The Drop

News and Resources from AXIS Flight School



  • To promote next year’s Electric Forest Music festival, Arizona Arsenal but together a short skydiving video. Check it out!

  • Check out the latest UPT ad featuring Spaceland Blue!

  • “While other women break the glass ceiling, they smashed through it – dropping from a height of 8,000ft.

    Meet the first all-women team of skydivers of the Indian Air Force (IAF), which will make its official debut on Air Force Day on October 8 by jumping from an An-32 transport aircraft at the Hindon airbase on the outskirts of Delhi.

    All of them IAF officers, a psychologist, an accounts officer and engineers make up the six-member team led by Wing Commander Asha Jyotirmoy, a mother of two.

    Asha, an accounts officer, is a skydiving ace, carrying on her back loads of experience apart from the parachute bag. She was led to the sport by her husband, Wing Commander EKN Swaroop, also an IAF skydiver.

    Her athlete background helped. Asha had competed in heptathlon at the national level before joining the IAF.

    Thirteen years after her first jump, she still talks about the sport with a child-like enthusiasm. “It’s something that cannot be explained. You are flying like a bird,” she said, after a practice jump with her team at the Hindan airbase on Thursday.

    She joined the IAF in 1997 and set her eyes on skydiving two years later. Though she met with an accident when her parachute was entangled in high-tension cables in 2001 at Tambaram in Tamil Nadu, it did not faze her. Soon, husband and wife became the first skydiving couple in the air force. In the last 11 years, she has made 560 jumps.

    When the IAF decided to form the first women’s team of skydivers, Asha was the obvious choice. In 2009, the team was picked and flown to scenic Car Nicobar for training. Asha missed the initial days as she was carrying her second child.

    Flight Lieutenant Priyanka Shedangi wanted to become a pilot but ended up being a skydiver. She is happy she did. A proud member of the women skydiving team, she now enjoys flying – outside the aircraft – much more than a pilot probably does sitting inside the cockpit.

    An engineer by training, Priyanka left her cushy job in a multi-national firm to join the IAF as a technical officer. For Flight Lieutenant Sangeeta Paulraj, an education branch officer, the experience was clearly out of the world as it was where the blue sky, the ocean and green coconut trees on the ground merged.

    Sangeeta is also the team photographer, who films the jumps with her helmetmounted camera. The Bangalorean has already completed 200 jumps.

    From Car Nicobar, the team shifted to Arizona, US, for a 45-day specialised training.

    Flight Lieutenant Priyanka Hooda, from Hissar, took to skydiving inspired by television shows on the adventure sport. The other skydivers in the team, Nisha Govardhan, an electronic and computer engineer, and Rupal Thakur are equally thrilled to be in the spotlight.”

  • Given that today is my birthday, I figured its only fair that I get to rock out with my birthday suit.

    If you are wondering what is going on in the image above, you will have to get a copy of the latest ESPN Bodies magazine, where Arizona Arsenal can be seen wearing only their rigs. Please click here to view more pictures of more athletes found in this issue. For more information about the ESPN Bodies Issue, watch the video below.

  • It just so happens that Utah’s Arches National Park is only a 15 minute drive from Skydive Moab. So after the MOAB Boogie I spent a few hours hiking through the park while the sun was setting. Here are a few of my selects:

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  • The M.O.A.B. Boogie (or Mother Of All Boogies) is an annual skydiving event held at Skydive Moab, Utah. AXIS Flight School attended the 8th annual event to organize formation and freefly jumps. In addition, I was able to take part in some of the off-site jumps, such as MOAB Airpark and Castle Valley in order to take pictures. Here is a short slide show of my selects, as well as some GoPro footage from an interesting jump I got to do with the tunnel instructors from SVCO (Skyventure Colorado).

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    During my stay I had the chance to do three XRW jumps with Taya Weiss and Will Kitto! We managed to take a few hand docks and even a long surf. The picture below is a screen grab from Taya’s GoPro. As you can see in the image, I still have the front riser trim tabs, however with my new VE-75 I found myself having to engage them very little, if at all!

    Thanks for the jumps Will and Taya! And thank you Skydive Moab for hosting this great event. Looking forward to next year.

  • Even though it is legal to BASE jump Camelback Mountain, it is no place for a beginner. From the exit point, it is 240 feet to impact. The landing area is located another 120 feet below that. I followed DZ friends David and Andrew to this location to check it out and take some pictures. We reached the exit point after a 45 minute hike, where I took a 360 degree panoramic of the area with my phone.

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  • Just the other day I did some fun jumps with Amy Chmelecki of Arizona Arsenal and Travis Mills from Team Disfunction. Both of them were under new canopies, and some flocking jumps proved a great way to dial them in.

    I took the image below by mounting my still camera on my helmet backwards.

    Here is another view from Travis

The Drop

News and Resources from AXIS Flight School

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