THE INDEPENDENT

The Latest

Skydiving Club Aims to Let Skyhawks Fly

By Roy Adams

Author: Bodine, James/Tuesday, October 3, 2017/Categories: Home, Campus

Rate this article:
No rating

 

A new skydiving club at Fort Lewis College aims to attract novice skydivers with little to no experience in the sky.

 

Skydiving offers a unique experience for students who want to experience a diverse culture of encouragement and acceptance by welcoming skydivers of any caliber, Taylor Webb, club founder and president, said.

 

Collegiate skydiving has been around since 1958, Webb said.  It offers students a very exclusive opportunity to explore the skies in a competitive environment, she said.   

 

Each year the United States Parachute Association holds collegiate national championships.  The events include: accuracy of landing, freestyle, formation skydiving, and a lot more.  For the first time ever FLC students will be competing in these championships, Webb said.

 

If students wish to compete in these they must attend the next scheduled meeting, October 12th.  After paying a club fee of $1000, students are given the opportunity to learn to dive competitively by participating in her various training courses, Webb said.  

 

Webb is a certified skydive instructor who will be doing the instructing of students herself.  She aims to help students feel the satisfaction of jumping out of a plane, she said.

 

“To those who have felt the wonderful sensation of freedom in the clear blue sky, there is no explanation needed, but for those who have not, none is possible,” Webb said.

 

This club is 100 percent aimed at novices, Webb said.  Yet, there are a lot of trained skydivers on campus like Junior, Logan Hulett.

 

Skydiving is one of those things that you can just lose yourself with.  Nothing feels like the wind rushing around you, or lift off when jumping out of the plane, Hulett said.  

 

Even though he is not in the club, he encourages anyone who can to join.

 

Meetings are held on the second Thursday of every month.

 

 

 

Follow reporter Roy Adams on twitter @Roywade_, and The Independent @flcindependent for the latest campus news. 

 
Print

Number of views (4149)/Comments (0)

Tags: RSO
Please login or register to post comments.

All News

Digital and Social Media Marketing at FLC

By Becca Day

The digital marketing landscape frequently changes, and Fort Lewis College’s marketing program has attempted to keep up with the industry.

 

The digital marketing landscape frequently changes, and Fort Lewis College’s marketing program has attempted to keep up with the industry.   FLC offers its students two courses within its marketing program, Digital Marketing and Social Media Marketing, Tomasz Miaskiewicz, assistant professor of Marketing, said.   “The fact that we already have two classes is...

Redefining Masculinity

By Benjamin Mandile

In the past, men have been seen as tough and invulnerable, but in recent years across the world, the Mankind Project and other movements have started to redefine the issue of masculinity.

In the past, men have been seen as tough and invulnerable, but in recent years across the world, the Mankind Project and other movements have started to redefine the issue of masculinity. Within the Durango community, people are working to bridge the gap between men and women.     Masculinity is a system of meanings people associate with being a man, Keri Brandt, a professor of...

The Fort’s Spring Sports

By Matthew T. Roy

Men’s golf and women’s golf along with lacrosse, softball and track and field all begin their season this month.

Men’s golf and women’s golf along with lacrosse, softball and track and field all begin their season this month. The Independent sat down with all of the head coaches and a few players to get the inside scoop on all your Fort Lewis College spring sports teams. All varsity sports compete in the Rocky Mountain Athletic Conference.   Men’s Golf Looking To Make Noise...

Art Exhibits in the Center of Southwest Studies

By: Becca Day

The Center of Southwest Studies rotated new artifacts out to its art gallery exhibits, Treasures of the Southwest and Ben Nighthorse Campbell: Colorado’s Renaissance Man, and will hold an opening reception Feb. 21  at 5:00 p.m.

 

The Center of Southwest Studies rotated new artifacts out to its art gallery exhibits, Treasures of the Southwest and Ben Nighthorse Campbell: Colorado’s Renaissance Man, and will hold an opening reception Feb. 21  at 5:00 p.m.   The art gallery opened a year ago but is rotating new items out of its collection into the gallery, Shelby Tisdale, director of the CSWS,...

Softball Renovations Won’t be Completed by Opening Weekend

Written By Matthew Roy, Photos by Shania Concha-Ortiz

The Fort Lewis College women’s softball team will be playing its opening weekend this Saturday and Sunday, and possibly subsequent weekends, in Aztec, New Mexico, due to the $3 million renovation project to the FLC softball complex being delayed.

The Fort Lewis College women’s softball team will be playing its opening weekend this Saturday and Sunday, and possibly subsequent weekends, in Aztec, New Mexico, due to the $3 million renovation project to the FLC softball complex being delayed.   Last season, the softball team was forced to drive 45 minutes away to Aztec for every home game.   The final things...

First5657585961636465Last