Jan 10, 2025

Rating Corner: Propeller Safety and SMS

Michael Knight
 
USPA Seeks Web Designer-Copywriter
Jan 10, 2025

USPA Seeks Web Designer-Copywriter

Photo by Ray Cottingham | D-1653
Dec 17, 2024

Photo by Ray Cottingham | D-1653

 

Jumpers Explore Greenland from the Air

Published on Wednesday, June 12, 2024

Jumpers Explore Greenland from the Air


The milestone 5-way builds over Kangerlussuaq, Greenland. Photo by Bob Draijer.

Above: The members of the expedition pose for a photo following their 5-way jump. Photo by Bob Draijer.

It was cold—freezing cold—in Kangerlussuaq, Greenland, above the Polar Circle. A herd of muskox grazed at the edge of the glacier, then looked up and instinctively formed a defensive circle as a humming noise evolved in the sky. The noise came from a shiny red Air Greenland helicopter that climbed quickly, surpassing 10,000 feet. Then five jumpers emerged.

In March, Bob Draijer, D-15531, organized an expedition team that made what are thought to be the first sport skydives above Greenland, including a 5-way Greenland record for largest formation. The planning took almost two years. During their expedition, the team— Arnold Camfferman, Bob Draijer, Joëlle Draijer, Ronald Engelage and Oana Oros—made four jumps, including two over Nuuk, Greenland’s capital. Nuuk, nestled along the fjord, offered picturesque sunset jumps, casting the surroundings in a serene blue hue. In Kangerlussuaq, where temperatures plummeted to –40 degrees Fahrenheit at night, they marveled at the enchanting Northern Lights. Their feat earned them the prestigious Order of the Blue Nose for crossing the Arctic Circle.

Beyond skydiving, the team learned something about the Greenlandic Inuit culture: clothing made of seal fur and muskox wool, meals of whale steak and seal meat and a way of living in the harsh environment.

A scenic helicopter flight over the ice cap (thanks to Engelage) provided a bird’s-eye view of towering ice formations and endless frozen vistas. Weather-wise, the group was lucky, making skydives in the windows between periods of overcast. It was a very special, extreme and beautiful expedition, which all five members of the team savored.

Bob Draijer | D-15531
Apeldoorn, Netherlands

Rate this article:
No rating
Comments (0)Number of views (6923)

Author: Bob Draijer

Categories: People, Five Minute Call

Tags: June 2024, Greenland

Print

Leave a comment

This form collects your name, email, IP address and content so that we can keep track of the comments placed on the website. For more info check our Privacy Policy and Terms Of Use where you will get more info on where, how and why we store your data.
Add comment
 
Photo by Javier Ortiz

Three trails flock across the sky during the Momentum Flock and Flow camp at Skydive Paraclete XP in Raeford, North Carolina.

Squirrel

 

Innhopps

Return To the Sky
Five Minute Call | Oct 01, 2018

Return To the Sky

B.J. Worth | D-3805
Profiles | Oct 01, 2018

B.J. Worth | D-3805

A Great Idea
Tales from the Bonfire | Oct 01, 2018

A Great Idea

AXIS

Monday, October 1, 2018

Letters | Oct 01, 2018

Letters

Monday, October 1, 2018

Letters | Oct 01, 2018

Letters

"Sunset Load"
Featured Art | Oct 01, 2018

"Sunset Load"

Think About Your Vote
Gearing Up | Oct 01, 2018

Think About Your Vote

AXIS

Skydiving Nationals a Wrap
Industry News | Sep 19, 2018

Skydiving Nationals a Wrap

September 1968
Featured Photos | Sep 13, 2018

September 1968

AXIS

First118119120121123125126127Last