runningman 0 #1 August 13, 2012 I was cooking dinner a few minutes ago and naturally started thinking about how much I miss jumping (I'm in school again). In my melancholy reverie, I recalled the first time I actually heard canopies opening above me while I was standing on the ground. That distinct, almost ribbon-like sound, accompanied by the little dots of various colors that appear soon thereafter, never fails to put a smile on my face. I just think it's pretty awesome. Anyway, just wanted to share some thoughts. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites billvon 3,085 #2 August 13, 2012 >That distinct, almost ribbon-like sound, accompanied by the little dots of various colors >that appear soon thereafter, never fails to put a smile on my face. At the 200-way in Perris a while back I was on the ground when they opened above me. I'd been on a lot of big dives but I realized I'd never been on the ground before to hear it for myself. It was impressive; sounded like very long thunder. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites pchapman 279 #3 August 13, 2012 And when it is really quiet, you hear the rumble of people in freefall. All that stuff I do remember as being really cool to hear when I was just starting in the sport. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites runningman 0 #4 August 14, 2012 That sounds like it would be prolific. I'm too young in the game to have experienced things like that but once I have the time to jump more...it's on. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites runningman 0 #5 August 14, 2012 I've actually heard that. It took me a minute to process what it actually was and I had to check myself to make sure I wasn't imagining things. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites tristansdad 0 #6 August 14, 2012 Not that the "ribbon-ish" sound isnt great, I think the change in the prop sounds on the turbines as they taxi are the best! Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites mjosparky 4 #7 August 14, 2012 One of the sweetest sounds I remember for my early days was a D-18, with short stacks, roaring down the runway at 7:30 in the morning. It made the hair on my neck stand up. Sparky My idea of a fair fight is clubbing baby seals Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites Quagmirian 40 #8 August 14, 2012 What you call the ribbon sound I call the crisp-packet sound. I just love the sound of a zero-p collapsed slider and stabilisers vibrating in the breeze. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites missbrz 0 #9 August 14, 2012 I LOVE that sound. My first favorite in this sport though is the sound right at the beginning of a swoop. It's hard to describe but it slowly builds up into this beautiful WHOOSH during the swoop. It's just magic. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites FreeFallFiend 0 #10 August 14, 2012 My favorite is the sound bodies make falling off of a very large tower in the middle of the night. Sounds almost like a plane overhead.Fiend I am about to take my last voyage, a great leap in the dark. - Thomas Hobbes. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites DcloudZ 0 #11 August 14, 2012 Quote I was cooking dinner a few minutes ago and naturally started thinking about how much I miss jumping (I'm in school again). In my melancholy reverie, I recalled the first time I actually heard canopies opening above me while I was standing on the ground. That distinct, almost ribbon-like sound, accompanied by the little dots of various colors that appear soon thereafter, never fails to put a smile on my face. I just think it's pretty awesome.Anyway, just wanted to share some thoughts. I remember the first time I heard that! I was looking up at the sky at my dropzone and everything was so quiet... The sky was a perfect blue and I could see the jumpers exiting the plane. The first sound I heard was while they were in freefall, the roar of the wind as if they were superman! I started to hear it when they were at about 6,000'. Shortly after I heard the first parachute open and the sound was so clear that even from the ground it had made it feel like it was my own parachute opening. It brings me pleasure to think that at some point someone will probably be on the ground watching and listening to me falling and my canopy opening"Better to have a short life that is full of what you like doing than a long life spent in a miserable way." -Alan Watts Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites runningman 0 #12 August 14, 2012 Quote It brings me pleasure to think that at some point someone will probably be on the ground watching and listening to me falling and my canopy opening Exactly! Man, these posts are amazing. So different, yet all related to the best sport on the planet. I love finding out what other people find to be particularly appealing or special. Make sure you never forget about the little things. They really do make a difference. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites runningman 0 #13 August 14, 2012 I have to agree with you on this one. Someone swooped over the hanger one day and it literally sounded like a jet flying overhead. AMAZING. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites airtwardo 7 #14 August 14, 2012 Quote One of the sweetest sounds I remember for my early days was a D-18, with short stacks, roaring down the runway at 7:30 in the morning. It made the hair on my neck stand up. Sparky I always remember with special fondness the metallic 'clink rattle rattle clink' of my rings & ropes when the PC was at full extension and the canopy was about to catch air...Use to love that sound, meant the scary free-fall stuff was over and the fun canopy stuff was starting! ~ If you choke a Smurf, what color does it turn? ~ Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites mjosparky 4 #15 August 14, 2012 Quote Quote One of the sweetest sounds I remember for my early days was a D-18, with short stacks, roaring down the runway at 7:30 in the morning. It made the hair on my neck stand up. Sparky I always remember with special fondness the metallic 'clink rattle rattle clink' of my rings & ropes when the PC was at full extension and the canopy was about to catch air...Use to love that sound, meant the scary free-fall stuff was over and the fun canopy stuff was starting! With ropes & rings it was the start of a whole new adventure. SparkyMy idea of a fair fight is clubbing baby seals Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites MikeJD 0 #16 August 15, 2012 Nice thread. We forget how many of our senses are involved, and how powerful the little triggers to those senses can be - more so, in some cases, than the visual aspects of the sport. I do find that in everyday life I can call up some of the feeling of skydiving by recalling those associative triggers. I tried to capture some of the effect in this, which I wrote a couple of years ago. Some of the things that set my skydive-senses tingling... - Standing out in the middle of the landing area on a still summer's day. The only sounds are the birds, the insects, the distant drone of the jump plane descending and the faint rumble of a big formation in freefall. - The cut of the engine on run-in. Even when I'm on the ground, it gives me the same sense of anticipation that the jumpers are experiencing thousands of feet above me. - Hearing a song on the radio that was popular when I was learning to skydive. - The smell of nylon when I open my rig bag. - The smell of jet fuel, of course. - The smell of the inside of my helmet (Eww!) Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites runningman 0 #17 August 15, 2012 First of all, that poem was extremely poignant and I thoroughly enjoyed it. You are a truly gifted writer. Secondly, I can identify with the first, second, fourth, and fifth things you said. I will say that standing in the middle of the landing area on a quiet day, listening to the canopies opening and swooping overhead, is pretty close to paradise. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites BKS60 0 #18 August 16, 2012 I have the grand total of 9 jumps UNTIL this coming weekend. Monday morning driving into work with the window down I had the sudden realization that while making my first jump with no-one holding onto me the day before....... I did not hear any wind while in freefall! I love this sport!"You don't get many warnings in this sport before you get damaged" Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites DcloudZ 0 #19 August 16, 2012 Quote Make sure you never forget about the little things. They really do make a difference. In regards to the small things, does anyone else stick their arm out of the window while driving on the highway and imagine that they are in freefall? I've caught myself doing that often lately, always makes me happy "Better to have a short life that is full of what you like doing than a long life spent in a miserable way." -Alan Watts Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites runningman 0 #20 August 16, 2012 I've actually gotten out of the car and sat up on the window when my friend was driving. Stupid? Sure. But it legitimately felt like I was at the bottom of the hill and about to hit terminal. Oh, and I stick my arm out all the time. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites JohnRich 4 #21 August 16, 2012 QuoteI actually heard canopies opening above me while I was standing on the ground. That distinct, almost ribbon-like sound, accompanied by the little dots of various colors that appear soon thereafter... The canopies should appear first, followed by the sound of the opening canopies about 10 seconds or more later, assuming minimum opening altitudes of 2,000'. Sound travels at about 1,000 feet per second. It wouild be impossible per the laws of physics for you to hear the sound of opening canopies before they were visually viewable. Light travels just a little bit faster than sound. What you may be hearing is the sound of the wind rushing past the bodies in freefall, before the canopy openings. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites oldwomanc6 60 #22 August 16, 2012 Quote Quote I actually heard canopies opening above me while I was standing on the ground. That distinct, almost ribbon-like sound, accompanied by the little dots of various colors that appear soon thereafter... The canopies should appear first, followed by the sound of the opening canopies about 10 seconds or more later, assuming minimum opening altitudes of 2,000'. Sound travels at about 1,000 feet per second. It wouild be impossible per the laws of physics for you to hear the sound of opening canopies before they were visually viewable. Light travels just a little bit faster than sound. What you may be hearing is the sound of the wind rushing past the bodies in freefall, before the canopy openings. Buzz-kill. That took all the romance out of it. lisa WSCR 594 FB 1023 CBDB 9 Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites airtwardo 7 #23 August 16, 2012 Quote Quote Quote I actually heard canopies opening above me while I was standing on the ground. That distinct, almost ribbon-like sound, accompanied by the little dots of various colors that appear soon thereafter... The canopies should appear first, followed by the sound of the opening canopies about 10 seconds or more later, assuming minimum opening altitudes of 2,000'. Sound travels at about 1,000 feet per second. It wouild be impossible per the laws of physics for you to hear the sound of opening canopies before they were visually viewable. Light travels just a little bit faster than sound. What you may be hearing is the sound of the wind rushing past the bodies in freefall, before the canopy openings. Buzz-kill. That took all the romance out of it. Ever hear a femur snap ~ If you choke a Smurf, what color does it turn? ~ Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites cocheese 0 #24 August 16, 2012 I know. And if your vision is bad, you hear shit first anyway..My ribbonish story: Skydive Chicago....246 way. I had 18 jumps and enough money to get there and back from Michigan. I told the gate keeper that I was experienced and just coming to watch and maybe buy a helmet. He let us in. From take off until everyone landed, I had goose bumps like never before. The rush of that much fabric is very loud. And 240+ canpoies opening made it THE coolest thing I ever saw and heard in my life. And I've seen and heard a lot cool shit. Ok take the excitement of Bridge Day and multiply it by 240 and then condense it down to one short moment. Oh and I didn't buy a helmet. I bought the whole sport. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites mjosparky 4 #25 August 16, 2012 Quote I know. And if your vision is bad, you hear shit first anyway..My ribbonish story: Skydive Chicago....246 way. I had 18 jumps and enough money to get there and back from Michigan. I told the gate keeper that I was experienced and just coming to watch and maybe buy a helmet. He let us in. From take off until everyone landed, I had goose bumps like never before. The rush of that much fabric is very loud. And 240+ canpoies opening made it THE coolest thing I ever saw and heard in my life. And I've seen and heard a lot cool shit. Ok take the excitement of Bridge Day and multiply it by 240 and then condense it down to one short moment. Oh and I didn't buy a helmet. I bought the whole sport. Neat....I was on that load. SparkyMy idea of a fair fight is clubbing baby seals Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites Prev 1 2 Next Page 1 of 2 Join the conversation You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account. 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billvon 3,085 #2 August 13, 2012 >That distinct, almost ribbon-like sound, accompanied by the little dots of various colors >that appear soon thereafter, never fails to put a smile on my face. At the 200-way in Perris a while back I was on the ground when they opened above me. I'd been on a lot of big dives but I realized I'd never been on the ground before to hear it for myself. It was impressive; sounded like very long thunder. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
pchapman 279 #3 August 13, 2012 And when it is really quiet, you hear the rumble of people in freefall. All that stuff I do remember as being really cool to hear when I was just starting in the sport. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
runningman 0 #4 August 14, 2012 That sounds like it would be prolific. I'm too young in the game to have experienced things like that but once I have the time to jump more...it's on. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
runningman 0 #5 August 14, 2012 I've actually heard that. It took me a minute to process what it actually was and I had to check myself to make sure I wasn't imagining things. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
tristansdad 0 #6 August 14, 2012 Not that the "ribbon-ish" sound isnt great, I think the change in the prop sounds on the turbines as they taxi are the best! Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
mjosparky 4 #7 August 14, 2012 One of the sweetest sounds I remember for my early days was a D-18, with short stacks, roaring down the runway at 7:30 in the morning. It made the hair on my neck stand up. Sparky My idea of a fair fight is clubbing baby seals Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Quagmirian 40 #8 August 14, 2012 What you call the ribbon sound I call the crisp-packet sound. I just love the sound of a zero-p collapsed slider and stabilisers vibrating in the breeze. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
missbrz 0 #9 August 14, 2012 I LOVE that sound. My first favorite in this sport though is the sound right at the beginning of a swoop. It's hard to describe but it slowly builds up into this beautiful WHOOSH during the swoop. It's just magic. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
FreeFallFiend 0 #10 August 14, 2012 My favorite is the sound bodies make falling off of a very large tower in the middle of the night. Sounds almost like a plane overhead.Fiend I am about to take my last voyage, a great leap in the dark. - Thomas Hobbes. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
DcloudZ 0 #11 August 14, 2012 Quote I was cooking dinner a few minutes ago and naturally started thinking about how much I miss jumping (I'm in school again). In my melancholy reverie, I recalled the first time I actually heard canopies opening above me while I was standing on the ground. That distinct, almost ribbon-like sound, accompanied by the little dots of various colors that appear soon thereafter, never fails to put a smile on my face. I just think it's pretty awesome.Anyway, just wanted to share some thoughts. I remember the first time I heard that! I was looking up at the sky at my dropzone and everything was so quiet... The sky was a perfect blue and I could see the jumpers exiting the plane. The first sound I heard was while they were in freefall, the roar of the wind as if they were superman! I started to hear it when they were at about 6,000'. Shortly after I heard the first parachute open and the sound was so clear that even from the ground it had made it feel like it was my own parachute opening. It brings me pleasure to think that at some point someone will probably be on the ground watching and listening to me falling and my canopy opening"Better to have a short life that is full of what you like doing than a long life spent in a miserable way." -Alan Watts Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
runningman 0 #12 August 14, 2012 Quote It brings me pleasure to think that at some point someone will probably be on the ground watching and listening to me falling and my canopy opening Exactly! Man, these posts are amazing. So different, yet all related to the best sport on the planet. I love finding out what other people find to be particularly appealing or special. Make sure you never forget about the little things. They really do make a difference. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
runningman 0 #13 August 14, 2012 I have to agree with you on this one. Someone swooped over the hanger one day and it literally sounded like a jet flying overhead. AMAZING. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
airtwardo 7 #14 August 14, 2012 Quote One of the sweetest sounds I remember for my early days was a D-18, with short stacks, roaring down the runway at 7:30 in the morning. It made the hair on my neck stand up. Sparky I always remember with special fondness the metallic 'clink rattle rattle clink' of my rings & ropes when the PC was at full extension and the canopy was about to catch air...Use to love that sound, meant the scary free-fall stuff was over and the fun canopy stuff was starting! ~ If you choke a Smurf, what color does it turn? ~ Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
mjosparky 4 #15 August 14, 2012 Quote Quote One of the sweetest sounds I remember for my early days was a D-18, with short stacks, roaring down the runway at 7:30 in the morning. It made the hair on my neck stand up. Sparky I always remember with special fondness the metallic 'clink rattle rattle clink' of my rings & ropes when the PC was at full extension and the canopy was about to catch air...Use to love that sound, meant the scary free-fall stuff was over and the fun canopy stuff was starting! With ropes & rings it was the start of a whole new adventure. SparkyMy idea of a fair fight is clubbing baby seals Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
MikeJD 0 #16 August 15, 2012 Nice thread. We forget how many of our senses are involved, and how powerful the little triggers to those senses can be - more so, in some cases, than the visual aspects of the sport. I do find that in everyday life I can call up some of the feeling of skydiving by recalling those associative triggers. I tried to capture some of the effect in this, which I wrote a couple of years ago. Some of the things that set my skydive-senses tingling... - Standing out in the middle of the landing area on a still summer's day. The only sounds are the birds, the insects, the distant drone of the jump plane descending and the faint rumble of a big formation in freefall. - The cut of the engine on run-in. Even when I'm on the ground, it gives me the same sense of anticipation that the jumpers are experiencing thousands of feet above me. - Hearing a song on the radio that was popular when I was learning to skydive. - The smell of nylon when I open my rig bag. - The smell of jet fuel, of course. - The smell of the inside of my helmet (Eww!) Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
runningman 0 #17 August 15, 2012 First of all, that poem was extremely poignant and I thoroughly enjoyed it. You are a truly gifted writer. Secondly, I can identify with the first, second, fourth, and fifth things you said. I will say that standing in the middle of the landing area on a quiet day, listening to the canopies opening and swooping overhead, is pretty close to paradise. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
BKS60 0 #18 August 16, 2012 I have the grand total of 9 jumps UNTIL this coming weekend. Monday morning driving into work with the window down I had the sudden realization that while making my first jump with no-one holding onto me the day before....... I did not hear any wind while in freefall! I love this sport!"You don't get many warnings in this sport before you get damaged" Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
DcloudZ 0 #19 August 16, 2012 Quote Make sure you never forget about the little things. They really do make a difference. In regards to the small things, does anyone else stick their arm out of the window while driving on the highway and imagine that they are in freefall? I've caught myself doing that often lately, always makes me happy "Better to have a short life that is full of what you like doing than a long life spent in a miserable way." -Alan Watts Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
runningman 0 #20 August 16, 2012 I've actually gotten out of the car and sat up on the window when my friend was driving. Stupid? Sure. But it legitimately felt like I was at the bottom of the hill and about to hit terminal. Oh, and I stick my arm out all the time. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
JohnRich 4 #21 August 16, 2012 QuoteI actually heard canopies opening above me while I was standing on the ground. That distinct, almost ribbon-like sound, accompanied by the little dots of various colors that appear soon thereafter... The canopies should appear first, followed by the sound of the opening canopies about 10 seconds or more later, assuming minimum opening altitudes of 2,000'. Sound travels at about 1,000 feet per second. It wouild be impossible per the laws of physics for you to hear the sound of opening canopies before they were visually viewable. Light travels just a little bit faster than sound. What you may be hearing is the sound of the wind rushing past the bodies in freefall, before the canopy openings. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
oldwomanc6 60 #22 August 16, 2012 Quote Quote I actually heard canopies opening above me while I was standing on the ground. That distinct, almost ribbon-like sound, accompanied by the little dots of various colors that appear soon thereafter... The canopies should appear first, followed by the sound of the opening canopies about 10 seconds or more later, assuming minimum opening altitudes of 2,000'. Sound travels at about 1,000 feet per second. It wouild be impossible per the laws of physics for you to hear the sound of opening canopies before they were visually viewable. Light travels just a little bit faster than sound. What you may be hearing is the sound of the wind rushing past the bodies in freefall, before the canopy openings. Buzz-kill. That took all the romance out of it. lisa WSCR 594 FB 1023 CBDB 9 Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
airtwardo 7 #23 August 16, 2012 Quote Quote Quote I actually heard canopies opening above me while I was standing on the ground. That distinct, almost ribbon-like sound, accompanied by the little dots of various colors that appear soon thereafter... The canopies should appear first, followed by the sound of the opening canopies about 10 seconds or more later, assuming minimum opening altitudes of 2,000'. Sound travels at about 1,000 feet per second. It wouild be impossible per the laws of physics for you to hear the sound of opening canopies before they were visually viewable. Light travels just a little bit faster than sound. What you may be hearing is the sound of the wind rushing past the bodies in freefall, before the canopy openings. Buzz-kill. That took all the romance out of it. Ever hear a femur snap ~ If you choke a Smurf, what color does it turn? ~ Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
cocheese 0 #24 August 16, 2012 I know. And if your vision is bad, you hear shit first anyway..My ribbonish story: Skydive Chicago....246 way. I had 18 jumps and enough money to get there and back from Michigan. I told the gate keeper that I was experienced and just coming to watch and maybe buy a helmet. He let us in. From take off until everyone landed, I had goose bumps like never before. The rush of that much fabric is very loud. And 240+ canpoies opening made it THE coolest thing I ever saw and heard in my life. And I've seen and heard a lot cool shit. Ok take the excitement of Bridge Day and multiply it by 240 and then condense it down to one short moment. Oh and I didn't buy a helmet. I bought the whole sport. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
mjosparky 4 #25 August 16, 2012 Quote I know. And if your vision is bad, you hear shit first anyway..My ribbonish story: Skydive Chicago....246 way. I had 18 jumps and enough money to get there and back from Michigan. I told the gate keeper that I was experienced and just coming to watch and maybe buy a helmet. He let us in. From take off until everyone landed, I had goose bumps like never before. The rush of that much fabric is very loud. And 240+ canpoies opening made it THE coolest thing I ever saw and heard in my life. And I've seen and heard a lot cool shit. Ok take the excitement of Bridge Day and multiply it by 240 and then condense it down to one short moment. Oh and I didn't buy a helmet. I bought the whole sport. Neat....I was on that load. SparkyMy idea of a fair fight is clubbing baby seals Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites