Google attempted to translate the caption:
Practice jumping parachutist-firefighters Avialesookhrana. Photo Valery Korotkov, 2002
Google attempted to translate the caption:
Practice jumping parachutist-firefighters Avialesookhrana. Photo Valery Korotkov, 2002
Above: N143Z, better known as Jump 43, showing off a new paint job at McCall, Idaho, April 18, 2016. Photo by Stuart Palley.
Yesterday Stuart Palley spotted two U.S. Forest Service Twin Otter smokejumper planes at the McCall, Idaho jumper base, N141Z and N143Z. They were sporting new paint jobs but that was not all that was new. Jennifer Jones, a spokesperson for the USFS, told us that over the last two years they have received new nose gears, nose wheel steering actuators, fuel bladder tanks, fuel pumps, and floor boards.
Annually, the U.S. Forest Service Intermountain Region mechanics go over each aircraft and make sure that they are prepared, equipped, and ready for the upcoming fire season.
Dehavilland DHC-6-300 Twin Otters were manufactured in 1974 and 1984. Even though the USFS has acquired a bunch of military surplus C-23B Sherpas for smokejumping and other purposes, they plan to hang on to a couple of the Twin Otters. One of the reasons is they have better performance at higher elevation airports.
Thanks and a tip of the hat go out to Stuart.
This is not your typical two-minute news story about smokejumpers. It has several close-ups (very close up) of Ramona Beyuka, based out of McCall, Idaho. Her voice narrates much of the video below as she describes what it’s like to be delivered to a wildfire by parachute.
Photo credit, Great Basin Smokejumpers
Early 80s”Aerial Attack” recruitment poster. @49ers Joe Montana w/U.S. Forest Service Redding Smokejumpers #OurRoots pic.twitter.com/B8zHHVaHhv
— USFS Fire-California (@R5_Fire_News) February 8, 2016
Can anyone identify these jumpers? Click on the picture a couple of times to see a larger version.
Shortly after the U.S. Forest Service retired their last DC-3 from smokejumping duties, I ran across another one in the Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum in Washington, DC.
It was displayed next to a Ford Tri-Motor.
The National Interagency Fire Training released this video today about rookie smokejumper training in McCall, Idaho.
UPDATE December 8, 2015: NIFC released the following video today showing the view as a BLM jumper parachutes into the Deadwood Reservoir Fire.