One Knight Earns A Spot On The U.S. National Team
Canopy Piloting is not a sport for the faint of heart. Imagine a
parachute so small and so fast, its lines cutting through the air
at nearly 100 mph actually sounds like a jet engines high pitched
whining. Think about a required landing area that is 10 feet wide,
but in length, it is the equivalent of 2 football fields placed end
zone to end zone. Now imagine going this distance after passing
only 5 feet off the ground. This is the skydiving discipline known
as Canopy Piloting. In Canopy Piloting, a discipline of skydiving
that is relatively new to the sport compared to all of the other
disciplines, competitors fly extremely small parachutes mere inches
off the ground and negotiate through various courses with different
goals.
Golden Knights File Photo
50 competitors descended on the 2010 US National Canopy Piloting
Championships which were held at Skydive Spaceland in Rosharon
Texas which is just south of Houston from the 1st to the 4th of
September. The purpose of the competition is to select National
Champions in each of the 3 individual events, an overall champion
and also to select the next team to represent the United States at
the world level where the team will bear the coveted title, Team
USA.
SFC Greg Windmiller a member of the US Army’s Golden
Knights has been a competitor in Canopy Piloting for the past 4
years and has earned numerous medals as well as many State,
National and International records. This event was no different for
the Knight with nearly 11,000 jumps and over 20 years of active
duty service. There are 3 separate events which make up the
discipline, distance, accuracy and speed.
In the distance event the competitors must have at least one
part of their body fly below the tops of the entry gates which are
5 feet high and 32 feet apart. From here, this is their starting
line. They are judged on how far they go from this point to their
first point of contact with the ground. Distances have exceeded
over 600ft. at other locations where the air density is thinner and
the elevation of the landing area is over 5,000 feet above sea
level. Windmiller broke the US National record last year and set
the Texas state record at sea level at this same location with 156
meters which is 514 feet. This year Windmiller won the Bronze
medal in the distance event after battling changing and difficult
wind conditions. The strong head winds didn’t allow anyone,
including Windmiller himself to come close to his State record
which still remains intact.
SFC Greg Windmiller
In the Accuracy event competitors collect points by dragging a
foot through the water while traveling at speeds up to 60 mph and
then collect points on land as well by attempting to stand up in
scoring zones. Without a doubt, this is the most spectator friendly
event, as the crashes are phenomenal to watch. “I was having
my best meet ever as I had great scores in the first 2 rounds, then
in the third round, I had too much power and couldn’t get the
parachute stopped in time which caused me to go out the back of the
course resulting in a score of zero for that round” said
Windmiller.
In the Speed event the competitors must pass below the top edge
of the 5ft tall course markers and remain below that height
throughout the entire course. The course is 32 feet wide and 230
feet long with a 75 degree carve in it preventing a straight line
run through the course. Electronic sensors and a timing system is
utilized like the ones used in downhill skiing which measure times
to the thousandth of a second. This event is without a doubt
Windmillers’ strongest as he holds not only the Texas state
and the National record but also the World record in Speed.
Windmiller put an interesting spin on the event, which he insists
helped him. Just as Olympic swimmers wear scaled suits, speed
skaters wear special suits, and bicycleists shave their legs to get
the advantage Windmiller himself wore a suit just for the event
which is made of a non drag creating material.
“Parasitic drag is anything on your body or attached that
causes you to be slowed down by wind resistance, it is the mortal
enemy of Canopy Pilots. You don’t see Olympic shooters
dressed in real tree camo with their dad’s guns. Everything
is high tech now days and every advantage helps. Sure no one wants
to be the first to wear something new and something that looks
strange out of fear of ridicule and if you wear something that is
out of the norm, then you had better win or else you are going to
get it from all the competitors. There were a lot of snickers,
remarks and comments from the other competitors when I put it on,
but after the first round of speed, no one was laughing anymore!
After the third round of speed the comments were, where can I get
one and how much are those? From the beginning the Golden Knights
have not only been ambassadors to the sport but also pioneers in
research and development with the goal of making the sport not only
safer for everyone but also pushing the boundaries of what some
consider normal.”
Skydiver Running On Water
Windmiller not only won the gold medal in the speed event but
also broke his existing state record and posted the fastest times
that have ever been recorded in competition at sea level. His
fastest time was 2.128 seconds through the 230 feet long course
which was only .035 seconds slower than his World record.
The overall champion for the competition was a member of a the
Performance Designs Factory team, a professional canopy piloting
team sponsored by a canopy manufacturer and former National and
World Champion by the name of Jonathan Tagle. Windmiller had no
expectations of even coming close to the overall medal chase due to
his zero in the accuracy event however his other competition runs
were so strong that in the end he stood next to Tagle in the second
spot winning the Silver medal.
“Being in the top ten is very prestigious, but being able
to share the Podium with two of the greatest canopy pilots in
skydiving history is an honor. Ian Bobo, who took the 3rd position
and the bronze medal, is a critically acclaimed and one of the most
well known canopy pilots in the sport.”
Not only did Windmiller walk away from this event with 3 medals
and another record for the Golden Knights, but he also earned a
spot on the US National Canopy piloting team for the 4th year in a
row. “I honestly feel blessed to be on the US Team, medals or
no medals records or no records. Not only am I blessed with this
but I am truly blessed that after having served 20 years in the
military I can still do my part to represent the Army in a positive
light and show my appreciation to all of my brothers and sisters
serving here and overseas.” Windmiller recently returned from
a deployment in Iraq in support of OIF.
FMI: http://armygk.com