Back-tracking | Photo by Gary Winkler/U.S. Army | D-4797

Published on Monday, October 23, 2023

Back-tracking | Photo by Gary Winkler/U.S. Army | D-4797

Back-Tracking highlights interesting, lesser-known moments in skydiving through the years. These photos are often unearthed from boxes in the attic, old photo albums and dimly lit DZ closets. Please send submissions to communications@uspa.org.


 

Sgt. Jose Pruneda, a member of the U.S. Army Parachute Team’s Canopy Relative Work Team, descends under two canopies during one of the dual-square deployment testing jumps in Yuma, Arizona, in the 1990s. The reserve parachute opened with a twist at the risers. The test on this particular jump was to stall the main parachute while the reserve was behind it. Upon stalling the main, the twist transferred from the reserve to the main, causing an unrecoverable downplane.

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Author: Gary Winkler

Categories: People, Featured Photos

Tags: October 2023

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Photo by Preston Pettigrew

While making a tandem skydive with instructor Leland Procell at Orange Skies Free Fall Center in Fort Morgan, Colorado, tattoo artist Katie Casey begins inking the leg of drop zone owner Mike Bohn with a canopy design that she later finished on the ground.

Squirrel

 

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