June 20, 2003
Down to the ground
SkyHawks drop in to
Iqaluit
KIRSTEN
MURPHY
The rear of the Buffalo
airplane opens like a hungry mouth. Freezing air fills the fuselage as Cpl.
Brent Nolasco positions himself on the edge of the opening and releases a bundle
of coloured tape. The streamers twist and turn, telling him wind direction and
speed.
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PHOTO TO ENLARGE
Cpl.
Murray Doods on his way down. (PHOTO BY KIRSTEN MURPHY)
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Inside the plane, a dozen
members of the Canadian Forces SkyHawks parachute team wait their turn
to drop 3,000 feet onto downtown Iqaluit. A crowd gathers at the Nakasuk School
grounds, eye cast toward the yellow aircraft overhead.
The SkyHawks were in Iqaluit
from June 11 to 13 and Rankin Inlet on June 14.
Nolasco releases the coloured
tape twice more then gives the signal to jump.
The red-clad daredevils
obediently undo their seatbelts and perform final equipment checks. The 12 men
and one woman take turns exiting the plane. For several seconds the parachutists
see Iqaluit from a birds eye view with no strings attached. Then their
trademark Canadian flag parachutes guide them to the ground.
Id like to
be like them, jumping out of a plane. And Id like to join the Army to
do it, said Natasha Noah, 8, who watched the parachutists start as specks
and finish as giants.
Such enthusiasm is exactly
what the Canadian Forces wants to hear.
The SkyHawks is a sub-unit
of the Canadian Parachute Centre in Trenton, Ont. Whether jumping in tandem
or solo, the demonstrative drops are purely promotional. (Paratroopers with
the Royal Canadian Regiment are the ones who jump from planes on defensive combat
missions.)
The role of the SkyHawks
is to get people, especially youth, thinking about careers with the Canadian
Forces.
Many apply, few are
chosen
Membership with the SkyHawks
is limited. All parachutists are regular and reserve members with the Canadian
Forces. They earn a place on the prestigious team through years of training,
exams and a love of carefully planned adventure.
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PHOTO TO ENLARGE
The
SkyHawks are known for their daring displays of aerial acrobatics. (PHOTO
BY KIRSTEN MURPHY)
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The troupe has performed
in 3,100 demonstrations in North America, Europe, Australia and Japan since
it was formed in 1972.
When theyre not performing,
the group trains other Forces members to jump. They also help civilian parachuting
groups who are on-call for military purposes and provide tandem jumps for search
and rescue operations.
While in Iqaluit, they
made time to visit three schools.
Natasha Noah, a student
at Nanook School in Apex, was smitten. Id like to join the army
if it meant I could jump out of planes, she said.
The inquisitive Grade 2
student asked Sgt. Kevin Karambowich about his specialized suit.
Karambowich invited Noah
and classmate Jazlin Kalluk to tug on his pants and to test the fabrics
strength.
It felt like frozen
spaghetti, Noah said of the padded leg flaps.
Kalluk doubts shell
join the army. Nevertheless, the enthusiastic student said she was impressed
with the SkyHawks visit.
I would rather jump
out of the plane than fly it because Im not really good at driving. I
still havent ridden a bike and Im not very good at steering,
she said.
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