Old Sweat said:It is very uncomfortable because the harness is worn and te straps between your legs take up all your weight - its nickname way back then was the Nutcracker Suite -
Spectrum said:They are letting gingers do basic para now?!
BearW said:I don't have a course message cut yet, but i'm on the JM thats running along side it at the same time-
PT's not hard.. it's to keep you loose in the AM before work and after a long day in the racks. I may vary from course staff to staff though, as usual.
Week one and two are all ground school, practicing putting on your kit properly, rigging it and whatnot. How to land so you don't hurt yourself and all the drills associated with it and some Mock Tower stuff. The course hasn't change much since the dawn of time and they still use all the old trg aids-which i thought was a real blast from the past.
I'd buy a pair of good shoes-if you don't already have them, good insoles for your cbt boots, a roll of medical tape for your pinkys on flight room training, Compression shorts or cyclist shorts instead of underwear on flight training aswell. Lastly, a party pack of ibuprofen and you should be set man. It's not hard if you show up fit and in the right mindset-like every other course in the army, right?
Any more questions you can PM me bro
Bear
Flips13 said:Selecting which meal you're going to have at the beautiful Trenton mess.
Flips13 said:I'm in this video, that day was funny because we had to do log PT and put on a big show for them. ''what daily life as a paratrooper is'' when in fact we barely did any log pt. Good times jumping though, not so much when the winds are real high but they don't want to ground you so they say winds zero anyways.
Thanks for posting the video good memories.
Not for the basic parachutist qualification; everyone has to do the three fun-filled weeks.Lone_Wolf said:I'm wondering if there is some sort of bridge program from a civilian jump course to the military one?
Journeyman said:Not for the basic parachutist qualification; everyone has to do the three fun-filled weeks.
If trying out for the Skyhawks, amongst the other prerequisites, you need to be Military Freefall qualified and/or hold a CSPA "A" licence with a minimum of 50 freefall jumps. Basic Para qualification is not required.
OK, let's not take one another the wrong way -- if your overarching concern is to have Canadian jump wings on your DEU.....Lone_Wolf said:So if one were wanting to get his wings; one MUST take the 3-week course? No other alternative route?
I'm somewhat in the know. Some jumpers are better at CREW (ie - CREW: Canopy Relative Work) than others.uncle-midget-Oddball said:Not sure if you're in the know or not, but what about CReW? Nearly every video of the Skyhawks I have seen involves the members doing CReW. Is it a requirement, something they teach, or is it something only some of the Skyhawks do?