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Living to diveStuart Wilson likes throwing himself out of an aeroplane at 12,000 feet, and he's just got a licence to do it. Stuart and his two friends Alan Thompson and Pete Davis are the only qualified deaf skydivers in the UK. Next week they will be attempting a new British skydiving record in front of the VEE-TV cameras. 'I live to skydive,' he says. 'You should try it! It's the best ever!' If the word 'skydiving' is associated more closely in your mind with dying than with living, you might like to consider another ambition. Stuart qualified for his skydiving licence with the help of a Jack Ashley Millennium Award for Young Deaf people, funded by a lottery grant with the aim of giving young deaf people opportunities that hearing people can take for granted. The closing date for the next application is 7 May 2002, so if you want to have a shot at it, e-mail millennium.awards@ndcs.org.uk or fax 020 7251 5120 for an information pack. If on the other hand you do want to try skydiving, you could consider
contacting the National Deaf Children's Society (fundraising@ndcs.org.uk)
about their fundraising skydive. You have to be at least 16, and if you're
under 18, you'll need your parents' consent. No fear of heights might
also be helpful.
British Parachuting Association (BPA) Deaf Skies Dirtdive.co.uk Dropzone.com Silent Free Fall |