean there were other things greater than just the flips, but that is an example of how reading a lot about the "tests" can make the "class" look impossible without trying the class first.

The truth of the matter is I ended up nailing my AFF jumps, they were easy for me...

If I had only known, I would not have waited so long...

The point being, reading a lot before your FJC takes the human element out of it, and makes it seem so foreign and intimidating... But once you show up and see the guy teaching the class is just another guy, hopefully has a good sense of humor, and you learn that you don't have to be perfect (on everything) to save your life and pass levels, it is so much less intimidating.

Now once you have a few jumps (or even hang around the DZ a lot and see how others are doing it), then I say, buy EVERY book and read them twice... But, visit the DZ, get to know some of the people, so the reading does not push you away from the sport but instead brings you in.

My two cents. Actually I think I gave you three. But it is more than opinion, but what actually happened to me.

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Tdog..
I see what your saying with regards to reasearching to much..
Right now I'm in college taking avaition and I've already noticed how fast something your so passionate about can turn boring. [ie studying airlaw :P]
I did my first tandem at 16 and now it seems the bug has bit me again! I cant get enough of this site , or even downloading a hole wack load of vids from skydivignmovies.com. My roomies think im nuts.
I will keep reasearching jsut becasue i enjoy it.. and i dought i'll lose interest for whatever reason.

thx for the inside advice:D


latros



[]DETE

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Tdog..
I see what your saying with regards to reasearching to much..
Right now I'm in college taking avaition and I've already noticed how fast something your so passionate about can turn boring. [ie studying airlaw :P]
I did my first tandem at 16 and now it seems the bug has bit me again! I cant get enough of this site , or even downloading a hole wack load of vids from skydivignmovies.com. My roomies think im nuts.
I will keep reasearching jsut becasue i enjoy it.. and i dought i'll lose interest for whatever reason.

thx for the inside advice:D


latros



Super cool... You have the right spirit... But, the second (if) it turns boring or overwhelming, then you know you need to back off a bit on the books and actually go jump.

;)

Best of luck, and welcome to the family.

Travis

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