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Skydive Laconia
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I gotta say Less, I love your enthusiasm!
Next time I am in the area, I promise you I'll get in touch with you and come up to Plymouth if you want to show me that great grass! :D As for the asphalt though, in now going on 12 years and over 4000 skydives, I have yet to ever land on asphalt by accident. But believe it or not, we actually can land on asphalt and sometimes even plan to if we are on a demonstration jump and the most suitable landing area is the event's parking lot. As I am also a professional demonstration jumper, I can tell the LAA first hand that when we jump into stadiums, the most complex of our demo jumps, that with the full blessing of the FAA, we list the stadium parking lots as alternate landing areas if turbulence over the stadium prevents someone from getting into it. The FAA signs off on it, so maybe the LAA might have a tough time if they went that route in an argument......lol Here is a couple of photos of me landing in Lincoln Stadium last year for a Philadelphia Eagles fan appreciation night. Note in the second photo, the orange flag, thats the target on the 50 yard line. We exited the airplane over Interstate 95 about a mile and a half north of the stadium over south Philly and despite these "non directional control, subject to wind drift" parachutes....lol, we managed to make it all the way to the stadium and land on the 50 yard line. Good thing none of those pesky katabatic winds threw us off course.....lol Blue skies to all and to all a good flight, Tom |
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I don't know if you know or have heard of Dana Bowman. He is a very inspiring speaker, and I have hired him a number of times as a motivational speaker. http://www.danabowman.com/ He has landed in some very tough spots for the events we contracted him for, Including a paved parking lot and beside a swimming pool in the courtyard of a hotel in Maryland. When Mrs SteveA did her jump in Florida, they landed Exactly where the jump master had told us to wait for the "landing photo's". The control the professionals have is amazing. |
Tom,
First let me say I admit to not having read this whole thread but I can't help but wonder why not just move on and open a facility elsewhere where it's actually welcome (i think that's possible.) I kind of wonder why it so definitely HAS to be Laconia. |
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Have you seen the whitish WACO Bi-plane flying around the lake? My wife and I watched it fly around the lake with the distinctive radial engine all season long and we finally made the call and took the full lake tour. What a great experience. Everyone should do it. http://www.lakesbiplane.com/location.html
Anyway, my point is that ten's of thousands of people will see the parachutes and a percentage of them will tack action and try it. Go off the beaten path and your market shrinks to a core population base. I think the Laconia location is probably the best for population density for this business. |
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I have a $120k rebuilt shoulder so my chances of doing a jump are long gone or else I'd be one of your first paying customers:D What I love the most about this issue is how they issues are dealt with with data and factual evidence, not perception. So many people out their write opinions and cash check that their mouths can cash.... Rock on Tom! |
Nimby
I would imagine that the Noonans did some marketing studies and found LAA to be a good airport to do business; And business is all about making money! Sorry to state the cold hard facts FLL and others, but that is what our economy is based on! To move to Plymouth or elsewhere, would waste their hard earned money put into that marketing study! I wish those that don't understand Marketing 101 would crack a book and learn something! You just don't ignore a study because someone says "NIMBY".
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Very well said Pineedles
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Dont'cha just know that the green grass runway over in Plymouth is looking like a lot more soft landing than that black asphalt runway in Laconia!
Landing a skydiver on the unfriendly Laconia asphalt could be used as a metaphor to describe how the Laconia Airport Authority is thinking; unfriendly! Green grass: Plymouth, NH, runway; think 'nice soft landing.' www.airnav.com/airport/1p1 www.jetphotos.net/viewphoto.php?id=6869793 Black asphalt: Laconia, NH, runway; think 'bloody abrasions on your hands and knees and nose......ouch! ...... :eek:!' www.laconiaairport.com/ It's so simple, and it will not be long before the skydivers all like to refer to Plymouth as "the green, green grass of home!" If the walls down in Washington at the F.A.A had ears and could talk, you know what those F.A.A. walls would be saying? They say: "But, over at that little Plymouth Airport, their grass is just looking soooooooo green!" .............. Both airports, Laconia and Plymouth, do have one thing in common; they both have a Wal-Mart for an abutter neighbor, but I think the Plymouth Wal-Mart would afford a much better view of the skydivers disembarking out their airborne airplane. If you want to see the skydivers all go "Exit-stage right" then the Plymouth Wal-Mart parking lot, way up atop a steep hilltop, would be the best spot! RV-er's and truckers use that parking lot like it was a rereational vehicle campground because of its' super mountain view, and to watch the birds of prey that soar down the Baker River valley on the thermal air currents. |
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FLLess,
For cripes sake. You don't land on the runway, you land in the grass next to it. The plane takes off and lands on the runway, think 'Less wear and tear on the equipment, equals: lower costs of operations, equals: lower costs to participate in the activity'. The issue with Plymouth is the same as Lebanon, ME. When you are up in the air the view of Winni is at a distance. I can only imagine how cool it would be to fall toward it. Jumped for the first time this summer and a group of 10 that have boats on Winni or live within 30 minutes of it, drove our 3 day bachelor party to Maine. The people that are saying to move away from the resistence are the same type of folks that fold/jump ship when things start getting nasty. At the end of the day if you stand up, having lost, you will know without a doubt that it was not because of your resolve. Tom, keep up the grind, because that is all it is at this point. |
And just to add something.
Our group was the first group in the air on Saturday, we left the ground just before 7:30am and that plane only stopped long enough to fuel up until darkness fell on the field. When we woke up the next morning, things had already begun again. This is a mix of tandem, first solo flights and indi's. While talking with some of the instructors that we jumped with at the end of the day around the fire. They said it is like this every weekend throughout the summer, except when rain slows them down. My instructor jumped with 15 different people that day and was on every other flight up. 31 flights that day and not a single space available for anyone that wanted to repeat that day or the following. The most interesting thing about the freefall, was how sharp the temp change was. One minute you are COLD and then instantly you are hit with the temp of a mid-July morning. I would have thought it to be more gradual, but it was literally a slap of change. |
Skydive Laconia
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We actually own a home in Southern New Hampshire. We currently live in Florida, but we are from New England. I am sure there are ample locations between Laconia and Daytona Beach, and I would welcome anyone that is interested in pursuing a skydiving operation somewhere within that region to contact me, and I would be happy to lead them in the right direction. :) As for us, we are continuing to pursue opening a dropzone on Lake Winnipesaukee, it's a large part of our business model, and based on my continued active interaction with the FAA in Washington these days, I am fairly certain we will be able to open at the Laconia Municipal Airport as we have always intended. As to "Why Laconia?", I promise you that if you read back through the posts, you will get all the answers I can offer and even the minority opposition's views. :) Blue skies to all and to all a good flight, Tom |
Skydve Laconia
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Hi Pineedles, I think everyone that has read this thread understands that whether a dropzone has a grass runway like Plymouth or an asphalt runway like Laconia, both operations would land their parachutes on grass. Blue skies to all and to all a good flight, Tom |
Exactly my point Tom. Thanks.
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Skydive Laconia
My thanks to the Noonans For doing their best to educate some of our children out here!
The grownups that stand up behind them, ( % Wise ) are very much looking forward to the very day that your drop zone will include the Laconia Airport! Less the bats, you can understand just how much most of us are willing and able to, and also have already welcomed TheNoonans to this area!! Team' Noonans will live long into the future here! With Love, Terry |
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Well, nobody said this before, and this is a new of piece of info to me. This information seriously changes the dynamics of my thought processes in comparing Laconia to Plymouth! So's, the plane lands on the runway, and the skydivers land on the grass field or somewhere soft, that's close to the runway. Somebody should have made this important point more clear to everybody, at an earlier time in this thread. Thanks very much!:eek: |
Oh boy
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Isn't there a large, vacant, and mostly unused parking lot directly across Route 11 from the Laconia Airport. You know, the p-lot with the water tower and the NH State liquor store. It's just a short jog back across the road from the p-lot to the hanger area like a quarter mile or so. Skydiver landing on an asphalt p-lot....at least you'll be able to find a parking spot, easy. I saw a great sign at the old Waldo Peppers(Home Cookin?) on Rt11 last Sunday while I was eating breakfast. It read something like this:We are born with 2 ears and 1 mouth.We should listen twice as much as we speak.:laugh: |
...always a soft landing guaranteed!
Up in Plymouth, a mere 17-air miles away from Laconia, the Plymouth Airport is basically one single, green grass, 2380' x 90' runway with a real working, vegetable farm that consists of acres of growing vegetables, just a few yards directly west and lined up with the grass runway.
So, should any beginner skydivers overshoot their landing, which seems pretty likely to happen, they will be landing in a farmer's field of vegetables, or maybe even crashing through the large greenhouse's translucent roof. www.longviewfarmnh.com and take a peek at the 12-photo slideshow and the aerial photo that includes the Plymouth Airport! Anyway, that would give the mis-directed skydiver a good opportunity for them to eat their VEGETABLES, as opposed to eating the ASPHALT parking lot over in Gilford, that's near the L.A.A. ... :rolleye2::D |
From FLL:
"So, should any beginner skydivers overshoot their landing, which seems pretty likely to happen, they will be landing in a farmer's field of vegetables, or maybe even crashing through the large greenhouse transparent roof." Hate to tell you this again, but it is highly uinlikely that there would be an overshoot on the landing- as much as I lover your banter, and I do, I have to correct you on this one, it is highly controlled |
Skydive Laconia
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But I am REALLY REALLY glad you brought this back up, because it brings up a good point. Despite providing the LAA with a business plan proposal and posting our intents here on the board, most of those minority opposers, have no idea what it is we intend to do when we open at Laconia. Our intent is to open a tandem skydiving operation to provide tandem skydiving over the lake. Our instructors and aerial videographers will all be professional skydivers with expert skydiving licenses. That will be 99% of our business at Laconia. Will we welcome sport jumpers? Of course, but we don't expect it to be a regular thing, at least in the first few years of operation. Another thing to consider is this, is a Monday afternoon as busy as a friday or saturday? Not usually on the airport. So if Monday's are slow there, we may choose Mondays to do "sport mondays" to give sport jumpers a chance to enjoy the view without interfering with a busy saturday. We mentioned this to the LAA and they know we are not planning on training students on weekends, if at all in the first few years. We made that abundantly clear. The problem is, they want to regulate that too, and guess what, they can't. Why? They're not experts. We are. No one knows what conditions are better for tandem, versus sport or sport versus student, than Mary and I up there. We refuse to budge because they have no legal right or safety background to be restricting our business. Safety is our first priority. With our global safety experience background, we, not the LAA, are in the best position to make safety based decisions on how we choose to run our business. For them to suggest anything to the contrary is not based on any practical knowledge or experience. So Less, what does that mean to you and I? I agree with you. How 'bout that? :) I agree that Plymouth would be a great place to train students and I tell you what, I'm even willing to put a Cessna 182 up there to do just that for you. :) I even told the LAA that for all intensive purposes, that tandem skydiving in Laconia was our primary objective and that student jumping was going to be non existent at first and minimally existent at best on slow days, once we got things going. So, call your pals in Plymouth and give them my contact info, and I'll be up there with a plane in no time for you, I promise. Blue skies to all and to all a good flight, Tom |
I wonder if Less is really a deprived "Closet Skydiver"..... :D :D NB
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Skydive Laconia
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The directors level of the FAA continues to work with me and they continue to proactively contact me every few days with new questions and items. The free flow dissemination of facts and evidence has been nothing short of exceptional. We are in the home stretch on this one. Trust me. Not only vindication from our perspective, that the Laconia Municipal Airport can sustain a skydiving operation and that the LAA, who have no background in aviation safety assessments, despite their "priority or responsibilities"......., will find out all too soon what can and cannot be accommodated on the government's federally funded airport. If you have a trike, a glider, a power paraglider, or any other aeronautical vehicle that you want to fly into or out of Laconia, you are about to be given a legal and fair opportunity to present your case to the FAA, not the LAA, regarding what can and cannot be safely accommodated. After all, the FAA, not the LAA, are the experts when it comes to safety. Now, one more item to mention. I have posted a few times in this thread before that the actions of the LAA have put the NHDOT Department of Aeronautics in a difficult situation, a situation that could very well result in the removal of the state's "block grant" status regarding federal funding. Well, I brought that point up to the FAA, that the LAA was shown multiple times to be discriminating against us, and that those discriminations were brought to the NHDOT Dep of Aeronautics and nothing was done. We believed (correctly so it would seem) that the NHDOT Dep of Aero, was responsible for ensuring LAA compliance with the federal funding grant assurances, as after all, they were the ones doling out all that money to the airport. And guess what? I was pretty much spot on in my assumption. Here is where it gets interesting. The NHDOT Dep. of Aero, has continued to fund an airport that was clearly shown to have violated it's federal funding grant assurances. The airport broke the agreement they entered into and then the NHDOT Dep. of Aero continued to fund them anyways. In this day and age of budget responsibility, do you think when I brought that irony up to the FAA that it fell on deaf ears? I didn't think it would either..... So now because I was able to document to the FAA that the LAA discriminated against us and that the NHDOT Dep. of Aero was informed about it and did nothing to bring them back into compliance, the "block grant" status of the NHDOT Dep. of Aerro is being investigated by the FAA. What does that mean to airports across the state that want funding? Nothing really. If the "block grant" status is removed, airports across the state can still request the same level of funding and receive the same level of funding. The only difference is they will request the funds directly from the FAA, like 43 other states currently do and the only change in policy will be that the FAA will ensure the airport's compliance with their funding grant assurances before doling out the money. So it's a win/win really. I offer you that explanation in case anyone from the other side tries to distort the facts. My version is fact based. With that, our next step is of course Congress. We want to make sure the people representing us in Congress are fully briefed on what is going on. The meeting is already scheduled for later this week. I'll be sure to post the results of the meeting next week to keep you in the loop. As always, we remain an open book of facts and actions. Blue skies to all and to all a good flight, Tom |
Skydive Laconia
I just sent the below email to both the City Council of Laconia and Gilford Selectmen:
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So, what do you think? Do you think the City Council and Selectmen should meet with us? Let them know your thoughts. Email them directly and tell them yes or no if you want them to meet with us. Now if you email them and tell them "No! Don't listen to reason and facts!", please feel free to post here as to why you don't believe that the leaders of both communities shouldn't take every opportunity to educate themselves on a potential new business that will bring new jobs, extend the tourist season, and more money into the economy. I know one person in that vocal minority thinks it's "disrespectful" of us to pursue justice and fair treatment....but that aside, is there any reason at all for a civic leader not to listen and educate themselves? If anyone can provide a sound valid argument devoid of emotional response, I will be impressed. After all listening costs nothing. Gilford: selectmen@gilfordnh.org Laconia: citycouncil@city.Laconia.NH.US Blue skies to all and to all a good flight, Tom |
It seems you don't care who you inconvenience. I can't help but think that there are more important things that these people should be dealing with.
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I for one feel my tax dollars when spent should be for the benefit of all. That said if grant money is given and the rules of the grant are not followed then all monies should be returned to the general fund.To be in the publics trust and not follow the letter of the law is criminal plain and simple.To not give someone equal oportunity to lawfully utilize an entity which gets funds from taxpayers without a fair hearing which is in part why you get those funds is again illegal.How many other people attempting to start a business have been thwarted due to this practice? If you don't want to allow anyone to be able use the facility then return the funding and operate without them,charge those who do use it enough to continue to do so. JMHO
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At what cost should a private entity get it's way?
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In any legal ways:)
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The government exists to serve the majority, not the minority.
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You would probably feel differently if it was you and your quality of life that was being forced upon.
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No I wouldn't,for the people and by the people. Equal for all is the key. Not a few chosing for themselves above what is right and what is law.
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Debates like this is exactly the way our government was formed. Without being overly dramatic, it is clear that the Noonans have every right to petition the government, Local, State or Federal. They also have the right to attempt to change the mind of elected officials that turn down ANY request they make.
They don't sacrifice that right just because the officials may have other other issues they would rather address. 1st Amendment to the Constitution: "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances." Agree or Disagree... they clearly have the RIGHT to do what they are doing. (Thank you James Madison) :) |
And too bad for everybody they effect.
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How is "your quality of life being forced upon"? |
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