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- Newsgroups: rec.skydiving
- Path: sparky!uunet!think.com!spool.mu.edu!umn.edu!lynx!zia.aoc.nrao.edu!dbriggs
- From: dbriggs@zia.aoc.nrao.edu (Daniel Briggs)
- Subject: Skydiving from Los Cruces
- Message-ID: <1992Dec23.132336.9890@zia.aoc.nrao.edu>
- Summary: Belen is really your best shot
- Organization: National Radio Astronomy Observatory, Socorro NM
- Distribution: usa
- Date: Wed, 23 Dec 92 13:23:36 GMT
- Lines: 34
-
- To the fellow from Cruces:
-
- I didn't want to open my yap here until after I had talked with some frieds
- from down in the Cruces area. Basically they confirmed the impression that
- I had had. There is a small DZ in El Paso, Skysport Parachute Drop Zone,
- 7735 Boeing Drive, El Paso, TX 79925. But the folks I talked to rather
- strongly recommended driving up to Belen, at least through the initial
- stages of your student career. Skysport is a very small Cessna DZ, with
- one owner/instructor/pilot and one or two other jumpmasters. Aparently the
- fellow that runs it is ex military, and a lot of the military attitude has
- carried over into the operation of the DZ. This isn't necessarily a bad
- thing -- some people like it. But be aware that this is only one way to
- run a DZ, and there are other ways. I'm told that skysport is static line
- only, with a very occasional tandem. Belen offers these, as well as AFF.
- Belen has more modern student gear in a wider range of sizes, a larger
- plane, and higher maximum jump altitude.
-
- By comparison with Eloy, the Belen DZ is tiny and parochial. By comparison
- with Skysport, it's positively cosmopolitan. Certainly it's possible to
- learn at a single Cessna DZ, but I think there are better environments.
- One single viewpoint on skydiving, no matter what it may be, is going to be
- somewhat limiting. A larger DZ with more instructors & experienced jumpers
- enables you to find the right style of teaching appropriate to your own
- personality. Start at Belen, or start at Skysport, but do make the trek up
- to Belen at least occasionally as you learn. (And after you learn...,
- you're at least as close to Eloy as most of us!)
-
- Blue Skies,
-
- --
- | Daniel Briggs (dbriggs@nrao.edu) | USPA B-14993
- | New Mexico Tech / National Radio Astronomy Observatory | DoD #387
- | P.O. Box O / Socorro, NM 87801 (505) 835-7391 |
- Support the League for Programming Freedom (info from lpf@uunet.uu.net)
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