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A group of female skydivers from 22 countries have set out to shatter the all-women 65-way skydiving world record set in 2016 ... women’s vertical – or head-down – skydive formation. ...
Formation skydiving is one of the first skills a novice skydiver learns while earning their license, according to Skydive Langar. The practice involves free-falling while taking ahold of other ...
MELBOURNE, Fla. — A new world record for formation skydiving was set Thursday in New Mexico, but with ties to right here in Central Florida. The five jump team members of the Alpha 5 Project ...
Another world record was set in Ottawa in 2015, when 164 skydivers flying head-down built the largest ever vertical skydiving formation. In 2012, ...
Becky Baird and Amy Marquardt, both Fargo, and Missy Fale, Minot, N.D., complete a formation while skydiving over West Fargo on May 31. The feat was recognized this past week by the U.S. Parachute ...
At the coaxing of fellow CWRU staff member Heidi Wagner, Nauer gave skydiving a try—and he was hooked. Now, it’s his preferred weekend hobby; he estimates he’s jumped out of a plane more than 1,400 ...
LOS ANGELES (AP) — Sixty-one wingsuit skydivers have flown into the record books, creating a diamond-shaped formation while soaring over California before breaking apart and floating to the ground.
An all-female group of skydivers from Queensland set two new records for formation skydiving, over Toogoolawah, on Sunday, May 5. “24 fearless women” set the Australian Women’s record with a ...
To break the existing unofficial world record for the highest HALO formation, skydive, the five jumpers will ascend to an altitude of 35,000 feet in a specially designed hot air balloon along with ...
World Skydiving Day count tally hit 26,718 jumps – just shy of last year's record, WA drop zones closed due to wild weather ...
It took four attempts, but 22 women in North Carolina say they have set a state record for the largest women's formation sky dive. 22 women set N.C. record by skydiving in formation ...
OTTAWA, Ill. — Traveling at speeds of up to 240 mph, 164 skydivers flying head-down built the largest ever vertical skydiving formation Friday over central Illinois, smashing the previous record.
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