What It Feels Like To Free-fall 15,000ft Through the Air

11 months ago Outdoor

15,000 Feet FreefallPhoto: Story House Productions

These amazing pictures of parachutists free-falling are a recreation of a death-defying jump by Mike Holmes where not only his main parachute failed but his reserve did as well. A new series by National Geographic, The Indestructibles, interviews survivors to discover how they lived through a situation in which most would have been killed. Join us as we learn some free-fall facts.

15,000 Feet FreefallPhoto: Story House Productions

Free-fall skydiving is a specialized discipline within the sport of parachuting whereby one person performs acrobatic moves in free fall while another films with a special camera. Mark Holmes had been doing it for ten years before he had his horrific accident. You can see it occur here live on video.

15,000 Feet FreefallPhoto: Story House Productions

When falling with arms and legs out stretched you fall slower than a lead balloon… at a speed of "only" 120 miles per hour!

15,000 Feet FreefallPhoto: Story House Productions

Students have to complete at least 10-15 tandem jumps (where they are attached to an instructor) before they are allowed to jump alone.

15,000 Feet FreefallPhoto: Story House Productions

It is a sport for any age: the oldest person to ever jump was a 100-year-old man while the youngest was a 4-year-old. Both of course jumped tandem (though not with each other!). We're not sure what the four-year-old must have been thinking!

15,000 Feet FreefallPhoto: Story House Productions

One thing many people don't realize is that because the airflow is constant when free-falling, you don't feel as if you are dropping, but rather floating, while doing rolls and other moves.

15,000 Feet FreefallPhoto: Story House Productions

The largest free fall formation involved 400 people in Thailand, who formed a flower shape within 80 seconds. Colonel Joseph Kittinger made the highest jump ever, of 102,800 feet, for NASA.

15,000 Feet FreefallPhoto: Story House Productions

Even dogs skydive! As part of Norway's operation Cold Response, bomb dogs have been trained to parachute in with Austria's special forces. Cats don't skydive but they are more likely to survive a fall of more than seven stories as opposed to fewer because they can get into a relaxed, spread out position.

15,000 Feet FreefallPhoto: Story House Productions

Skydiving is normally an extremely safe sport – in fact errors are rare and are more likely due to human error than anything else. In the case of Mark's fall it was a bad design flaw on a specific piece of equipment which only a few manufacturers make.

The show that recreates Marks accident airs on July 17 at 10 pm, on the National Geographic Channel.

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MikeDeHaan says

Jul 5th, 2011 at 12am
Thanks for this report on free fall skydiving.