Tandem skydiving student holding her face

Skydiving With a Cold: What to Know

Wednesday, February 15, 2017

If you have a cold and you’re trying something you’ve never tried before–skydiving, for instance–it’s hard to know what is or is not a big deal. For example: jumping in heeled shoes? Big deal bad idea. Jumping in a dress? Actually, totally doable (if you’re willing to get a grass stain on it and you’re not too bothered about perfect modesty). Jumping when it’s a cold fall day on the ground? It’s a big deal unless you’re a big fan of icy eyelashes–it’s about thirty degrees colder up at altitude. Are you jumping at sunrise or sunset? Big deal–the beauty will knock you sideways.

Risks of Skydiving With a Cold

Skydiving with a cold? You might not think it’d make much of a difference one way or the other, but it is a big deal. And here’s why.

Eardrum Pressure and Popping Risks

EEK! Right? Most folks, thank goodness, haven’t ever experienced the utter misery of a popped eardrum. That’s for a good tandem skydivereason: because the pressure differential between the inside and outside of the ear must be high enough to do the dirty job.

When the pressure on the inside of the eardrum is so much greater than the pressure on the outside of the eardrum–as can happen, when a stuffy nose rises into the proportionally thinner air of a jump ship at altitude–then the eardrum can pop like a balloon. It sounds like a popping balloon. And it feels like a teeny, tiny stab wound in a very delicate place.

It’s important to insist here that this does not happen to a healthy ear. Never. Never-ever. It only happens to seriously congested people, and it doesn’t happen on every occasion. If you’re at risk for it, though, stay down. Seriously. Reschedule.

Headaches and Altitude Sensitivity

Much more likely than a burst eardrum is the cranial misery that results from illness plus altitude. In much the same way that the eardrum problem works, this has to do with the pressure differences betwixt the world outside your head and the world inside your head.

A healthy body can–and does–manage pressure differences just fine. If you add a head cold to the equation, it can’t. The body tries its best to sort it out, trying to pump blood and move swollen tissues around, but it can’t make it happen until the tissues calm down and the inflammation has passed. An altitude headache is the kind of thing that Advil doesn’t help. You just have to wait it out. The wait, suffice it to say, is not fun.

Contagiousness and Impact on Others

Your hardworking tandem instructor–the guy or gal who has been hand-picked to safely take you from the door of the plane back to terra firma–would like to very kindly, respectfully beg you not to jump with a head cold. Here’s why.

As you freefall, the thin air at altitude will start to thicken back to the ground-level norm. As it does, your angry, stuffy nose will scramble to haul itself back to equilibrium. The way it does that is by running. It empties itself right out, all over you and your instructor, and there won’t be a Kleenex box floating there to help you out. Trust us: it’s a messy scene.

So–now you know. Skydiving with a cold or when you’re not feeling well is a big, bad deal. Don’t do it! Happily, Skydive Tecumseh will be right here when you’re feeling better!

Tandem Skydiver in freefall at Skydive Tecumseh

Skydiving for the first time at Skydive Tecumseh was by far one of the greatest experiences of my life. No matter how high maintenance I was before the jump when I was scared, every single jumper employee did everything they could to make my experience unforgettable. I have already recommended here for many of my friends wanting to go with me for their first time on my next round!

Christine Kardel