Dec 15, 2025

The Sky Chooses—Survival Psychology in Skydiving

Karim Elemary, Ph.D.
 

 

Double-Amputee Veteran Achieves Landmark 42,600-Foot Skydive

Published on Thursday, October 23, 2025

Double-Amputee Veteran Achieves Landmark 42,600-Foot Skydive

Above: Veteran Michael Vasquez descends in freefall during a HALO jump at West Tennessee Skydiving. Photo by Tylor Flurry.

On Saturday, August 23, at West Tennessee Skydiving in Whiteville, Michael Vasquez—known as “Wheelchair Skydiver”—made a HALO skydive from a Piper Cheyenne 400 at a GPS altitude of 42,600 feet (and 41,000 feet barometric).

Vasquez is a double amputee who was injured in combat during Army operations in Afghanistan. He was awarded the Bronze Star and Purple Heart and has since dedicated himself to raising awareness for injured veterans through demonstration jumps across the country.

USPA National Director Mike Mullins piloted the aircraft and Southern Regional Director Paul Gholson served as oxygen jumpmaster. USPA Vice President and Western Region Director Josh Hall also took part in the jump. Mullins, who operates West Tennessee Skydiving, donated the HALO skydive to Vasquez.

Mike Mullins D-1643
Whiteville, Tennesee

Rate this article:
No rating
Comments (0)Number of views (3392)
Print
 
Photo by David Cherry

At Skydive Arizona in Eloy, (clockwise from “driver”) Carlo Manuel, Dan Baker, Sam Laliberte and Joel Tremblay perform a car-drop stunt to promote Cleared Hot’s Vet Boogie.

AXIS

 

AXIS

Ready For Spring
Five Minute Call | Jun 01, 2018

Ready For Spring

Exit! Exit! Exit!
Features | Jun 01, 2018

Exit! Exit! Exit!

Lake Wales Revisited
Features | Jun 01, 2018

Lake Wales Revisited

AXIS

No Companion Left Behind
Features | Jun 01, 2018

No Companion Left Behind

Danji “DJ” Marvin | D-22292
Profiles | Jun 01, 2018

Danji “DJ” Marvin | D-22292

AXIS

Board of Directors
Gearing Up | Jun 01, 2018

Board of Directors

Friday, June 1, 2018

AXIS

First138139140141143145146147Last