Re: [ericmillionaire] Advice on going it alone
Going solo is something many will do once in a while and it's part of the sport. However, it makes more sense at some objects than at others. I wouldn't launch a back country solo where it's possible I'd have to fight off bears and coyotes with a broken leg. But I would, and have, launched from the Flatiron Building downtown all alone as I know someone will stumble upon me before I bleed out.
Some sites are so high profile two or more jumpers climbing a fence, or two or more canopies in the air, are just too much to maintain secrecy and security.
I don't recommend solos for most people, but for some there's a special quality and a cool dynamic to planning it, getting in, climbing up, standing there looking down, gearing up and actually doing it, and all by yourself. It harkens back to a time when we BASE jumped for ourselves and not for the show.
Another thing in favor of an occasional urban solo is if you are a well know and experienced BASE jumper you always end up the "senior" dude on the load and the others will be wide-eyed and looking to you for the answers. That's fine, and something I enjoy most of the time, but sometimes it's a responsibility that overshadows the reason you BASE jump in the first place.
We always said in the earlier days of the sport we did it to be independent, to show we needed no one's permission or support, and BASE jumping alone has that spades. In the end, BASE is sport full of dirty little secrets, and in the end, when it's all said and done and you're sitting on the porch of the Old BASE Jumper's Home , it's nice to have a few dirty little secrets of your own . . .
NickD
BASE 194