Overview
The Basic Parachute Course is four weeks long for regular troops. During that time, trainees are instructed in exit, flight and landing techniques. They are required to complete four descents, one at night, to qualify for their 'wings'. Exit training is carried out from full-size mock ups ofParachute Badge
On successful completion of their four descents, trainees are presented with their ' wings' by the Officer Commanding No. 1 Parachute Training School, and return to their units as qualified parachutists. The ''Parachute Badge with Wings'' insignia is only to be worn by a qualified parachutist who has subsequently been on the posted strength of a unit where he may be ordered in the course of his duties to parachute. Those who do not serve with a parachute unit are permitted to wear the ''Parachute Badge without Wings'', colloquially known as the 'Lightbulb'. Reservists conduct the same training as their Regular counterparts on the same three week course in order to be awarded their Parachutist wings.History
In the past, ground training concluded with the exit trainer, designed to simulate the effect of slipstream as the parachutist exits the aircraft. The trainer consisted of a wooden cabin, mounted on a structure of girders, equipped with doors representing those on the port and starboard side of the Hercules. On either side cables ran from above the trainer to a point near the ground some 55 yards away. Wearing harnesses suspended from them, trainees jumped from the trainer and traveled the length of the cables in a gradual descent towards the ground, where their progress is arrested by an instructor. Until the late 1990s, the first parachute descent was from a balloon at the dropping zone at Weston-on-the-Green; this has since been phased out. It was carried out from a height of 800ft (244m) in what is known as "clean fatigue" - without equipment. Eight descents used to be carried out in total instead of four today. Trainees performed their first descent from a C-130 Hercules in single 'sticks' of six without equipment from one door of the aircraft. Their second descent was again in 'clean fatigue', in single 'sticks' of eight or ten. Trainees then make their third descent, jumping in simultaneous 'sticks' of six from both sides of a Hercules. This was followed by a night descent without equipment. Thereafter, descents were made with equipment, initially in a single 'stick' of six, subsequently in simultaneous 'sticks' of eight or ten and finally in the maximum size of 'stick' possible, depending upon the number of personnel on the course. The historical course for members of Army Reserve units and Royal Marines Reserve lasted only two weeks, and trainees were required to complete only seven descents without one at night. Before taking the course, however, they had to undergo a considerable amount of synthetic training to enable them to be of a sufficient standard to carry out their balloon descent and their first aircraft descent by the end of the first week at Brize Norton. The rest of their descents are carried out during the second week of the course. In 2020, Captain Rosie Wild, the first female to pass the All Arms Pre-Parachute Selection Course (P Company), passed the BPC to become the first woman in the British Army to wear the Wings badge.See also
* P companyReferences
Further reading
*Newnham, Maurice, 'Prelude to Glory', Sampson Low, London, 1947 * * Sturtivant, Ray, 'Royal Air Force Flying Training and Support Units', Air-Britain, Tunbridge Wells, 1997, * Hearn, Peter, ' Parachutist' Robert Hale & Company 1976, * Harclerode, Peter, 'PARA! Fifty Years of the Parachute Regiment, Orion Books Ltd, London, 1992, * Cartner, Edward, 'Parachutes Princes & Predicaments', Woodfield Publishing 2003, * Cartner, Edward, 'Jumping Beans', Woodfield Publishing 2012, {{ISBN, 978-1-84683-132-4 Education in Oxfordshire Military education and training in the United Kingdom Military parachuting in the United Kingdom Military parachuting training West Oxfordshire District