Illinois Valley Parachute Club a decades old staple at the Logan County Airport
 

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[June 18, 2024]    Did you know you could skydive right here in Logan County? Did you also know that this is nothing new? The Illinois Valley Parachute Club (IVPC) has been operating out of the Logan County Airport in Lincoln since 1975.

The club is composed of many jumpers, some with more experience than others, but all with a great knowledge of the sport. Lincoln Daily News recently had the chance to talk with and observe several dives, as well as take a trip up in the plane!

The IVPC, as previously stated, has been operating out of Logan County since 1975, but this particular club predates this location. Before being located in Lincoln, the club operated out of Minier, Pekin before that, and Taylorville even before that. The IVPC was founded back in 1963.

Jeff Hayes, one of the more veteran jumpers of the IVPC, was kind enough to provide this brief history of the club, as well as his history with it. Hayes has been jumping for several decades and learned how to skydive from someone at the IVPC back when it was located in Minier. On his first day, Hayes shared, he performed six jumps. Hayes just recently completed his 4,000th jump back in April of this year.

Another member of the club, Chad Donnel, was able to provide some insight into what the club is like, as well as why it is different from a skydiving company. The club does offer classes like a skydiving company, but that’s where the similarities end. According to Donnel one of the best perks of being a part of a club like this is that it is not operated like a business. It’s just a group of people from all walks of life who like skydiving.

Donnel also shared some information on the different types of skydiving that one can perform. The first is Accelerated Freefall (AFF) skydiving. In this method, which is the most common in the sport, according to the United States Parachute Association, you deploy your own parachute after a specific time in freefall. The second method, Static Line, is the first of two methods where the skydiver does not have to pull their own ripcord. The static line is connected to the aircraft as well as the deployment bag on the diver’s parachute. Once the cord reaches its full extension and is pulled taught, the deployment bag is pulled from the chute and the skydiver’s parachute deploys. The final method is called Instructor Assisted Deployment (IAD). This method is like the Static Line method, but the instructor is the one who plays the “role” of the static line. Donnel shared that the IVPC only provides Static Line training.

Depending on how you would like to jump, solo or tandem (with an instructor attached), your class before you jump could take anywhere from 30 minutes to four hours. This, fortunately, only needs to be completed once. Your paperwork, however, needs to be completed each time you jump.

On the morning of June 15th, the day LDN was present for the jumps, there were three separate jumpers. Two of them, James Hayden of Pekin and Sumanth Viswanathan of Champaign, had previously jumped before, and so were skydiving solo.

The third jumper, Brandon Jones of Morton, had never jumped before and was doing so in tandem with Donnel. All three of the jumpers appeared to have a great time, jumping from varying heights of 5,500, 8,000, and 11,000 feet up.

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Before these three jumpers took to the skies, however, the first jump of the day was performed by several of the club's more experienced members. These included John Bartis, Dion Santi, Tonia Royer, and Ian Magerl. Before boarding the plane, they all got ready in the upstairs room of the club.

As they were Vertical Formation Skydiving, skydiving as a group and performing sequences of moves before their chutes deploy, they took some time to choreograph these moves in advance. Once on the plane, it took about twenty minutes for it to ascend to the proper height for the divers to jump. What took twenty minutes to climb probably lasted less than a minute before their parachutes were deployed.

With every jumper, once their parachute was deployed, they sailed back and forth in the air using the steering lines on their parachute. Hayes shared instructions on how the steering lines operate. If you pull the left cord, you will steer left for as long as you are pulling it. If you pull right, you will do the same but to the right. If both are pulled, it slows you down. Donnel also shared information on the parachutes the skydivers were wearing. All of the jumpers have two chutes. The first is one that is either packed by them (if it is their own gear), and the second one is packed by a federally licensed parachute packer. This second chute must be packed by a licensed packer once every six months.

The club was also kind enough to allow LDN reporter Matt Boutcher to go up in the plane with some of the more experienced divers. Hayes and Bartis jumped from about 5,000 feet while pilot David Scott expertly navigated the plane up and back down. While he did not jump, Boutcher did manage to grab some great shots of Lincoln and Logan County that you can see in today’s edition of LDN.

If you are interested in learning to skydive, you can learn more about it and schedule a time to jump by visiting the IVPC’s website here. According to their website, tandem jumps are available most Saturdays and Sundays between the months of May and October. Solo jumps are available throughout the year upon request, although you must be a licensed jumper to do so. Prices for tandem jumps as well as solo dives can be found on their website as well.

[Matt Boutcher]

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