Monday, 30 June 2008

The video - and thank you!



Thank you all for helping me do the jump and raise £ 750 for the Brooke Hospital for Animals .....








And here is the video ..... linking won't work, so copy and paste to your browser!

http://www.watchmyskydive.com/carolyoung

Jump Accomplished!



An amazing experience, exhilarating and frightening in turns, I jumped at the end of a long training day at the Army base at Netheravon which had left me tired and bruised and my mind stuffed with drills and parachute failure situations. I hadn't expected to jump on the same day. I also hadn't expected how it would feel to fall from 13,000 feet into 400 mile an hour air and find I could only move in slow motion. The fear of the moment made my brain respond slowly too, and the carefully learned drills went out of my head, but I guess they cater for that. I was grateful for the 2 instructors hanging on to my jumpsuit who helped me pull the parachute toggle, when I was passing the 6,000 feet mark still fumbling to find it. And then suddenly the rush and noise of the air was gone, and I was peacefully dangling from a thankfully tangle-free large rectangular parachute, with only locating the landing site to worry about. And at last, able to relax a bit, I found I did enjoy the feeling of quiet and space, the clear sky and setting sun, the beauty of Salisbury plain, and my ability to trim the flight of the chute - the wonderful technology responding to even my handling. The steady wind and my inexpert brake application meant I never made it to the proper holding area, and so I landed into the wind near the edge of the landing zone, to the amusement of a whole herd of cows, who came over to greet me. The final few seconds came very quickly but my landing was ok, just tipping onto my knees with a soft thud. Then a longish trudge to the hangars after gathering up my chute, and negotiating the cows' electric fence. I was a bit weak at the knees, so my performance on the video probably left a bit to be desired. My instructors Neil, and Nick, strapping Royal Engineers, never failed to be encouraging during the training and the jump, and I was grateful to my fellow AFF students Simon, Chris and Byron (all fit and in their twenties!) for their humour and camaraderie on a long day.

The terrifying bits? Kitted up and taking off backwards in the belly of a plane with no seats, packed with 15 or so jumpers perched against each others' laps, knowing that for once, I was not going to be landing in it.
The cold blast of air when we reached 13,000 feet and the door was slid open.
The indicator light changing from red to green.
Watching the first solo jumpers launch out head first.
Having to slide to the door of the plane and realising how cold and fierce the airstream was.
Trying to position in the doorway and finding I couldn't stabilise myself with the weight of my pack and the air stream to do the required 'up and down' signal that I was about to jump.
Finding myself hesitating on the brink then plunging out against my better judgment (and keeping my instructors guessing - I was lucky they are skilled at following after and hanging onto their students).
The initial tumble until I arched into a stable position.
The cold and strength of the wind (did I mention that?)
The brain numbing effect, which meant I forgot to check my altimeter again after the first check, until I was prompted by signals.
Trying to do the practice parachute pulls against the resistance.
The realisation that time had passed so quickly, and they were giving me the signal to pull NOW!
Reaching to pull the toggle, then realising Neil had pulled it for me. (After all, they had to pull their own chutes after me, and we'd passed 6000 ft!)
Looking at the canopy to check whether it was fully inflated (or I'd have to pull the reserve chute).
Looking around at the scenery and then realising I should be locating the landing site
The most unreal thing was the speed of it all, 40 seconds of freefall, and then 5 minutes or so under the canopy, from inside the plane to kneeling amongst the cows.
And the best thing - the achievement, and the congratulations from Neil, Nick and Andy the cameraman!

Monday, 9 June 2008

Thank you folks!


I'd like to say a huge thank you to all who have donated to my chosen charity, the Brooke Hospital for Animals in Cairo, and their care for working animals in the world's poorest communities in Africa, the Indian subcontinent, Afghanistan and the Middle East.

To my sisters Rosemary and Jill.

To my friends from St Johns Church and the village of Rowlands Castle: Valerie, Jane, Carol, Terry, Marion, Eileen, Chris, Anne, Paul, Lizzy, Adam, Alan, Melva, Ian, Fionn, Mary, Zoe, Chris, Bob, Bill, Roger, Bob, Barbara, Mary, Betty, Heather, Mel, Mary, Carol, Chrissie, Anne, Graham, Pam, Diane, Pam, Peter, Buffy, Peter, Christine, Pearl, Frances, Meryl.

To my Southsea Shakespeare Actors friends Lesley, Giles, Terry, Fay.

To Archaeologists Jan, Angie, Pat, Sue and Eclipse chasers David and Irene.

To my fellow Star Trekkers Chris, Lesley-Anne, Jeanette, Jo, Mary.

To my vet and nurse colleagues: Joe, Ellen, Lauren, Sam, Sharon, Simon, Elspeth, Sarita, Carly, Vicente, Stephen, Kevin, Sara, Vicky, Sian, Elaine, Tracy, Laura, Elaine, Liz, Sarah, Lucy, Sally, Janie and Hayley.

To my patients - pets and their owners: Dolly Miles, Bill Wilkins, Abby Young, Bosun Gunnell, Suki West, Oscar Matthews, Ceilidh Watson, Charlie Snelling, Barbie Tubbs, Jordan Smith, Lucky Smith, Candy Locke, Fluffy Paine, Susie Dollery, Jessie Green, Albert Gardiner, Jessie Smith, Holly Walmsley, Billy Batt, Alice Metcalfe, Allsorts Munday, Bubbles Flower, Amber Jeffery, Sassy Perkis, Fatty Fletcher, Floyd Ripley, Tallulah Hammond-Hunt, Pippa Hill, Billy Edwards, Flopsy Jackson, Jester Gould, Ally White, Nigel Mandrupson, Bonny Mays, Dinah Holman, Billy Mallice, Abby Charles, Flick Denton, Kizzie Crichton, Jock Freeman, Bertie Ward, Bailey Thomas, Bonnie Whipp, Millie Claydon, Sophie Gray, Domino Scott, Polly Gibbons, Florence Armitage, Milton Doherty, Betty Woodley, Jet Lay, Sienna Fenner, Angel Legg, Dandelion Conroy, Dixie Hewer, Gypsy Martin, Blue Charron, Martin Jones, Chester Curtis, Patch Clarke, Lilli Pickett, Charlie Morton Mason, Max Whitehouse, Archie Cox, Ben Latter, Lucy Lancaster, Poppy Cheal, Jessie Stichbury, Gus Coldwell, Louis Holcombe, Toffee Fay, Cassidy Germaine, Dolly Lamming.

And very special thanks to Connor Trinneer of Star Trek: Enterprise and Stargate: Atlantis for his support.

WHAT IS THIS ALL ABOUT?

On 29th June 2008 I will be plunging towards Wiltshire from an aircraft at 10,000 ft - experiencing freefall and attempting a safe landing in the company of 2 instructors but depending on MY OWN PARACHUTE! YES, IT'S NOW A SOLO JUMP! Why? Well, I love flying but have no head for heights. Scary! But it's something I'd love to do - and more than that - I hope it will raise some money for a charity - the Brooke Hospital for Animals. 'The Brooke' work across the Middle East, South Asia, Africa and South America operating 66 mobile teams and 13 field clinics to provide much needed veterinary care for 650,000 working horses, donkeys and mules a year. An average of 6 people are dependent on each working animal, so the livelihoods of three million people are at stake. And around 80% of the ailments treated are the result of owner ignorance or poverty. The Brooke use education to help change this, and work with local people to find long-lasting solutions to the equine problems they encounter, placing particular emphasis on educating and involving children in good welfare practices. The working animals they reach are mostly used to transport people and carry or pull loads of food, goods, building materials or bricks. They work in the harshest of terrain for long hours at temperatures of up to 50 degrees celsius. And the loads borne and the harness worn can be cruel. These practices can be changed. And the Brooke have an on-going programme to install portable water troughs and shade shelters in places where the working animals congregate. The Brooke are working with Bristol University Veterinary School to study the suffering of working animals in the developing world, identify the worse problems and determine the most effective ways of ending that suffering.
A little money goes a long way. £2 could pay for treatment of one emergency case, £10 could pay for anti-rabies vaccinations for 20 horses or donkeys, £25 could shoe 45 horses, £38 could pay for a community educator for a week in a village. £50 could pay for an entire mobile team including fuel, staff and medicines fr one day, £90 for medicines for a week, £250 would install a hand pump and water trough providing fresh water for a whole community.
I'm willing to throw myself from a plane - are you willing to sponsor me? I would be so grateful if you would! Thank you!

About Me

Rowlands Castle, Hampshire, United Kingdom
Vet, animal lover, bookworm, tv addict, sometime adventurer, globe trotter, Christian, trekkie, archaeologist and football fan with a taste for chinese food and fish and chips