Full-text of the abridged article which appeared in Parachutist January 1995

DZ BUSINESS ALLIANCES:
SKYDIVING'S NEWEST FRONTLINE DEFENSE

We skydivers share a special kinship that extends to the drop zones where we are all "family" in pursuing our freefall addiction. I wanted to know how well this kinship serves us in the actual practice of regional DZ alliances. I hoped to reveal a "model" for cooperation between neighboring DZs (parachuting drop zones). What I found is that the positive results of sharing resources and ideas across drop zone boundaries seem to override any apprehensions DZ owners have about competing with each other.

I interviewed in person and by phone every USPA DZ operator in Northern California, and came away convinced that the "intentional community of freefall" I found is good business practice. Alliances between these DZs strengthen the sport. Their symbiotic relationships are similar to the business alliances that operate through extended networks of relationships between companies in Japan. The Japanese bank-centered "enterprise group"--about which much has been written in contemporary business literature--is an example. They appear to operate in much the same way as business alliances between parachuting centers in USPA's Pacific Region.

Not only do alliances promote camaraderie between DZs, they also describe a new form of "on-ground skydiving" [sidebar]. Explaining how alliances work reveals how DZs can realign their "competitive priorities" to capitalize more profitably on the public's interest in action sports such as ours.

WHY DZ CAMARADERIE?

Alliances allow DZs to combine resources to serve their skydiving clientele more effectively, and to present a unified front against external forces that impact them negatively.

Many of the events that affect a DZ originate outside its boundaries, usually in the form of federal, state, and local government regulations meant to control skydiving enterprises. In any given year, as many as 250,000 bills intended to control the organizations that operate within their jurisdiction are introduced for debate in state legislatures. An additional 35,000 regulations are adopted. The federal government wields its influence on skydiving through the FAA. Court decisions can expose parachuting businesses to criminal charges. (Richard L. Daft, Management, 2nd. Ed., The Dryden Press, 1991) County, city, and airport authorities restrict parachuting activities, forcing skydiving enterprises to battle for access to airports and landing zones. The resulting legal-political environment creates uncertainty.

In skydiving, as in other industries, techniques for addressing the problems of an uncertain legal-political environment include community and public relations, political activism, participation in trade associations, and joining business alliances. Unfortunately, more often than not these techniques are under utilized by skydiving enterprises. When skydiving enterprises fail to unite their efforts to influence their common external environments, it puts the privilege to skydive at peril for all of us. But by uniting our political power, we strengthen our numbers and give ourselves a more powerful public voice without which we stand to lose our air space and our landing areas are increasingly endangered.

DZS AT WAR WITH EACH OTHER ... NOT!

Starting into research for this article, the hypothesis was that competing DZs behave as warring tribes. Like bickering children, they avoid cooperating with each other. Their self absorption hurts the sport's image in general and their own corporate images--and business--in particular. But this theory generalizes all DZ relationships as being unbusinesslike and more like the testosterone driven ego trips of our high school years. (As when a DZ operator proclaims: "My skydiving place is better than yours, so there! Our way is the only good way. Our instructors are more correct and we are more religious at adhering to the BSRs. Our competitors are outlaws, safety cheaters, and incompetent turkeys who should be run out of business.")

Interviews of our sport's leaders at first upheld the notion that parachute centers generally do feud. The PIA members, USPA directors, DZ owner/operators, DZ employees, skydiving publishers, and other experienced jumpers I talked to said that chest-beating of the sort described above does exist. Seven out of the first eight I interviewed (88%) reported they knew of DZs that defame or "bad-mouth" others.

But bad-mouthing is not the real message. Rather, it's how alliances benefit skydiving.

It should be obvious that allowing politics and hassles to direct the business strategy of our skydiving centers is disempowering to all concerned. Feuds are destructive, especially when DZ owner/operators feel compelled to use questionable tactics in a misguided competitive spirit. Many of us believe that airing the sport's "dirty laundry" in the press gives force to those who desire to capture our air space and restrict our landing areas. This kind of maligning is extraneous background "noise", more like static on the radio. Although it has little to do with the purpose of the broadcaster, the noise of backbiting can mask the real broadcast signal.

Within any group of family or friends there will be petty clashes which are less important than the whole of the family itself. The manifestations of chest-beating have little to do with the true purposes of skydiving and DZ operations. Individually and collectively--as constituents of the DZs at which we skydive--the sport gains from DZ alliances and suffers from the actions of quarreling DZs.

Two different models for DZ alliances reveal the current state of "on-the-ground" DZ camaraderie. One is a DZ-as-"hub" model; the other demonstrates intentional interconnectivity. Both are valid models for DZ alliances; both types are practiced by DZs in Northern California.

A DZ AS A MAGNET--THE HUB MODEL

Here a larger entity which enjoys both economies of scale and relatively more of scarce resources shares those resources with smaller drop zones in the surrounding area. This "hub" DZ has sufficient size, power, and incentive to benefit smaller parachuting operations. The most powerful drop zone in the area is the de facto leader (Table 1). Other examples of the hub model are found in kingdoms, cities, and in agricultural communities.

In this model the sharing tends to be one-way--from the larger entity out to the smaller ones. A visit to SkyDance SkyDiving's impressive operation in Davis, Calif., illustrates the hub concept. SkyDance SkyDiving is a big DZ supporting surrounding smaller DZs with services. To validate what SkyDance owner-operators Ray Ferrell, Dan O'Brien and Alisdar Boyd told me about their "hub DZ," I visited or called seven other DZs in the northern California and adjacent area. In response to the question "Do you receive support of any kind from another DZ, and if so, which one?" all (100%) reported receiving support from another skydiving enterprise. Five of the seven DZs (71%) told me they received support from SkyDance SkyDiving. Three of the seven (43%) reported support from The Parachute Center at Lodi, Calif. More than two-thrids (71%) named other area DZs from which they got support.

As a "hub" DZ, SkyDance SkyDiving provides their instructor and student syllabus to any USPA-member DZ that requests it. Regional DZs who have include Madera, Skydiving West, Skydive Hollister, and Skydive Oregon. SkyDance has also developed, with input from Madera, the first skydiving specific parachute center Flight Department Procedure which is used by a DZs operations as a supplement to appropriate FAA regulations. These are standard operating procedures (SOPs) complete with manuals, training syllabus, and recurrency requirements which were presented at the 1993 Parachute Industry Association Symposium. They are available to other DZs on written request. Bay Area Skydiving reported receiving help from both SkyDance-Davis and The Parachute Center at Lodi, while Skydiving West works more closely with SkyDance.

As I spoke with these DZ operators, evidence of a more complicated mutual support network emerged. One that was totally unexpected and not previously reported. It is a model for interconnected yet independent parachute centers, i.e. an intentional DZ community that benefits all participants.

INTERCONNECTED DZS--A STRATEGY OF THE NEW SKYDIVING CENTER

Interconnected DZ alliances are a new way of doing business in the skydiving industry. They could transform the American parachuting center landscape in the 1990s. An intentional community of interconnected drop zones is a counterpart to the Japanese model for business relationships in which organizations with similar interests join forces, or ally strategically, for their common good in a loosely knit enterprise group.

Strategic alliances among West Coast DZs apparently came about as each sought market development and reduced operating costs. Sharing of aircraft, sharing of tandem rigs and instructors, employing common instruction techniques, and even sharing landing areas on windy days are a common pattern in USPA's Pacific Region.

Such alliances are common in Japan (kigyo shudan) where cooperating groups of companies (not always in the same general business) are one of the most significant features of Japanese business society. These cooperative groups, or alliances, are the basis of complex and long-term ownership and trading relationships. This special dimension of business strategy is explained by Professor Michael Gerlach of the University of California: "They are organized around identifiable groupings and are bound together in durable relationships based on long term reciprocity." (M. Gerlach, Business Alliances and the Strategy of the Japanese Firm, Calif., Management Review, 1987.)

I believe America's skydiving industry would benefit from following this model for long term reciprocity, or community. Skydiving will always compete with other action adventure sports, e.g. skiing, scuba, white water rafting, surfing, motorcycling, etc., for the public's leisure dollar. Alliances allow DZs to enhance their service offerings, because the cost of strategic resources such as aircraft, instruction, even equipment, can be "shared" among members of the enterprise group. "Interconnected" DZ enterprise groups in Northern California are not formal organizations but rather, they are extended networks of relationships between parachute centers (Table 2). One of their benefits is in the quality of exchange. In short, alliances among DZs and related parachuting businesses create an environment of mutual benefit; that is, they help "keep each other warm."

Here's what Alisdar Boyd, Chief Instructor at SkyDance SkyDiving said about DZ alliances: "Yes, there is definitely a better feeling this year than ever before. Until recently, DZs didn't get along. Now there are signs we're becoming allied. This is a pleasant trend--a cross fertilization of ideas and friends."

J.R. "JR" Taylor, who owns and operates Skydiving West in Mendota, Calif., agrees. JR, a friendly guy, is pleased to talk about sharing resources and ideas: "We work real close (with SkyDance SkyDiving) including sharing aircraft, equipment, tandem gear, instructors, training syllabus, and big events. It's important ...(for DZs to)... find out about each other's instructor course ... so if I get a student from (some specific) DZ, then I feel comfortable in taking them on. Also, we call in out-of-area referrals and in-area students referral to convenient DZs."

Madera Parachute Center's Nita Gilbert sees DZs as ubitiquious as convenience stores, "There are 21 Drop Zones in California. Five of them are within a three-hour drive from us." Nevertheless there is a lot of inter-DZ sharing. "We help with staff, rigging, and when other DZs aircraft break down.

Business alliances have helped Crazy Creek (BiTron). According to Airport Manager Connie Indrebo, "When they're winded, they've dropped West Coast Skydiving (Colin Medalie in Petaluma) loads here. We just love it. It gives us activity here. Jim and I haven't been in this (DZ) business before so we need and appreciate help." BiTron's DZ operator, Steve Haley agrees and adds, "Yes, West Coast Skydivers brought another formation (of aircraft) over just last weekend (4-16-94). On other occasions, when we needed a camera man and tandem masters, they sent them over." Steve adds Byron (Jani Bango's Bay Area Skydiving) and The Parachute Center (Bill Dause in Lodi) as big helpers. " We've had a lot of support form other DZs, Bill Dause (Lodi) in particular", says Steve. "Bill Dause is always open to my needs and questions. He has done a lot of research. He has stopped whatever he's doing and set down and told me (what he's learned and made recommendations). This sort of thing has really helped everyone. It is a survival technique for small DZs which works."

There is art to "Serious" fun jumping

Skydiving is still a new sport. We are only now discovering that good-vibe relative work on the ground, between jumps and between drop zones, is the only thing that ensures a continuing string of high caliber good-vibe jumps. Fun exciting skydives, big fast-climbing aircraft, reliable gear, good instruction... these are a few of the things that are important to the skydiver community. To get more of these desirable high-joy jumps in your logbook, you'll want to jump at professional centers who recognize the relationship that good ground skydiving has to fun, high energy skydives at altitude.

What is on-the-ground skydiving?

Ground skydiving is the structuring of good skydives now with an eye on maintaining an atmosphere that will enable you to have good skydives later, and ever after. As the term implies, ground skydiving is what happens on the ground before and after the jump; at home, in the bar -- everywhere. The goal is simple: to prepare yourself and others on all DZs to get maximum joy from skydives. That means you'll not only participate in making the very next jump a complete success, but (importantly) you'll consider other upcoming jumps for later in the day, later in the week, or later in the year so as to ensure that everyone (on your drop zone and on their drop zone) will share the ecstatic wonder of being part of that energy flow we call skydiving. Skydiving is not just the relating of one to others in the air. It happens on the ground, too. It's jumper-to-jumper and drop-zone-to-drop-zone camaraderie. These relationships have created a community of free-fallers, and as brothers and sisters we should help each other. It is our sport. It is as good and fun as we allow it to be. Maximize the fun!

Dave Stewart of Skydive Hollister says: "Greg Nardi and I strongly believe in maintaining good association with the other centers. We think very highly of them and they seem to feel the same of us. ... (camaraderie and sharing) is like the law of karma in that you get what you give, and it has worked well for us in running our DZ. We work closely with Ray and Dan (Yolo County Airport, Davis California, home of SkyDance SkyDive). We share instructors and aircraft, and we cooperate on special events such as the annual Balloon Festival at Laguna Seca."

Jani Bango of the Bay Area Skydivers is another proponent of business alliances. Jani said: "Bay Area Skydivers does do a lot of business with other DZs. And yes! we get a huge amount of cooperation. Bill Dause (Lodi) and Ray Ferrell (SkyDance) have helped out a lot. When we get winded we go to Lodi and drop our jumpers there."

Over at West Coast Skydivers in Petaluma, a phone talk with Colin Medalie yielded another good example: "Jani Bango (Bay Area Skydivers) has helped me a lot! I help them whenever I can."

At Skydive in Paradise (Calif.), James Schlernitzauer proffered: "At nine months old, we're the new kids on the block. We've gotten good support from Lodi Parachute Center for instructors and from SkyDance SkyDiving for rigging. If I have anything that requires a master rigger, I don't hesitate to call. They're bigger, but it comes both ways. Bill Dause at Lodi has gone out of his way to help with aircraft and equipment support. We just held a Jumpmaster Certification Course which helped them out, too."

So far, interfirm DZ relationships seem to be a California affair. There, as in the Japanese model, DZ business alliances are the key link between parachuting related firms and their environments. Since each operates as an independent entity, these business alliances retain the advantages of the corporate form of organization. But there is more to it than that. Alliances yield stable business relationships, reliable instructor labor markets, shared employment pools, and better information flow between DZs. Most significantly, alliances promote aggressive, long-term growth policies.

The strongest argument for this form of interfirm cooperation is that it promotes a willingness to experiment, to try new things, and to look outside and learn from others. While the spread of cooperative alliances in other parts of the country remains an open question, my examination of the Northern California DZ community shows that the most productive of all alliances are those between DZs and their respective jumping publics.

CONCLUSION

No longer trying to smash their competition, the entrepreneurs who run today's most successful air sports companies are going about it in new ways. In their pursuit of better products and services for their skydiver customers, they are turning to business alliances to lower their costs and improve their chances of competing with the real rivals to sport parachuting, e.g. other action or "thrill" sports.

Strategic relationships between DZs, skydivers, and other businesses in the parachuting industry are changing. The fact that the drop zone landscape has moved from club-centered (run as a club, with officers, bylaws, etc.) to service-centered drop zones (run as a commercial business) helps explain why "natural competitors" choose to collaborate. Today's owners and operators are generally experienced and skilled professionals who, perhaps because of the specialized nature of their business, equipment, and skydiver-customers, have had to rely on each other for support when conditions require. Their interrelationships tend to reshape their business strategy as they share gear, equipment, and instructors.

They represent diverse concerns joined together in what seems more like a guild of sky-masons or an intentional community of freefall workers who place as much value on good relative work "on-the-ground" as on that which takes place in the air.

* * *

Table 1
The Hub Model:
Skydiving enterprises who receive support from larger enterprises,
based on interviews with owner-operators


Skydiving Enterprise Receive support Receive Receive Receive any from SkyDance support support from support from
SkyDiving? from The enterprise any Parachute other than enterprise ? Center? these two ? 1. Skydive In yes yes yes yes Paradise 2. Crazy Creek no yes yes yes (BiTron) 3. West Coast no no yes yes Skydiving 4. Bay Area yes yes yes yes Skydiving 5. Skydive Hollister yes no no yes 6. Madera Parachute yes no yes yes Center 7. Skydiving West yes no no yes percent reporting 71% 43% 71% 100% support

copyright (c) 1994 by Pat Works

Table 2
Reciprocal Business Alliances among Skydiving Enterprises

based on multiple interviews with owner-operators

  USPA Pacific Region        
Provide Business
Receive Business
Skydiving Enterprise support TO:
Support FROM: 1. Skydive In SkyDance SkyDiving
The SkyDance Paradise Parachute Center SkyDiving
The Parachute Center 2. Crazy Creek West Coast Skydiving
West Coast (BiTron) Skydiving
The Parachute Center
Bay Area Skydiving 3. SkyDance SkyDiving Skydive in Skydive in Paradise
Crazy Paradise
Skydive Creek
Skydive Hollister
Skydiving Hollister
Bay Area West Skydiving
Skydiving West 4. West Coast Crazy Creek
Bay Area Crazy Creek
Bay Area Skydiving Skydiving Skydiving 5. Bay Area The Parachute SkyDance SkyDive
The Skydiving Center
West Coast Parachute Skydiving Center
West Coast Skydiving 6. The Parachute Skydive in Skydive in Center Paradise
Bay Area Paradise
Bay Area Skydiving
Skydiving Skydiving Reno-Stead 7. Skydive Hollister SkyDance Skydiving SkyDance Skydiving 8. Madera Parachute SkyDance Skydiving Center Skydive
Taft
CalCIty West
SkyDance Skydive 9. Skydiving West SkyDance SkyDiving SkyDance SkyDiving
copyright (c) 1994 by Pat Works

On-The-Ground Skydiving: the Art of Serious Fun Jumping

Fun exciting skydives, big fast-climbing aircraft, reliable gear, good instruction... these are a few of the things that are important to the skydiver community. To get more of these desirable high-joy jumps in your logbook, you'll want to jump at skydiving enterprises who recognize the relationship that good ground skydiving has to fun, high energy skydives at altitude.

What is on-the-ground skydiving?

Ground skydiving is the structuring of good skydives now with an eye on maintaining an atmosphere that will enable you to have good skydives later, and ever after. As the term implies, ground skydiving is what happens on the ground before and after the jump; at home, in the bar -- everywhere. The goal is simple: to prepare yourself and others on all DZs to get maximum satisfaction from skydives. That means you'll not only participate in making the very next jump a complete success, but (importantly) you'll consider other upcoming jumps for later in the day, later in the week, or later in the year so as to ensure that everyone (on your drop zone and on their drop zone) will share that energy flow we call skydiving. Skydiving is not just the relating of one to others in the air. It happens on the ground, too. It's jumper-to-jumper and drop-zone-to-drop-zone camaraderie. These relationships have created a community of free-fallers; as brothers and sisters, we should help each other.

Ideas behind the intentional community of skydivers.

Fellowship should come first. Personal satisfaction depends on skydiver unity: a community of freefall.

This community of freefall Camaraderie is designed to place principles above personalities and the perfection of flight above all else.

In matters affecting parachuting as a whole, DZs must work together with genuine camaraderie. Except for that, each drop zone can and should be autonomous.

Each drop zone has but one primary purpose -- to carry the ecstasy and excitement of doing hot skydives to all, far and wide. Camaraderie enables that.

No man is all of himself: his friends are the rest of him.

Your next skydive starts on the ground.

To do any kind of skydive you must relate to others
in the air and on the ground.

It is our sport. It is as good and fun as we allow it to be. Maximize the fun!

AFTERWORD: ABOUT THIS STUDY:

These interesting relationships were discovered expecting to find 'smoking gun' evidence of bad inter-drop zone relations while doing field research for the speech I gave in San Francisco at the second annual Skydiving Banquet. To write my speech, I first interviewed local and national figures. Since I hadn't owned a DZ since back in the early 70s, when Dave Ellis and I owned the Hartsgrove DZ near Cleveland, I didn't feel current on the topic of inter Drop Zone relations. So, in preparing to give a speech in Northern California on the topic of Drop Zone unity I interviewed more than eighteen people who could be considered experts in the field of Drop Zone Operation and relationships.

Person(s) Interviewed      Enterprise                 Location                         
 John Sherman               The Jump Shack            Florida                          
 Mike Truffer              Skydiving News             Florida                          
 Becky Livingstone         USPA Region. Dir.          Pacific Region                   
 Robin Heid                Instructor and journalist  Colorado                         
 Roger Nelson              DZ owner                   Skydive Chicago Lake Whales Fl.  
 Steve Wilson              Producer, Eye Contact      Florida                          
 Dan Poynter               Publisher                  California                       
 Ray Ferrell, Dan OBrien   SkyDance SkyDive            Yolo County Airport, Davis      
and Alisdar Boyd                                      CA (W. of Sacramento)            
 Skratch Garrison          original sky dancer        outer space                      
 JR Taylor                 Skydiving West             Mendota CA ( Hwy. 33 W. of       
                                                      Fresno)                          
 Dave Stewart and Greg     Skydive Hollister          Hollister Airport (Hwy. 156      
and Patti Nardi                                       near  San Juan Bautista)         
 Kathy & Bill Dause        The Parachute Center       Lodi ( S. of Sacramento)         
 Colin Medalie             West Cost Skydivers        Petaluma CA (off 101 N. of       
                                                      S.F.)                            
 Jani Bango                Bay Area Skydiving         Byron Airport  (E. of Stockton)  
 Nita Gilbert              Madera Paracenter          Madera Airport (NW of Fresno)    
 Connie and Jim Indrebo       Crazy Creek                BiTron (N. of Calistoga

and Steve Haley around Clear Lake) James Schlernitzauer Skydive in Paradise Paradise, CA (NE of Chico)

CHARACTERISTICS OF THE DROP ZONES STUDIED

Interview notes and descriptions of skydiving enterprises in the Pacific Region.

SkyDance SkyDiving

SkyDance SkyDiving in Davis California serves both the Northern San Francisco Market and the Sacramento Market. To most area jumpers, SkyDance SkyDiving is known as being "The place to make quality skydives." DZ junkie, Robin Heid rates SkyDance SkyDiving as "Very progressive, a country-club operation; well-run like a business"

SkyDance SkyDiving is owned by Ray Ferrel and Dan OBrien. Both are long-time contributors and successful competitors. Their operation boasts a fleet consisting of a Twin Otter, King Air, and two Cessna 182s. Jumpers take off form 5,000 foot paved runway and climb out to the Drop Zone which is in a nearby field. With an annual operating budget of about one million dollars, SkyDance SkyDiving is a big business. Like most successful businesses, SkyDance SkyDiving graphs their operating statistics. As Ray Ferrel says," We track everything including number of jumps, students, tandems, graduates, how they heard about us, and more. We saw a spike in 1991-1992 , due in part to the movie "Point Break," and great weather. In 1993 we had a drop in business, partly due to the end of the drought which meant bad DZ weather, and a poor California economy."

SkyDance SkyDiving example statistics

1992    42,000 jumps   2,800 Tandems  750 AFF first   120 graduates   
                                      jump            (16%)           
                                      Students,                       
1993    37,000 jumps   2600 Tandems   470 AFF first   110 graduates   
                                      jump students   (23%)           

Ray started the Tandem program in California in 1984. According to Ray, "We have developed a thorough Tandem first jump course and I also have certified most Tandem Instructors in the area." Through a subsidiary of SkyDance SkyDiving, Ray has also established a sub-dealer network through many of the smaller DZs and trained many riggers as well. Both are proud of being a group member center of the USPA. Ray counts seven DZs in his market area. Both Dan and Ray believe that their biggest asset is their Staff. SkyDance SkyDiving has a staff of experienced instructors and jump masters. Ray characterizes his relationship with the community, airport, and neighbors as "good." However, relations with the county are "bad." SkyDance SkyDiving advertises in Magazines, Cable TV, direct Mail, yellow pages, and print media. The closest city to the SkyDance SkyDiving Operation is Sacramento. In addition, San Francisco is a short trip across the bridge.


Madera Parachute Center

Dave and Nita Gilbert

209 673-2688 4130 'D' Aviation Dr. Madera CA 93637

Talked with Nita on 3/20--- 4/22/94 at home

11/12/94 phone Interview with Nita:

"The Banquet is a good networking Opportunity ."

"My major concern is coordination on event dates. (Each drop zone should) plan so events don't conflict. Make up a calendar and publish it!" [This point was also mentioned by Ray Ferrel who said, "Publish your event calendar. (1-a)"

" Outside visitors: Carry your USPA card in your log book."

2- Cessna 182s

1- Beech QueenAir

SL $140

Tandem $130 (10.5')

AFF level one $250

4/21/94 interview with Nita:

Madera is a family oriented, comfortable operation. Being smaller and very friendly, it is easy to get on loads. Madera Parachute Center is on the public airport where they enjoy good rapport with the airport management. Spacious and unpretentious, Madera offers a huge landing area centrally located in the San Joaquin Valley. Conveniently located just two minutes off of highway 99, they are just one and one-half hours from the mountains, Yosemite National Park or the Sequoia redwoods "which makes for a nice three-day trip," according to Nita. "There are 21 Drop Zones in California. Five of them are within a three-hour drive from us."

Nevertheless there is a lot of inter-DZ sharing. "We help with staff, rigging, and when other DZs aircraft break down. (Taft, California City, SkyDance SkyDive) We sent our aircraft over to other DZs and when ever we've asked to help we've gotten it. Now, our big need is getting AFF instructors. We frequently send packers to SkyDance SkyDive and they've always helped us out: we call them first."

Nita called back on 5/6/94 to say that she liked the paper a lot and to mention that "We are proud to be group members of the USPA and have been from the beginning."

Skydiving West, Mendota CA

209 826-3933

655-3483 (validated and re interviewed on 3/11/94)

JR Taylor

owns and operates Skydiving West in Mendota California. JR is a friendly sort of guy; we talked about sharing resources and sharing ideas. When asked about inter-DZ cooperation JR said, " We work real close together (with SkyDance SkyDive) all the way from sharing aircraft, equipment, tandem gear, instructors, training syllabus, and big events. It is important (for DZs to) find out each other's instructor course so if I get a student from some (specific) DZ then I feel comfortable in taking them on. Also, we call in out-of-area referrals and in-area students referral to convenient DZs."

on 3/11/94 JR mentioned cross support with Madera and Paso Robles. JR has a 182. He characterizes his DZ as "Small, family-run, primarily student." According to JR, Skydiving West is unique because of their fine un-crowded airport facility. They are sole users of a 4,000 foot paved and lighted runway.

Skydive Hollister

408 636 0117

Dave Stewart and Greg Nardi (called on 11/12 and 3/5) visited their DZ on Sunday to talk and jump.

Two king airs and a 206. Operates from the Hollister Municipal Airport. DZ for experienced jumpers a mile away. Students use a drop zone eleven miles from the airport. Skydive Hollister is blessed with excellent winter weather. On Wednesdays from April through May experienced jumpers land on the beach where the Crow's Nest has live music and BarBque. Many of their jumpers also jump at Yolo SkyDance SkyDive and Lodi. Last year Skydive Hollister had about 2,000 first jump students with a 60/40 split between tandem and AFF. Our first jump course is from 13.5.

Dave Stewart says, " Greg and I strongly believe in maintaining good association with the other centers. We think very highly of them and they us they feel the same of us. To us, it (camaraderie and sharing) is like the law of karma (you get what you give) which has worked well for us running our DZ. We work closely with Ray and Dan (Yolo SkyDance SkyDive). We share instructors and aircraft and we cooperative on special events such as the annual Balloon Festival at Laguna Seca."

West Coast Skydivers in Petaluma

415 5846332

Phone talk with Colin Medalie on 11/12/93

Quotes:

"Jani helped me a lot! I help when I can. The most important thing in insurance! Self- insurance is required. Price wars on students. The market here is tandem oriented. Tandem is same price as SL! SO, of course, SL is more profitable

Bay Area Skydivers (Byron)

Byron California, Byron Airport

510 634 7575

Jani Bango

Tel con of 11/12 (& again on March 5 to check & validate)

Bay Area Skydivers is another proponent of these business alliances. Jani said, "Bay Area Skydivers does do a lot of business with other DZs, And yes! we get a huge amount of cooperation. Bill Dause (Lodi) and Ray Ferrell (SkyDance) helped out a lot. When we get winded we go to Lodi and drop our jumpers there.

"I absolutely support Truffer (re. PR/Advt.) Why doesn't USPA do National advertising and PR like the soaring people do? Lets get a call in number (for info) USPA's 800#

Tel con w/ Jani of 3/5/94

Aircraft = 206 and two 182s (one on call)

Closed Mon./Tues. [ will send a News Letter ]

Tandem, AFF and some SL (last 3-yrs, only 30 SL)

Offer sales for everything. Jani is a Sr. Rigger.

The Bay Area's only skydiving center. Uses modern training methods and state of the art equipment. USPA rated staff.

Weekends and Wednesday through Friday by appointment

Tandem One Skydive $135

AFF $248

S/L $150

Skydive in Paradise

James Schlernitzauer Tel con of 3/5/94

916 872-3483

One Cessna 182. Tandem 1st jump; then AFF and S/L. Full time video on every student loads. Mid summer Boogie July 8-10 (Rebirth of the Chico Freako Follies). Core of regular jumpers plus students. Spectacular views of mount Lassen, Shasta, lakes and river canyons.

"At 9 months old, we are the new kids on the block. We've gotten good support from Lodi Parachute Center for instructors and from SkyDance SkyDive for rigging. If I have anything that requires a master rigger, I don't hesitate to call if I need something. Bill Dause at Lodi has gone out of his way to help with aircraft and equipment support. They're bigger but it comes both ways. We just held a Jump Master Certification Course which helped them out, too. For equipment, I work with specific manufacturers -- have since I was just a pup. My volume is still small; so I concentrate it with Jump Shack and Precision."

Tandem $125

Static line $185 w/ USPA membership

AFF $250 w/ USPA membership

The Parachute Center at Lodi

Telephone and visits. Bill & Kathy Dause

Aircraft:

182

206

Twin Beech

Porter

DC-3 (2)

S/L @ $130.00

Accelerated Free Fall $260.00

Introductory Parachute Jump (tandem equipment) $100 [ students continuing on after the Introductory Parachute Jump go into S/L, AFF, Tandem, or Tandem/AFF ]. For AFF, the Parachute center encourages students to take their concentrated course which goes through all the normal AFF progression in one week. The student's training is more concentrated over a shorter period and it's felt that there is more learning and less forgetting.

Lodi is friendly and high volume. Bill Dause characterizes the DZ as being a good country DZ.... "we're the country-club DZ without the club-part, a country club DZ." Lodi shares instructors, tandem masters and camera people occasionally with Jani Bango at Byron, and with Skydiving Reno-Stead (skydive in Stead) If things are "real busy" a phone call is made to see if someone can get sent over. "If they need something, we'll try and help them out." says Bill.

Crazy Creek (BiTron)

Connie and Jim Indrebo (interview with Connie on 3/11/94)

Interview with Steve Haley (Skydiving Operation) on 4/21/94

Crazy Creek

575 Middletown, Calif. 95461

707 987 9112

Crazy Creek is a glider port and a drop zone located on 600 acres. The view is spectacular, Connie says, " It's beautiful, open area with green grass and rolling hills. A real nice place to fly and jump. (from the air) you see for 100s of miles, Clear Lake, San Francisco, mount Shasta. . . We are the clearest county in the state.. . Bring your bike, bring a picnic, it is peaceful." Operating 7-day a week from 9 a.m. to sunset. (But call first). Crazy Creek offers glider rides and instruction. They have a 182.

S/L $135

Tandem $150

Yes business alliances have helped. According to Connie Indrebo, "When they're winded, they've dropped West Coast Skydiving (Colin Medalie) loads here. We just love it. It gives us activity here. West Coast Skydiving helped us out with tandem instructors when we needed help. Jim and I haven't been in this (DZ) business before so we need and appreciate help."

Steve Haley (Skydiving Operation) on 4/21/94 (707) 928 4772
BOX 12, Cobb CA 95426

Byron, Petaluma, Bill Dause at Lodi is a big help. " We've had a lot of support form other DZs, Bill Dause (Lodi) in particular. This is a excellent skydive environment out here, four out of five DZs in the area have bent over backwards to help us."

4/22/94 phone conversation to recap & verify with S. Haley

Jumpers from all of the DZs have been over to jump in our place. It has been great -- never a problem.

Aircraft -- Larry Hill in Arizona has lent us his Otter. Dan (SkyDance SkyDive) has since offered turbine aircraft support.

When we opened, Byron (Jani Bango, Bay Area Skydiving), flew our first load for us. I thought it was really decent of them to do this for us: a really fabulous thing for our "competition" to be doing.

"Petaluma (Colin Medalie's West Coast Skydivers) jumped in just for fun. It was real friendly and relaxed. They brought a formation (of aircraft) over last weekend (4-16-94). Everyone has a good time. On other occasions, when we needed a camera man and tandem masters, they sent them over. This sort of thing has really helped everyone. There is just no reason not to do things like this. We try to reciprocate. When they call up, we try to take off and just do whatever is need. It is a survival technique for small DZs which works."

"We had a perspective customer who lived close to Petaluma call us and ask about making a first jump. We told them that they were located closer to Petaluma but that either way (starting to jump there or here at Crazy Creek) they should go skydive and have fun!" We refer advanced students to both Lodi and SkyDance. . . I like to see them get up in a big aircraft. It creates a better skydiving environment for everyone.

"I get a lot of help from Lodi (the Parachute Center). Bill Dause is always open to my needs and questions. He has done a lot of research (about skydiving operations). When ever I have had a question, he has stopped whatever he's doing and set down and told me (what he's learned and made recommendations.) We do not get coastal or valley fog. When all the DZs are socked-in, we're clear. We have year-round sunshine. The mountain ranges offer a wind-block which allows us to jump when other DZs are winded.

II. Survey of other skydivers -- what they think about the topic of DZ Relations

John Sherman, President, the jump Shack

My experience in the early days led me to the opinion that excessive drop zone loyalty hurts the sport. Back then, in the mid-to-late 1960s, being loyal to a single drop zone retarded learning and accomplishment. New skills were not learned or even known of. Old skills were lost. In the late '60s I found that there were over 125 drop zones around my home in Wisconsin. As a jumper and pilot, I visited most of them. The differences in skill levels and kinds of skills were staggering. There was no communication or sharing. You just couldn't get enough people or aircraft to build anything over a five-way.


Robin Heid, journalist, tandem instructor

We have so much more in common than we have in dispute, so why do we keep festering on this? We, the DZs, need more volume. We don't need more bickering. And please, don't forget to have fun. To lower the stress level, raise the fun level.


Roger Nelson, DZ owner

The factors critical to DZ success and survival are neither understood nor communicated. Drop Zones need more voice and consideration.

We need to stop the cycle of DZs reinventing the wheel just to "be doing it differently" thereby introducing chaos. We must jointly recognize that our common goals are two fold:

1. Saving Lives while

2. Increasing the popularity of the sport.