First jump at Airborne school!!!

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  • čas přidán 6. 06. 2011
  • Here is the full length video of the first jump at Airborne school.
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Komentáře • 557

  • @reggierico
    @reggierico Před 5 lety +105

    I attended Army Airborne School in August of 1984, while serving as an Air Force ROTC cadet out of San Jose State U. I remember our first jump vividly. I was sitting next to this young black private and I remember asking him if he was nervous. He looked at me and said, "Yes, I've never flown in an airplane before." So, by the end of Jump week, he had taken off in an airplane 5 times in his life, and never landed in one. I thought that was amazing. A great, well run school, very professional 'Black Hats' and a lot of history there.

    • @sonofjapheth5382
      @sonofjapheth5382 Před 4 lety +4

      Made my first jump in February of '84....made my last in February of 2001....I went airborne because I couldn't stand to land in a plane, figured I'd get out halfway there..lol

    • @ObamaFromKenya
      @ObamaFromKenya Před 4 lety +2

      Cory Comelio did you serve 20 and a wakeup 🤔

    • @sonofjapheth5382
      @sonofjapheth5382 Před 4 lety +4

      @@ObamaFromKenya Nah, 21years, 6 months, 11 days, then I woke up.

    • @dirtydave2691
      @dirtydave2691 Před 4 lety +1

      March of 1988..........I got to know Fryer DZ pretty well over the next 21 years. Last jump June 2001 out of a ROK Army Chinook Masun Ri DZ South Korea.

    • @donotneed2250
      @donotneed2250 Před rokem

      They tell you about the Major who HALO'd from a chopper in 1981. Chute didn't open and impacted by the towers. That was on my last tour on Benning.

  • @cr7neymar908
    @cr7neymar908 Před 4 lety +20

    the feeling before you jump out for the first time is like no other

    • @TheJimtanker
      @TheJimtanker Před 4 měsíci +1

      No, the feeling when that parachute opens over your head for the first time is like no other.

  • @HarlinNeal
    @HarlinNeal Před 11 lety +15

    I remember this feeling and these sounds. The most nerve-wrecking thing about a parachute jump is waiting to get out of the bird. Then...when you see the door or tailgate open...you know you're about to get out. And like my Sgt. Airborne told me...any jump you can get up and walk away from is a good on. AIRBORNE ALL THE WAY!!!!!

  • @cardelle68
    @cardelle68  Před 11 lety +122

    Trust me, you go through the motions so many times that when you first get ready to jump you are just so excited just to finally go. Honestly, I felt like such a bad ass when I got on that plane for the first time. Dont worry about it... when its time to jump, just jump, dont even think, just jump, you will be just fine.

    • @Wildcat5181
      @Wildcat5181 Před 4 lety +5

      Your training guides you.

    • @kfooclan3058
      @kfooclan3058 Před 4 lety +5

      I did paragliding not jump off an airplane was it scary

    • @richardflower7408
      @richardflower7408 Před 4 lety +12

      My first jump was euphoric. My second jump, I got stuck in an up draft, it was better than the first. Until the ground instructor told me if I didn't "get down now" he'd kick my ass when I did. That was 1964.

    • @marloforreal
      @marloforreal Před 3 lety +6

      My motto had always been: "Jump now. Get scared later." The view had always been wonderful up there.

    • @rockdaddy2168
      @rockdaddy2168 Před 3 lety +5

      My first jump was a C141. Extremely noisy bird. I jumped and all of a sudden it was quiet and I looked up and saw a big green dot, that's a good thing. I looked left no other jumpers, all I saw was white. I looked all around, nothing, i just saw white. I looked down, nothing just white. I got pissed and thought "@#$% I died on my first jump." All of a sudden I did a perfect 3 point landing.... feet, butt, head. It was snowing real hard.
      82nd Airborne. 1970s.

  • @apburner1
    @apburner1 Před 10 lety +120

    I used to mess with these guys when I was a Loadmaster:
    "Wow, how much do you guys get paid to jump out of airplanes?"
    "We get $150 a month!"
    "Really? I get $450 to stay in!!!"

    • @kermitstewart6572
      @kermitstewart6572 Před 5 lety +9

      I got cool stories though.

    • @AlaskaErik
      @AlaskaErik Před 5 lety +9

      @@kermitstewart6572 I have over 5000 hours as a C-130 loadmaster and I have lots of cool stories. Been to about 45 countries, including Afghanistan and Bosnia.

    • @theflash01100
      @theflash01100 Před 5 lety +7

      @@AlaskaErik All LM's have cool stories (mostly bs), C141 LM 76-2000

    • @Wildcat5181
      @Wildcat5181 Před 5 lety +4

      We were paid $65.00, officers were paid $130.00 per month for qualifying once every three months.

    • @joetrump5844
      @joetrump5844 Před 4 lety +7

      Got paid $55.00 Hazardous duty pay 💰 per month.
      HHC 2/504th Ann Inf
      Ft. Bragg
      1973-1976
      Medic
      WWG1WGA
      🇺🇸👍💪✊☝️💕

  • @svpatl
    @svpatl Před 5 lety +2

    9:16
    Jumper: No! Wait!! Not ready...
    Instructor: Get your ass outta here!!
    😂😂😂

    • @johnnyvain544
      @johnnyvain544 Před 4 lety

      pretty sure after the chute opened he was glad he jumped.

  • @williamluna5957
    @williamluna5957 Před 5 lety +54

    Completed jump school at Ft Campbell,Ky in 1955.Jumpmaster School at Ft Bragg,NC in 1965.Served with 11th Airborne Division in Germany and 10th & 12th Special Forces with over 100 jumps and loved every exciting minute of it.Go Airborne-All The Way.LTC Bill Luna-Chicago

    • @tomkelly9714
      @tomkelly9714 Před 5 lety +6

      Vxiii Corp ft.bragg 1971

    • @sonofjapheth5382
      @sonofjapheth5382 Před 4 lety +2

      !0th Group (1984 - 2001)...Never could stand the "Regular Army"..lol

    • @L8Pilot
      @L8Pilot Před 4 lety +1

      My Dad was 11th Airborne in 1950. I was an Airborne qualified Marine

    •  Před 4 lety

      Doesn't the Military give more money to guys who jump as opposed to those who don't? My sister was in the Army 84-86. She really admired those guys.

    • @rickymccutcheon
      @rickymccutcheon Před 4 lety +1

      @@tomkelly9714 i was 1/508th ,71-74 , them were crazy days ,lol

  • @gordonwalker7625
    @gordonwalker7625 Před 6 lety +58

    1st jump is the easiest. (like a "slow-mo" dream for me) Easy landing.
    After that......... I'm addicted.

    • @stainmasterzinc9418
      @stainmasterzinc9418 Před 4 lety +3

      TRUTH. 1st Jump is easy: You just do what the Sergeant's Airborne have taught you the last two weeks.
      2nd Jump and you do a little remembering and JUST might have a bit of a problem going out the door.
      My 5th Jump was from a C-123. The door was removed and I was the 2nd one out. It was fun seeing the ground drop away. Two Minutes as opposed to the SIX Minutes for Hercs. Absolutely enjoyed everything.

  • @WESTERLUND2
    @WESTERLUND2 Před 12 lety +50

    I remember the first time I jumped. Landed like a feather. Landed like a ten ton rock every time since then.

    • @TA-ht4jo
      @TA-ht4jo Před 3 lety +1

      Lol

    • @DevilFrog61
      @DevilFrog61 Před 3 lety +1

      Same! Idk why it works that way

    • @johnnystancil5272
      @johnnystancil5272 Před rokem

      Same same here my very jump landed like a fetter every jump afterwards wasn't like that Airborne School Jan 1989 ft. Benning GA

    • @alchemicalsoul
      @alchemicalsoul Před rokem

      This has to be a thing.

    • @tr0779
      @tr0779 Před rokem +1

      The adrenaline made all of our landings softer 🤣

  • @michaelsteal9128
    @michaelsteal9128 Před 4 lety +9

    the eternity waiting as the parachute opens. the. thrill of that tug as it opens and slows your decent. the joy of a peaceful decent and concentration again as you preparing for landing. Awesome.

    • @JukesMcGee
      @JukesMcGee Před 4 lety +1

      Michael Steal A poetic description, I like it. I’m a 2LT starting airborne school next Monday. Wish me luck.

    • @cardelle68
      @cardelle68  Před 4 lety +1

      Take luck LT.

    • @michaelsteal9128
      @michaelsteal9128 Před 4 lety +1

      Whoa I am sure you will find the airborne of today to be a radical change from -1969. Best of luck with your future. The more relaxed you are the better you will function and think. and therefore the better you will be at every task. Remember the army wants to put you under stress to test your metal. Understanding that will put you ahead of most others. Thanks for your service to our great country.

    • @JukesMcGee
      @JukesMcGee Před 4 lety +2

      @@michaelsteal9128 I got my wings. I just remembered my training and I was okay.

  • @jamesnesmith7756
    @jamesnesmith7756 Před 12 lety +9

    I attended jump school (Airborne Training) in the late 60's. There were approximately 500 students in my class. A few dropped out, a few could not make the runs (in combat boots then), and I think we only had three students injured with broken legs. Not a bad safety record. There was no bigger thrill than to exit the plane, feel the tug on your shoulders and look up and see that beautiful deployed green canopy.

  • @rleslie845
    @rleslie845 Před 4 lety +7

    I went through as a young Navy EOD tech in 1976. It hasn't changed.
    I later attended jumpmaster training taught by some awesome Army Green Berets. What an adventure.

  • @hankwilliams9558
    @hankwilliams9558 Před 4 lety +5

    My uncle was in the 101st airborne screaming eagle. From 1942 to 1946.

  • @mariosantos7061
    @mariosantos7061 Před 4 lety +16

    Just graduated Friday September 13, 2019 🤘
    Hotter than hell at Fort Benning!!
    Out of my graduating class I was the second oldest at 39 😅

    • @BADMONTESS
      @BADMONTESS Před 4 lety +2

      Go to an Airborne unit, do not be a 5 jump chump. Some get their wings and just go to leg units. Some weekends at Bragg they do jumps for pay hurts (if you do not jump for a period of time you will lose your jump pay). You can go to these usually on Sicily and do Hollywood jumps from 123's, tail gates, no pack, build up your jump totals real fast. Congrats! Super duper paratrooper...

    • @xmachine7003
      @xmachine7003 Před 4 lety +1

      Good job....old fart😂😂😂👏👏👏👏😇

    • @vetman101st
      @vetman101st Před 4 lety

      Way to go!. Good for you. It's never too late is it?

    • @mariosantos7061
      @mariosantos7061 Před 4 lety

      @@vetman101st at some point it might be 🤣. I can't picture being 60 and making it through

    • @ivogarner4146
      @ivogarner4146 Před 4 lety

      Mario Santos Congrats! I graduated February 23rd as the youngest guy in my company and Keeper of the wings. I think the oldest guy for us was 43 and seemed to enjoy every second of the experience!

  • @edwarddicecco3219
    @edwarddicecco3219 Před 5 lety +9

    The Army Chaplain made every jump with us. He was the guy that pushed you out the door if you balked. Too funny.

    • @titojesusmane9540
      @titojesusmane9540 Před 3 lety +3

      "don't worry son, if you don't land right then it won't be the Army's problem, it'll be God's"

  • @Trueknight27
    @Trueknight27 Před 12 lety +7

    Oh those were the days - particularly remember leaving Jump school and constantly saying "Clear" to everyone for ever damn thing, took me months to shake what they drilled into me in days. One of the best experiences of my life - Airborne!

  • @joetrump5844
    @joetrump5844 Před 5 lety +64

    My number was number six....... I was either in the front near the exit door...... or deep inside the belly of the aircraft.
    On my first jump...... all I could think, once my chute opened, was.........” if my father could see me now “ , as I was starting to hear one of the instructors with a megaphone 📢 giving me heads up to land.
    My second jump......... was really, the hardest thing I have ever made myself do.
    I was full of apprehension ........ I wanted to scream “jorraaannaammo”, and all I got out was “Jooo”, before getting hit in the face with the wind blast.
    Ahh......the things you do for God and Country .
    82nd Airborne Div.
    1973 - 1976
    All the way.....Sir.

    • @JG-ii1ce
      @JG-ii1ce Před 5 lety +4

      82nd! 2014-2018

    • @Wildcat5181
      @Wildcat5181 Před 5 lety +5

      On my first jump, I remember being on the plane and then being on the ground. I have no recollection of what transpired in between. 05/67 until 02/74. E/2/503 173rd ABN, and Troop A and later Troop B 1/17th Cavalry 82nd ABN. 124 jumps total.

    • @patgarrett2152
      @patgarrett2152 Před 5 lety +3

      The thanks for you service, I wondered if sometimes it was fun and others NOT!

    • @Wildcat5181
      @Wildcat5181 Před 5 lety +2

      AIRBORNE ALL THE WAY!

    • @patgarrett2152
      @patgarrett2152 Před 5 lety +2

      @@Wildcat5181 Thanks for your service, sounds like you liked it! All the replies so far have been enthusiastic, but... some time ago on my tablet was a group of probably WWII paratroopers singing, and laughing enthusiasticly "It's a hellofa way to die"
      They probably saw a lot of both! Is it sung now, or reserved for those special men that have seen both sides? ( I think perhaps they were a .ittle tipsy, which may have helped!
      It really DIDN'T sound funny to me!)

  • @spartan4745
    @spartan4745 Před 11 lety +56

    enlisting army infantry airborne..i know my hearts gonna sink to my butthole when i first see the door open but the rush of adrenaline probably overtakes that feeling immediately

    • @joetrump5844
      @joetrump5844 Před 5 lety +7

      Nathan Gardner
      You are right about that.......
      But if you know that’s going to happen......... you are half way there.
      Stay positive, and good luck 🍀👍.

    • @McL0VINNN
      @McL0VINNN Před 3 lety +4

      I was infantry. I saw the towers on my first road march and i said... no thank you. Lol

    • @alanmadden771
      @alanmadden771 Před 3 lety +3

      Welcome to the Airborne fraternity. I was Airborne for 10 years active duty. SF & 82nd Abn. First jumps in Jump School was from C119s. “All the Way”

  • @alchemicalsoul
    @alchemicalsoul Před rokem +1

    I started working in a skydiver A license in 2022. Made four solo jumps with an instructor during free fall. I can't even imagine having to PLF on purpose PLUS carrying a load, PLUS potentially getting shot at when you land. Skydiving canopy is maneuverable and can flare on landing. Airborne is the most courageous strong work around. Kudos to every one of you who made this leap. Most humans will never get this view of the earth. Revel in the fact you overcame fear to experience it. Blessings to ALL.

  • @bubbaknowsstuff
    @bubbaknowsstuff Před rokem +1

    Brings back memories. My jumps from C-130, C-141, Crane, Huey, Chinook best jump. Even got to go to German jump school to get German jump wings made 5 jumps in one day out of an old helicopter with a jump door that was about 5 ft tall. When you got to the door you had to sit down in the door with your legs dangling out then push off. 1972

  • @35t10b
    @35t10b Před 4 lety +2

    I don't remember a thing from jump school. I was scared shitless the whole time. November 1980. Learned to love it at fort brag. Landed in the jungle in Panama February 1981. Last jump July 1983 and I've missed it ever since

  • @donburden7383
    @donburden7383 Před 2 lety +4

    I graduated 11B from Fort Benning in 1979. Didn't give a thought to going airborne training, but about a year after my enlistment was up a co-worker and I decided to try it so we trained and jumped using the old static line airborne equipment so I got the full effect. Greatest thing I ever did, to someone that hasn't jumped, you can't describe the view, the quiet, the almost spiritual feeling, etc. even though you're only in the air descending a short time.

  • @robertpepperney5321
    @robertpepperney5321 Před 5 lety +2

    It took me 20 jumps to give up the fear of dying. We couldn't do it without the riggers. Our lives were in their hands.

  • @jodan4
    @jodan4 Před 7 lety +2

    I went to Jump school at Ft Campbell and my first jump was June 4, 1958. Nothing like it,especially the first one. Back then everybody had to be Airborne in the Division.

    • @cardelle68
      @cardelle68  Před 7 lety +1

      Things have definitely changed since then. Thank you for your service!!!

  • @michaelwright3351
    @michaelwright3351 Před 3 lety +8

    My first jump was on June 16,1969. When the black hat opened the door all hell broke loose and I thought to myself
    “Oh Shit these guys are serious.” Got out the door and looked down at the ground and thought to myself “O MY GOD WHAT HAVE I DONE?” Going Airborne was absolutely the best thing I have ever done.

    • @alanmadden771
      @alanmadden771 Před 3 lety +2

      I went through jump school in April 1969. Made 5 jumps from an old buckets C119. Airborne 10 years.

    • @shakamakana2404
      @shakamakana2404 Před 3 lety +1

      I think it was March '69..... 4 on 119, and 5th on a 141... then 11B to 173rd.... Today, I'm 100% VA Disability 👍🏻😎👍🏻What a LIFE!

  • @joesoap9385
    @joesoap9385 Před 4 lety

    Thank you. Brought back some memories for me as old paratrooper . First jump 1976 from a DC 3 Dakota.

  • @mountrushmore6425
    @mountrushmore6425 Před 5 lety +10

    Ii remember it well, I was the senior person in our aircraft so I went first. Amazing. What the video did not show was the full Airborne Chapel that morning, including me!

  • @thedjartillery
    @thedjartillery Před 11 lety +57

    God bless the Airborne Infantry.

    • @slit4659
      @slit4659 Před 4 lety

      I Bet Fake God dropped everything he was doing because YOU asked FAKE GOD to Bless these Guys..... IT'S SO PHONY EVERYONE SAYING..... GOD BLESS....GOD BLESS

    • @JustinKing-ug3gz
      @JustinKing-ug3gz Před 4 lety

      @@slit4659 hey bud, you forgot your toilet paper.

  • @SWBarbour
    @SWBarbour Před 7 lety +3

    After watching some of these youtube videos, I recall a much more punishing type of physical training as well as the very difficult jump school component of the entire experience. I started with a class of about 750, about 350 of us got our wings. Probably one of the largest classes ever to attend jump school (??). Of course, I arrived at Ft. Benning Labor Day, 1965; assigned to the 101st on TDY to complete jump school. The 1st Calvary Air Mobile Division had just been created and officially left Ft. Benning for Vietnam the weekend I arrived (I was told). Interesting times in terms of a lot of stuff happening in the military during the build-up in Vietnam. Those days are ALL seared into my memory forever, but I'm glad that I was a part of it all.
    I was 20 years old at the time and I thought either the physical punishment or the training would kill me, but obviously I survived and am better for it. I recall a 35 year-old Colonel in my jump class. I thought "he will never make it, he is just too old." But, to my surprise and delight, he did...and in a style and manner better than most of us. Nothing but admiration for this colonel and all the others who earned their badge in this jump class!

  • @kotro88
    @kotro88 Před 13 lety +25

    The guy on the right door at 9:09 looked like he needed a little "encouragement"! Thanks for sharing this. Made my first of about 70 jumps in the Army on June 6th, 1994. This brought me back. Got chills when I heard that door open! :)

    • @tree01house
      @tree01house Před 4 lety

      I didn't see any of the "1st guy in door", jump position, foot down, hands out, forward near the door. All seemed hanging back, maybe things changed

    • @michaelwright3351
      @michaelwright3351 Před 3 lety +1

      Did anyone else notice that Layton88 make his first jump exactly fifty years after Normandy?

    • @kotro88
      @kotro88 Před 3 lety +1

      @@michaelwright3351 That's right! They made kind of a big deal of it at the school..... But not too big of a deal. You know the Army! They can't have you getting too comfortable! Lol

    • @aviator2117
      @aviator2117 Před 2 lety

      @@kotro88 10 years later!

  • @Grayman58
    @Grayman58 Před 5 lety +2

    Jumping those T10 chutes and hitting the deck like a sack of potatoes . Years later I would jump squares in Hawaii much better on the body hahahah

  • @TheJimtanker
    @TheJimtanker Před 5 lety +13

    Loved the JM assist at 9:20!

    • @rpm12091
      @rpm12091 Před 3 lety

      Gotta keep the door clear.

    • @Gitn2it
      @Gitn2it Před 4 měsíci

      Dude changed his mind at the last second. 😂

  • @GHOSTFORTYONE
    @GHOSTFORTYONE Před 11 lety +16

    Im British Airborne, Para Reg, Good video! nothing is more exciting than being first out, until you hit the ground and realise youve got a right fucking tab back off the DZ.

    • @michaelwright3351
      @michaelwright3351 Před 3 lety +1

      I was fortunate enough to have served with the British Exchange Officer, Captain Joseph Vitoria, in my unit 2/325th. He told me that the British jump school was six months long. Damn fine officer. He told me that the British army had the exchange program to teach us yanks how to speak English properly. Of course we had to reply that we had the exchange program to teach you brits how to fight wars properly.

  • @tysonl79
    @tysonl79 Před 5 lety +5

    I remember my first jump. It was a C-141. I hated that thing. It felt like someone slamming a door on you every time you step out. I was happy when they phased that thing out and we started jumping from C-17s regularly at Ft Bragg.

  • @retiredcolonel6492
    @retiredcolonel6492 Před 4 lety +1

    Paratrooper Ft Bragg, August 1986. Best time of my life and I LOVED the ride down.

  • @ObnoxiousNox
    @ObnoxiousNox Před 9 lety +2

    These guys have this down to an art form. I used to find a lot of equipment out there, when I was a drill sergeant at Benning

  • @edwarddicecco3219
    @edwarddicecco3219 Před 5 lety +4

    I went through jump school in January 1971 at Ft Benning. On the first jump I was the 2nd man out the door. After 2 weeks of hell I was happy to finally jump. All 5 jumps in school were out of C141’s - jet cargo planes. The slowest they could fly was 180 mph. It was like being shot out of a cannon. What a rush! Two weeks after I got back to my Special Forces reserve unit we went to summer camp at Camp Edwards/Otis AFB in Cape Cod. We did a night jump in bad weather at 1,000 ft in a C141. Nobody hit the DZ! I landed 5 ft from the guardrail of a highway. Every one else landed in deep woods.

    • @joeycarr1398
      @joeycarr1398 Před 5 lety +1

      They had this new Adverse Weather Delivery System test back in '73, it was a new sytem them and I volunteer to be one of the first. Man that was not good at all. That C-130 shook like a washing machine. I did not volunteer anymore after that flight.

    • @xmachine7003
      @xmachine7003 Před 4 lety +1

      @@joeycarr1398 never volunteer😉

  • @PennPearson
    @PennPearson Před 4 lety +4

    I will always remember that wonderful feeling of being part of a huge, elite, deadly military machine - the U.S. Army AIRBORNE, at Ft. Bragg. No feeling as good as that, before or since.

    • @geodes4762
      @geodes4762 Před 3 lety +2

      When you make your sixth jump, the first after jump school with your unit, you really feel you are airborne. Back in the day, having six jumps immediately set you apart from the hundreds of guys who went to jump school and never served on jump status after that!

    • @PennPearson
      @PennPearson Před 3 lety

      @@geodes4762 True - absolutely! I'm more proud of that than of anything else I've ever done. All the way, brother!

    • @supersegway9464
      @supersegway9464 Před rokem

      I don’t know if you’ll see this, but I just graduated from jump school last week and just arrived in fort Bragg, now renamed to fort liberty. I’m scared as hell, but excited to join something bigger. Airborne!!

  • @williamthedeerslayerward5037

    gotta love these legs talking like they know all about it.

  • @shawnroark582
    @shawnroark582 Před 3 lety +1

    I miss those days.

  • @Mike-lh4wn
    @Mike-lh4wn Před rokem +1

    Intel guy. Never had a desire to jump out of a perfectly good airplane. But after watching a few of these, actually looks pretty good.

  • @mike247worldwide
    @mike247worldwide Před 3 lety +1

    Made my cherry jump in June 1972. Served in the 82d Airborne Division from 73-75. All I can say is it was a helluva way to get to work.

  • @maxwill6408
    @maxwill6408 Před 5 lety +5

    My 1st jump was the week after Thanksgiving 1971 from a C-130. My 5th jump that last week was from a C-123. I wasn't too scared first couple of jumps but that fifth one scared the crap out of me, Iguess because of the Piston engines the c-123 used. I also jumped from a C-7a caribou which also use piston engines which I don't remember much except that we jumped off the ramp

  • @sonofjapheth5382
    @sonofjapheth5382 Před 4 lety +4

    You're so busy trying to remember everything they told you, that before you know it, you're standing on the dz looking up and wondering what happened.

  • @edwardbisbee7872
    @edwardbisbee7872 Před 5 lety +9

    Love being Airborne my first jump I was the first out on the left side scared as hell but thank god got over that real quick thank you Fort Benning Georgia. Late 1968 my number was 88

    • @wilsonblauheuer6544
      @wilsonblauheuer6544 Před 5 lety +1

      my number was 745. Door position on my first jump, and then again at least once more in jump school

    • @vetman101st
      @vetman101st Před 4 lety

      It was July 68 . Really warm in Georgia, I think my number was 253. Sergeant Turnipseed was the black hat I remember

    • @shakamakana8492
      @shakamakana8492 Před 4 lety +1

      Papa 32 , '69 jump school, 173rd, 11B4P, AIRBORNE, ALL THE WAY !

  • @LenT1968
    @LenT1968 Před 12 lety +1

    ALL OK JUMPMASTER!!!!!! ahhhh the memories lol...86-91...45 jumps Airborne Infantry...thanks for the vid

  • @vetman101st
    @vetman101st Před 4 lety +3

    July 67 Made my first jump out of a C-141 jet. I just remember how noisy it was as I got near the door. Stuck my foot out and I was gone. Really peaceful after exit. Sure glad the parachute rigger did his job!! Four more from a C-119 Flying Boxcar. Then on to the 82nd Airborne.The extra $55/mo was nice.

  • @ChrisBrown-kh9wz
    @ChrisBrown-kh9wz Před 4 lety +38

    The first one is easy, the second one is the hardest.

    • @halobro27
      @halobro27 Před 4 lety +3

      Explain please

    • @calebkleinhans3668
      @calebkleinhans3668 Před 4 lety +1

      halobro27 I haven’t jumped yet but they say the second time you know what to expect and have more time to think about it

    • @drifter1dc
      @drifter1dc Před 4 lety

      Chris Brown I think chopper blasts are hardest as you can see the ground leave you under your feet but in an airplane you don’t see much till you “Stand in the door”.

    • @shakamakana8492
      @shakamakana8492 Před 4 lety

      I remember my 1st jump, a blurry of blue, green, and brown! 😀🙃👍'69 ALL THE WAY

  • @brianpearis1478
    @brianpearis1478 Před 4 lety +2

    That last guy had second thoughts, but they pushed his ass out, lol! I hope he's good.

    • @lteagle101
      @lteagle101 Před 4 lety +1

      looked like he lost his balanced or got hit with turbulence or something.

    • @rockdaddy2168
      @rockdaddy2168 Před 3 lety +1

      I saw a few Boot Assisted Tactical Exits.

  • @hawkarock75
    @hawkarock75 Před 11 lety +16

    Maybe a year after jump school, I made a jump, I can't remember how high it was, but it was the first time I could see the blackness on space and the curvature of the earth. It was that day I truly became AIRBORNE. I will take that image with me to the grave. ALL THE WAY AND THEN SOME!

  • @AlaskaErik
    @AlaskaErik Před 5 lety +1

    I loved night jumps in the middle of winter. As a C-130 loadmaster I would watch guys jump out of my airplane and I'm thinking my flight pay is more than their jump pay and I'll be in my nice warm bed in a few hours while they're out there playing army all night in the snow.

    • @AlaskaErik
      @AlaskaErik Před 5 lety

      @@richardmcgee8315 I've told that to a lot of army guys, but you're the only one who got butthurt over it. Want to talk about REMFs? 14,000 out of 15,000 army types never went outside the wire at Bagram Air Base, Afghanistan. Ever been in a firefight and needed more ammo? That was me above you, watching the A-10s roll in on the enemy, while we're orbiting and trying to drop that load. Which we finally did. If you ever flew on a C-130 in Afghanistan, that was us. Including taking the wounded back to Bagram so they could so they could get medevacked out on the C-17. And we didn't just land at fortified compounds. We landed all over Afghanistan and brought our own security team with us. And sometimes our planes would come back with bullet holes in them. So if you think C-130 aircrew are REMFs, dream on. I've got almost 100 combat missions in Bosnia and Afghanistan under my belt.

  • @101jumper8
    @101jumper8 Před 4 lety +2

    Graduated from Ft Campbell jump school January 1961. Used C-130. First jump was the biggest rush I have experienced. Now I'm 76 and still remember like it was yesterday.

    • @jamesharber7820
      @jamesharber7820 Před 4 lety

      sy nielson .Sy...I too am 76 and had the opportunity to attend Jump School at Fort Benning, Georgia immediately following OCS, but did not. Have regretted it many, many times since. I envy your experience.

  • @cardelle68
    @cardelle68  Před 11 lety +11

    Yes.... but you have two choices... fight through it and jump anyway or refuse and get kicked from the school.... sickness is no excuse!!! :-)

  • @noleshot2713
    @noleshot2713 Před 4 lety +1

    In the 70’s with T-10’s from C130’s and C123’s, we had to hold the edges of the door then jump 3’ out and 1’ up. Into the prop blast. These guys just step out. I guess it is the airfoil ahead of the door creating a vacuum. I never felt like I was facing death in jump school, just nerves. A hundred or so hours of having every move pounded into your brain and body by Black Hats made the jump “automatic”. Didn’t even have to think. No question of backing out...you WERE going out. One of the first women to go through jump school was in my stick. I was a Lt. and stick leader, but she was to go out 1st ahead of me. On our first jump the command “GO” was given and she hesitated. The jumpmaster through her out. I was highly incentivized to move smartly to the door and out!

    • @davidechohawk9761
      @davidechohawk9761 Před 4 lety +1

      you are right sir about standing in the door. Hands on the outside of plane, foot 6" out of the door, green light, jump up 6" and out 36" into prop blast. Except on C-141 Star-lifter Jet. you just grabbed your reserve on the ends by both hands and walked out.

  • @patgarrett2152
    @patgarrett2152 Před 5 lety +2

    I can't imagine all the emotions there, from sheer terror, to 'what am I doing here' to absolute elation, ' I'm really going to jump!! To- "Wow, it looks different from this angle! Here I go!
    Am I right?

    • @patgarrett2152
      @patgarrett2152 Před 5 lety

      @Chin Brumback Thanks for your answer, it sounds like you really liked it! Thanks for your service!

    • @patgarrett2152
      @patgarrett2152 Před 4 lety

      @Chin Brumback you make it almost sound like fun! Wow,! I suppose each one has different reasons and feelings, but for whatever reason you all were "airborne" you have my great admiration, thanks, and I stii wonder why, but I am VERY thankful l for all you have given, so I can learn from great patriots like you all! " Go AIRBORNE"!, and my thanks and gratitude to you all! ( even if I sometimes wonder at your 'themesong! )

  • @tr0779
    @tr0779 Před rokem +1

    Watching this in 2023… Not much has changed. I graduated today. And may I say I LOVE MY JOB. AIRBORNE!

  • @cardelle68
    @cardelle68  Před 11 lety +10

    Anyone in the military is a friend to me... no matter the branch. We had some Navy guy at jump school also, dont know what they did, they were not in my platoon.

    • @johnnicatra570
      @johnnicatra570 Před 5 lety +5

      They were Seal trainees

    • @Wildcat5181
      @Wildcat5181 Před 5 lety +3

      Navy guys in jump school were either aviators or UDTs.

  • @tomdoland6918
    @tomdoland6918 Před rokem +2

    I went through Airborne School in 1982. Went on to the 82nd Abn.

  • @classifiedsincebirth
    @classifiedsincebirth Před 5 lety +5

    I hated every jump, but the extra money every month was worth it..Fayetteville took it all..1978-82

    • @hiker2742
      @hiker2742 Před 5 lety

      LOL, I was there the same time frame....remember Hay st.

    • @classifiedsincebirth
      @classifiedsincebirth Před 5 lety +1

      @@hiker2742 Ya, buy me drinky until your money was gone. I heard its all cleaned up now.

    • @hiker2742
      @hiker2742 Před 5 lety

      @@classifiedsincebirthYea, went there a couple years ago with my kids...... It didn't even look like the same place!

    • @hiker2742
      @hiker2742 Před 5 lety

      @Chin Brumback When were you there?

    • @hiker2742
      @hiker2742 Před 5 lety

      @Chin Brumback LOL fayettnam LOL, I remember! groovy!

  • @bigtex3255
    @bigtex3255 Před 12 lety +2

    i was there in june of 85. brings back memories. it was scared shitless when the door opend.

  • @EASYDRE
    @EASYDRE Před 4 lety +1

    I remember my first jump, May of 1986. We had one guy, he threw up every jump. Once that last jump was made, he declined jump status. I still ran across at Bragg. He was in a leg company.

  • @rayscott4780
    @rayscott4780 Před 2 lety +1

    I remember when I was in I had a saying that pissed off the higher ups. Everybody wants to wear the boots but no one wants to go through the training. Did 295 of these most as a jump master.

  • @MrBobcone
    @MrBobcone Před 5 lety +1

    1st jump in the summer of '77...could do this every day...twice on Sunday!!! the good life!

  • @AlexandraPeters70
    @AlexandraPeters70 Před 11 lety

    Very good advice!!!

  • @eddiesaninocencio6635
    @eddiesaninocencio6635 Před 4 lety +3

    The last guy froze, the jumpmaster assisted him out the door.

    • @hml3672
      @hml3672 Před 4 lety +1

      LOL

    • @hml3672
      @hml3672 Před 4 lety +1

      Why jump out of a perfectly good aircraft?

  • @KING3407
    @KING3407 Před 8 lety +32

    true 1st jump is not like 2nd jump. vietnam vet. jumpschool graduate of 1971/1974

    • @jk-76
      @jk-76 Před 6 lety +2

      My 3rd for me. We had a female (1LT?) break her leg on number 2 and it sounded like she was being eaten alive by ants or something. D Co 1/507 in 1998. We HAD a BUDS class with us and their Ensign busted his ankle on the 5th jump. That was a fun Dan school

    • @robertdonahue2600
      @robertdonahue2600 Před 5 lety +2

      That was back when it was a real school, not this lower standard feel good crap the army does now

    • @robertpepperney5321
      @robertpepperney5321 Před 5 lety +1

      After first jump, it's all work.

  • @tiggersdad6878
    @tiggersdad6878 Před 4 lety +2

    I seem to remember the seating in the C130 being next to the fuselage in 1972.

  • @Twinkiiman1
    @Twinkiiman1 Před 11 lety +4

    i cant wait to be apart of the airborne.. its been my dream since i was kid..

  • @joeycarr1398
    @joeycarr1398 Před 5 lety +4

    Airborne School 1973, Ranger School 1975 1 Bn. Ranger 75 INF. I joined to go to 'Nam but peace accord was signed 2 months prior.

  • @Vewwy
    @Vewwy Před 12 lety +3

    monday, wednesday, and friday are 3.2 mile run days at a 8:30 mile pace. tuesday and thursday are upper body strengthening workouts such as push ups, pull ups and sit-ups.
    You need to be in pretty decent shape to come to the school and not have any problems with the physical side of it. At least be able to do 10-15 pulls ups without struggling and 50-60 push ups and sit ups with out trouble.

  • @ralphgreenjr.2466
    @ralphgreenjr.2466 Před rokem +1

    Airborne school 1969. The first jump was a piece of cake, I was 19 years old, fearless, and clueless as to what was about to happen. I was jumping a C-119, a real adventure. Now the second jump, that is something else, because I now knew the earth had something for my A$$!

    • @tomuss2082
      @tomuss2082 Před rokem

      I went through March 1997. Same reaction to the C119, shake rattle and roll

    • @Thomasnmi
      @Thomasnmi Před rokem

      In some ways the second jump can be more stressful 😊

  • @TJ571
    @TJ571 Před 7 lety +9

    The best and most exciting I had in the Army.

  • @ZAGOR64
    @ZAGOR64 Před 5 lety +2

    It was more than 35 years ago, but damn, I can still smell the fuel fumes and hear the loud engines noises and the screams of the Jump master. I was just a kid then, but once I exited that door, did my things RIGHT and landed..I felt I grown in to a man.
    1st jump...I'l never forget it.
    ps: as many already stated...the 2nd one is a bit more spooky...but at that point you worked so hard to get there that you just want to get out from that metal box.

    • @johnnicatra570
      @johnnicatra570 Před 5 lety +1

      It was the day we jumped twice that scared me the most .1969 509thNam70-71173rd.

    • @ZAGOR64
      @ZAGOR64 Před 5 lety

      @@johnnicatra570 Nam? Respect for ya brotha....lots of respect from the airborne brotherhood!

  • @daveyusuf7189
    @daveyusuf7189 Před 11 lety +1

    Good Job Bro =)

  • @billybobthornton9011
    @billybobthornton9011 Před 7 lety +16

    Let's see if we can spot the future Rangers out of the group

    • @mouthwash8182
      @mouthwash8182 Před 2 lety

      Nowadays you go to RASP and Ranger before going to airborne. Too many people were taking option 40 and then backing out of ranger after airborne, so they switched the order of it up to save money.

  • @RangerBVP
    @RangerBVP Před 4 lety +3

    My "Airborne Prayer" when my stick was over Fryar DZ, ;
    Please Airborne Jump God, I've wanted to do this ever since I can remember, having been training for it the last two weeks, am now in the plane with my stick, please don't let me nut up in the door, piss my pants, or die! Amen!

  • @yolandajohnson8685
    @yolandajohnson8685 Před 5 lety

    this is soooooo AWESOME!!!!!!

  • @johnburrows1179
    @johnburrows1179 Před 3 lety +3

    First time I was nervous as hell. I was like please just let my chute open ok. Once I hit the ground I was hooked, couldn’t wait to go back up and do it again. A feeling like no other

  • @eddiejones856
    @eddiejones856 Před 5 lety +2

    My only regret during my 20 years career is, I didn’t earn jump wings. Father was a paratrooper 12 of his 20 year career. Hell, I was born in Womack Army Hospital and spent some of my youth on Ft.Benning.

  • @huntersiebenhausen2955

    Dude thats so sick i cant wait till i can go.

  • @cardelle68
    @cardelle68  Před 11 lety +2

    You hold on to your risers... they are the things that connect your chute to your harness, and you can control yourself just a little bit with those, but no, there are no cords to direct yourself. However, on the new delta T-11 there are more distinct handles to direct yourself but still no real guiding capability, plus they have been having trouble with the T-11 so I dont even think they are letting people jump it right now.

  • @hardcorehunter9155
    @hardcorehunter9155 Před 5 lety +15

    Imagine doing this shit at night, getting shot at with AA fire and its exploding all around you and taking down planes than landing amongst the enemy behind enemy lines with most of your fellow soldiers scattered miles apart.

    • @KEVWARD63
      @KEVWARD63 Před 4 lety +2

      Yep , like those brave souls that jumped at Arnhem & Nijmegen , to take the Rhine bridges for a clear road into Germany in WW2. Sadly failed , as Arnhem truly was a " bridge too far " .

    •  Před 4 lety

      I think the scariest part is actually jumping out at night & risk getting caught in a tree. That alone can possibly kill someone, IMO.

  • @kencarson2920
    @kencarson2920 Před 3 lety +1

    Made my first jump in 1978 (obviously, I'm seriously old) but not sure dread was the right word. I was nervous, but I really wanted to do it. And yes, we were jumping old WW II era T-10s and DU-5s.

  • @c-459
    @c-459 Před 5 lety +13

    WTF is this T-shirt Chit ? Leapin Leatherneck Class 40 May ‘68 Aye Aye Semper Fi

  • @margaritavaldez8560
    @margaritavaldez8560 Před 4 lety +4

    9:18 “GET OFF MY PLANE!”

  • @hawkarock75
    @hawkarock75 Před 11 lety +8

    Does anyone remember the chat, "Put the pole in the hole pole man," when using the parachute practice tower that would lift and drop you during training? That use to be the last warm up before jump week.

    • @AZJadie
      @AZJadie Před 6 lety +5

      Hit the hole Pole man, hit the hole!

    • @johnnicatra570
      @johnnicatra570 Před 5 lety

      Rig and run

    • @joetrump5844
      @joetrump5844 Před 4 lety

      That by far........was the softest landing I ever had.......deep sand all around the towers. Great stuff.
      Hit the hole 🕳 pole man 👨; hit the hole 🕳.........
      Hit the hole 🕳 pole man 👨.
      HHC 2/504th
      Ft. Bragg
      1973-1976
      Medic
      WWG1WGA
      🇺🇸👍💪✊☝️💕

    • @35t10b
      @35t10b Před 4 lety

      I remember. Tower week was so much fun

  • @sivadmg
    @sivadmg Před 10 lety +4

    very kool stuff- but this definitely takes the mystery away of what it's like. the suspense of not knowing what it's like was a part of the thrill.

    • @sivadmg
      @sivadmg Před 9 lety +1

      Well, since I didn't get to be a part of the generation that watches CZcams videos on Jump school before going to Jump school, I'll have to take your word on it.

    • @jakereyes278
      @jakereyes278 Před 7 lety

      it don't matter how many time you've jump before.. you'd always get that same feeling everytime

    • @joetrump5844
      @joetrump5844 Před 5 lety

      @ Sivadmg........
      In 1973 I watched a movie in the Recruiting office of Airborne School........ I had a pretty good idea of what I was getting into......... but I must tell you.......no amount of movies or videos can compare with the experience of being there in person and being part of a selected group of people who are willing to do this for God and country.
      Good luck 👍🍀.

  • @gbrm6077
    @gbrm6077 Před 5 lety +5

    I did my jump training in 1964 with the Canadian Army. We jumped out of C-130 Hercules aircraft, probably ones with the most miles on them in the world. It wouldn't be the first time we took off on three engines because the fourth wasn't working.We jumped with FN C1A1 battle rifles strapped to us because the army could not afford smaller weapons for the airborne, snowshoes were strapped to us with the rifle and a fully loaded rucksack was under our reserve. I had about 40 skydives at the time, so jumping for me was just fun.
    Now, this is why I love you Yanks. After my jump course, my Sergeant wrote to Fort Bragg to see if about 6 of us could take their HALO course. They said that they'd love to have us down, no charge, free room and board, just get down here, it'll be a blast!
    We contacted our Commanding Officer, who refused our request for travel expenses, hell, we were English, n'est pas? He did however, authorize a C-130 to fly from Quebec to Germany and back so that one Van Doo skier could compete in a competition. The fuel cost in today's money would be about $25,000. The French asshole came in at 137 out of a field of 141. This was the first time I learned about discrimination.

    • @pharikfazoot1048
      @pharikfazoot1048 Před 2 lety +1

      Snow shoes! Fug that

    • @gbrm6077
      @gbrm6077 Před 2 lety +1

      @@pharikfazoot1048 That's what I said after one jump at -35 below and a week long exercise after that. I got out when my time was up.

  • @maxwill6408
    @maxwill6408 Před 4 lety

    What's with the ripcord on the top of the reserve parachute? When I was in Jump School (Nov 1971) and in the 82nd Airborne it was on the right side the reserve parachute. BTW one of my jumps in jump school was from a C-123.

  • @cardelle68
    @cardelle68  Před 11 lety +3

    Awesome... Congrats man!!! Being first man is almost the best cause you have nothing to think about but jump when you feel that slap... its great!!!

  • @sonupe
    @sonupe Před 11 lety +18

    I remember doing this as if it was yesterday; being a young cocky marine at an army school were all branches of the military there.

    • @ronbad12
      @ronbad12 Před 4 lety +1

      Same here. I remember my first PLF was pure shit and I landed like a bag of dirt thrown off a two story building! lol. My next 60 or so jumps were never as bad as that first one.

    • @paulmorris6177
      @paulmorris6177 Před 4 lety +3

      Me too! LOL! There were 7 of us Marines in a class of ALL ROTC..and one AF Weather guy. This was 1988. That was when there was still Blood Wings (and Gold of course). Got my Gold Jump out of a CH-53 at Pendleton. Little did I know then that my son would graduate from the same school in 2010!! Semper Fi!

    • @SSN515
      @SSN515 Před 4 lety

      @ Yep, they did. Trained NSW (SEALS) until the '90's, too

  • @teamflail
    @teamflail Před 11 lety

    Once had my foot stuck in the anti-inversion net of another jumper under the old T-10B's. Was a night jump so of course you could not see the ground. Ended up hitting the ground when I was approximately horizontal. Luckily did not get hurt as I was more worried about the current issue than getting hurt by hitting the ground. Funny thing is both the hand guards on the barrel of my M-16 broke. Fun, fun times.

  • @MarkBrown5150
    @MarkBrown5150 Před 11 lety +1

    Of all my days in the Army I think I remember jump day more than just about anything.
    The first one wasn't so bad but I was scared as hell on the second jump.

  • @dbackjac1
    @dbackjac1 Před 11 lety +2

    .......and you know that first guy in the door is thinking...how the F did I land up here ?

  • @Vewwy
    @Vewwy Před 12 lety

    no problem man, happy to help

  • @Jleed989
    @Jleed989 Před 5 lety +1

    I don’t care how safe it is, you still have to have the balls to go out the door.

    • @Wildcat5181
      @Wildcat5181 Před 5 lety

      If you don't jump, someone behind you will push you out. Sometimes, you have a jumper that refuses to let go of the door frame out of fear even though they were told that if they lost their nerve, to just move to the rear of the aircraft.
      I had a guy in front of me do that once. I grabbed his left hand and broke his grip on the door frame while the guy behind me took control of his right hand and we pushed him out ahead of us. Ah, for the good old days,

    • @kevinscanlonsr1593
      @kevinscanlonsr1593 Před 4 lety

      @@Wildcat5181 - George, I never saw a refusal

  • @jonathanbonaparte5673
    @jonathanbonaparte5673 Před 5 lety +3

    First jump was the hardest, after that couldn't wait to go back up. 1 jump C-130, 4 jumps C-141

  • @patgarrett2152
    @patgarrett2152 Před 6 lety +1

    What do they think about while waiting to jump, ESPECIALLY the first time?

  • @reddevilparatrooper
    @reddevilparatrooper Před 11 lety +1

    Never forget that day for the rest of my life.AIRBORNE!!

  • @mattfetter4123
    @mattfetter4123 Před 4 lety +1

    named. My first jump. As soon as I cleared the bird, my Clark Kent's flew off my face. Couldn't see shit . Couldn't judge the ground. Hard hit. Wore contact lenses on all the rest.