Skydiving caravan to drop by Friday
ERIC WELCH | Hagadone News Network | UPDATED 10 months, 3 weeks AGO
If you’ve ever wanted to soar over Sandpoint, Friday may be your best chance to do it.
On July 19, Skydive West Plains of Ritzville, Wash., will bring its Cessna 208 Caravan airplane and crew of instructors to offer tandem skydiving at Sandpoint Airport.
David DaVinci, Sandpoint local, described the Caravan as “one of the most comfortable planes you could do a tandem skydive out of.”
DaVinci, who travels the world as a "thrillusionist” (part thrill seeker, part illusionist), parrot trainer, and wingsuit pilot, has jumped from the Caravan more than 200 times.
“It’s a total treat to have them up here in Sandpoint," he said.
The multitalented magician began skydiving after being inspired while performing. “Having integrated parrots into my magic shows, I thought, ‘it would be cool if I could fly,’” said DaVinci.
Today, DaVinci has skydived more than 600 times. “It’s arguably the most fun you can have with your clothes on ... although licensed jumpers will occasionally do nude jumps!” he said with a laugh.
According to DaVinci, the stigmas of recklessness and danger surrounding skydiving are unfounded. “Skydiving can be done with an incredible safety record,” he explained.
Modern parachutes are equipped with an automatic activation device, which deploys a reserve chute at a predetermined altitude if there’s a problem with the primary canopy, even if the operator is unconscious.
“You don’t think twice about throwing on a couple of skis or a snowboard and heading down the mountain and all the dangers around that,” DaVinci said. For skydiving, “the safety is incredibly high.”
On Friday, skydiving participants will receive a brief training session before taking to the sky and harnessing with an instructor. Friends and family members can watch from the ground or even join them on the plane for a “ride along.”
“It's a really fun way for somebody who feels they’re too elderly to jump, or just has no desire to jump, to experience all the fun from the front seat of the plane,” DaVinci explained.
After half a thousand jumps, what’s DaVinci’s favorite place to skydive?
“By far, Sandpoint,” said the magician. “You get the snowcapped mountains in the background over this massive lake, and you see the city from above.”
MORE FRONT-PAGE-SLIDER STORIES
ARTICLES BY ERIC WELCH
City personnel, community members discuss options as James E. Russell Center costs exceed revenue
Community planning and development director Jason Welker, who oversees Sandpoint’s parks and recreation programs and facilities, suggested that the city could either maintain its current approach at the facility, shrink the center’s operating hours, install new modular playing surfaces for mixed sports use on some of the courts, or recruit a nonprofit organization to operate the facility.
‘Expressions’ courses fill non-school art void
Teens participating in Gentry’s class practiced printmaking, painting and design to create works including a pop art-inspired self-portrait. “My goal when I'm teaching the kids is to just show them lots of different ways that you can make really cool art. It doesn't have to be just traditional,” she said. “The kind of art they do with me, they get to just express themselves, and it doesn't have to be perfection.”

City of Sandpoint sheds light on sewage incident outcome
On the morning of Feb. 24, an electrical control system failure caused pumps to shut off unexpectedly at Sandpoint’s municipal wastewater treatment plant — a city-owned facility that removes contaminants from sewage before discharging it into the Pend Oreille River.