Just for all the people who have asked me about instruction, can someone tell me and them where the line is in the sand as to who can instruct.
In the UK there are few people over the 200 jump mark and i am curious as to when people become suitable,this ones a question for you Space and all the other guys who have expressed opinions on this before...I have no desire to teach because I jump for myself,dont feel experienced enough and realise the responsabilities involved,but in a low experience area like the UK where and to who are "students" supposed to go?
I doubt that this only applies to the uk,so, it may be quite a valid thread to start.I value the training that CR,BR and Vertigo and the like can give people but a student travelling to do one of these courses from outside the USA will be ostensibly "on their own" once they have completed the training.
I have been contacted by a guy who hasnt jumped since he finished his course (last year) because he had no one to jump with and possibly that no one wanted to take a newbie under their wing,would someone with say 60-100 jumps be suitable to "instruct" them or would they just be carrying out the role of chaperone to a blind man?
I am open to comment here but,I feel in the UK we are stuck between a rock and a hard place in so much as everyone talks about people not being experienced enough to instruct...but there isnt anyone experienced enough anyway, so what do the aspiring instructors do...tell all the wannabes to go away for twelve months till the 60-100 jumpers have the "required" air time?
Its just a thread to instigate some discussion..i am not having a pop at anyone...the point need clarifying by the long timers in the sport.
Laters
Sean
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