Monday, August 10, 2009

Grad

When June 18th rolled around you couldn't take the smiles off our faces. This was the day we had been waiting for, for almost a year. We had spend most of the week doing admin to make leaving a little less complicated as well as getting ready for grad. One of these preparations was doing a practice freefall jump since the plan is always to skydive into your graduation parade. It was a great feeling to freefall again after doing static line jumps for 2 straight months. I understand that static line IS the way SAR Techs jump operationally and the importance of being proficient at it, but that doesn't make freefall any less fun! Unfortunately the weather wasn't co-operative on grad day and we weren't sure if we would be doing a freefall or static line jump. The first thing I seen when I arrived at the school that morning was the school CWO looking at the sky and I heard him mutter "good enough for a hop 'n pop" as he tossed his BOC rig on the truck.

We started with 5 guys doing full kit static line jumps from the Buffalo 3000' AGL so the crowd could see what we wear when we jump as well as the actual exits. The second group in the skyvan did a 4200' hop'n pop since we couldn't get the ceiling for anything higher. I was in this group and I have to admit it was a friggin' blast! When we started learning how to parachute we were jumping static line from 5000 feet and now here we were doing a freefall from almost 1000 feet lower! It was a rush. The last group of free fallers in the Buffalo managed to get up to 10,000 feet and do a legit freefall.

After landing we all 'high fived' and that stuff, field rolled our shoots and proceeded to the parade area. It is in my honest opinion that SAR Techs have the coolest grad in the forces. Your family is brought out to the seating area and they are flanked by a CC-115 Buffalo on their right and a CH-149 Cormorant on their left. The students and staff land their canopies 100 feet in front of them and parade less than 50 feet in front. We line up in 3 ranks, the first two being students with their blue berets and sans SAR wings. The third rank consists of SAR instructors. When you get called you march up to the reviewing officer, the Chief and, the course NCO where they give you your wings, orange beret and promote you.

All in all it was a pretty good day!

6 comments:

Shooter said...

Excellent Blog, very informative, do you have an email, civi or on DWAN

Anonymous said...

Congrats on graduation. Do you have an e-mail that I could use to ask you some questions?

Thanks for the blog, extremely informative, very helpful.

Unknown said...

great blog, please keep updating it.

Anonymous said...

Do you have any final advice on becoming a SAR TECH. I currently working as hard as I can to get in to top physical shape, and learning as much as I can on SAR and medical info. I am hoping to become a part of the SAR TECH course 46-50 considering my age.

***YOU HAVE THE BEST JOB EVER***

Unknown said...

Awesome blog! Great info for those of us dreaming to be selected.

Can you tell me about posible postings for Techs? Being in the Navy, I really aren't familiar with the Air Force bases.

Andrew

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