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Skydiving

Luke Aikins' Flight Of A Lifetime

Plane Swap on April 24 Features Luke Aikins and Andy Farrington in the First-Ever Dual Skydive Into Separate Planes
By Jorge Martin
18 min readPublished on
Luke Aikins vividly remembers the magazine cover that would portend his future. It was the 1990s, and the artwork on the skydiving magazine showed a biplane pointing straight downward with a drogue parachute trailing behind it and a skydiver in a yellow jumpsuit flying even with the aircraft.
Skydiving Magazine Cover

Skydiving Magazine Cover

© Luke Aikins

The idea would seem outlandish to a great majority of the population. A skydiver maneuvering toward another plane and looking to get in? That wasn’t just testing physics, but possibly rational thinking. For Aikins, it was more inspiration fueled by an ever-present feeling of continually breaking through barriers of conventional thinking when it came to flying through the heavens. “I thought how cool that was,” Aikins said. “I always remember that photo. I wanted to do a version of that on steroids. It was somewhere in my future. I really, really wanted to jump out of a plane and get into another plane.”
Andy Farrington Plane Dive

Andy Farrington Plane Dive

© Red Bull Content Pool

That day is coming. Plane Swap comes to life in a three-hour live stream broadcast exclusively on Hulu on April 24. Aikins and his cousin Andy Farrington, teammates, cousins, and accomplished skydiving masters will attempt a first-of-its-kind event where they each solo pilot an aircraft, put the planes into a nosedive, jump out of the planes, race through the sky into each other’s planes, take control and fly away. Yes, you just read those words. Never in the history of flight has a solo-piloted aircraft taken off with one pilot and landed with another. And the audience will see it happen live for the first, and only time.
“I honestly think that doing something like this live is the only thing left with TV, in my opinion”.
Luke Aikins
Luke Aikins BTS

Luke Aikins BTS

© Red Bull Content Pool

“I think sports are so popular because they’re live, happening right now. A taped version of this, you can do it 30 times until you got it right so you can show that. I think that live element, it makes it like reading a day-old newspaper if you don’t see it live. That’s what’s very cool about Hulu stepping in and broadcasting it, streaming while it happens when it happens. Win, lose, or draw, it’s going to be live on the 24th of April.”
01

TAKING OFF

The wins have been plentiful for Aikins throughout his life careening through the air. He is the third generation of pilots and skydivers, his grandfather Lenny Aikins starting a skydiving club. His father Lance Aikins was a skydiver and pilot, having taught both Aikins and Farrington how to fly, both getting their pilot’s licenses simultaneously with their driver’s license.
Luke Aikins jumps with his dad Lance Aikins, and his grandpa Lenny Aikins

Aikins Family Jump

© Luke Aikins

Skydiving very much held Aikins’ attention from probably as early as the black-and-white photo of him taken at three months old laying on the packing table of the family skydiving center.
Luke Aikins with dad Lance Aikins

Luke Aikins with dad Lance Aikins

© Luke Aikins

Watching family members and others freefall and then glide gracefully through the air was captivating. And even living in stops in Florida, Guam and Japan – his father was in the Navy – he would watch unfathomable stunts from Evel Knievel, as well as shows like Wide World of Sports and That’s Incredible that often tested the laws of physics for entertainment’s sake.
“It was almost something that was unattainable to the rest of us,” Aikins said. “I was like the rest of us watching it on TV, in awe… Those kinds of things were inspirational to somebody who aspired to be a skydiver.”
Aikins did his first tandem jump when he was 12, and began skydiving when he was 16. From there his thirst for thrill-seeking was hard to quench. “I was the kid that when we built the bicycle jump in the neighborhood, you would build it higher,” Aikins said. “We would go until you broke a person or a bike. If somebody went faster than you when you were running, you wanted to run faster than them. That competitive nature, some people have that and they live to be fighting for that first position. And then other people are just happy doing stuff.
"I think I always wanted to push the edge."
Luke Aikins
Luke Aikins in 2000 jumping in Eloy, Arizona:

Luke Aikins in 2000 jumping in Eloy, Arizona:

© Luke Aikins

He improved at skydiving so much that when he was still in high school, he was asked to parachute into the school’s homecoming game. With the game ball! Yet it wasn’t just wanting to jump higher and hit a mark the size of a frisbee. He was learning about the art form, trying to improve on his technique, and also testing any limits. “That was more the norm for me,” Aikins said. “You’re obviously looking to push from there and you just didn’t know what was possible. Skydiving and knowledge of human flight, how we’re able to steer our bodies and all the things we’re actually able to do now. It’s kind of mind-blowing compared to when I started skydiving. The learning curve has ramped up so much.”
When asked how to describe what he’s feeling when he’s jumping out of an airplane, Aikins compared it to jumping off a dock and into a body of water. For anyone who has not done it, and for those who have only a handful of jumps, here is a tantalizing description. “You’re going, but your foot’s still on the dock, and there’s no going back. That feeling is probably one of my favorite things about skydiving,” Aikins said. “That full commitment to what’s about to happen. You can’t go backwards, but it hasn’t happened yet. That limbo-ey moment is kind of my favorite part. Then once you jump out, and the wind starts to take, you don’t get that feeling of like a roller coaster. You feel almost like you’re floating on a pillow of air. It sounds sketchy and crazy to someone who’s never skydived before. It’s almost a calming feeling. You’re falling through the air, but you feel like you’re laying on a giant cushion of air. And what you do with your hands and your body moves you around the sky. It’s such a free, fun feeling until it’s time to open up your parachute, then everything gets fast again. But that middle of the skydive portion, it’s such a surreal moment.”
Luke Aikins’ early Red Bull jumps

Luke Aikins’ early Red Bull jumps

© Luke Aikins

As Aikins began to gain acclaim in the skydiving arena, he was picked up by Red Bull Air Force in 2005. His first event will forever be special to him, as he was set to parachute into a Seattle Seahawks game. A diehard Seahawks fan, this was a special moment for Aikins, and he had a wrinkle he added in his debut as a Red Bull athlete. “When I jumped into the Seahawks stadium,” Aikins said, “I didn’t tell anybody, but I took a 12th Man flag with me into that Seahawks game. I opened up and I pulled the flag out and hooked it to my foot. I had this 12th Man flag hanging. When I came into the stadium, I was flying one direction and needed to land the other way. I looked at the Jumbotron, I could see me flying into the stadium with the 12th Man flag and the smoke, and the crowd going crazy. It was one of my most memorable jumps of all time.”
02

SPACE MISSION

A few years later, Aikins was asked to help out with a secret project. This request saw him just jump with a camera on his head and film his skydive. It was for a project for an Austrian skydiver named Felix Baumgartner. After he landed, Aikins looked at the equipment Baumgartner was using and felt it was “subpar.” He said there were improvements that could be made, and mentioned what could go wrong if those improvements weren’t made. A day later, in a practice jump, there were malfunctions that happened exactly how Aikins had said previously might happen.
His years of skydiving expertise would now serve him in a different fashion. Aikins was invited to join the Red Bull Stratos team, which was working to send Baumgartner to the “Edge of Space” to set the world record for the highest skydive in history. Aikins was given massive responsibilities from the start. “I end up designing the equipment, training Felix to do the jump, working hand in hand with him for 3½ years designing all the equipment and basically running the skydive portion of the project,” Aikins said.
Mike Todd, Felix Baumgartner, Joe Kittinger, Art Thompson, Luke Aikins

Mike Todd, Felix Baumgartner, Joe Kittinger, Art Thompson, Luke Aikins

© Red Bull Content Pool

He also got to work with John Kittinger, the man who held the record for the longest recorded freefall at 4 minutes, 36 seconds. This proved to be equally as thrilling as working on the project itself. “I grew up as a little kid knowing who Joe Kittinger was,” Aikins said. “I knew who jumped from the highest.”
When the Oct. 14, 2012 jump occurred, Aikins was in Red Bull Mission Control. As Baumgartner experienced fogging on his face shield, it was Aikins who was directly in communication with the Austrian jumper to talk him through what to do. As the jump from more than 128,000 feet – more than 24 miles above ground – happened, Aikins was one of many team members feeling the thrill of shattering many records. Though Kittinger’s freefall record would remain intact, as Baumgartner timed out at 4:22 before pulling the ripcord.
This project was especially important to Aikins’ career, as it showed him a different way he could use his varied skill set on a stunt that would thrill the world. “It also let me experience that I was engineering things. I was designing equipment. I was testing equipment. Things that I always thought I could maybe do, but I never had an opportunity,” Aikins said. “What Stratos did is it opened my mind up that, even though I don’t have an engineering degree from college, I can run a team. I can develop a flight test program. I can do all these things I thought I wasn’t capable of doing. I learned all of that because of Stratos and them giving me more and more reins to make that jump happen.”
03

GIGANTIC LEAP

What Red Bull Stratos did also was open him up to other opportunities. He did some work in movies like Iron Man 3 and Transformers. He participated in a wingsuit race with Red Bull. He was also approached with an off-the-wall ideal: skydiving without a parachute.
Aikins initially dismissed it, saying that Gary Connery had already flown his wingsuit into a field of cardboard boxes to cushion his landing. This new idea, however, would be to jump from 25,000 feet and freefall without a parachute. His landing would be cushioned by what would best be termed a giant slide, where he would hit high on the sidewall and come down and glide to the ground. He thought of his wife, Monica, and son, Logan. He passed, saying that he’d like to help them find someone to do it.
Yet the idea never left Aikins’ mind. After a couple of weeks, he started to ask himself if this could be possible. He started to formulate ideas and called back the people who had pitched him on the stunt. He proposed that instead of jumping into a giant slide, a large net would be constructed to catch him. When the sponsors went for it, the background work began.
The 100 x 100-foot net was perfected over time. He made test jumps with parachutes where he pulled the ripcord low to the ground. He would only do the jump without a parachute once, at the event on July 30, 2016, in Simi Valley, CA. In preparing, he worked with a sports psychologist, Michael Gervais.
Gervais asked how Aikins was approaching the jump, whether it was just another jump or the most momentous of his life. After much contemplation, Aikins determined it was just another jump, and the pair worked accordingly to get the jumper in the right mindset.
When the date to jump came, it was another person close to Aikins who helped him. Farrington and Aikins grew close after Aikins’ family settled in the Pacific Northwest. The pair had performed thousands of jumps together, and Farrington had worked on every Red Bull project with Aikins with the exception of Red Bull Stratos.
Farrington was by Aikins’ side as the ascent happened. Farrington noticed that some nerves were hitting his cousin. So he did something that only close family members could do to release tension. “Andy reached over and gave me a charley horse on my leg,” Aikins recalled. “He meant a lot of time, relax. I don’t know how he could tell that I was freaking out. I had sunglasses and an oxygen mask on. As soon as he did that I snapped out of it. I thought of all the work, all the training, all the preparation. Everything that went into it and I was sure that everything was going to be OK. From that moment on it was just a jump. Though there was a moment on the way up where I’m like, ‘What am I doing?’”
“I could see him just kind of sitting there and like his wheels were turning and he was kind of getting in his own head a little bit,” Farrington said. “And I noticed it and I just tapped him on the leg. And I was like, ‘Hey, just relax, chill out. We’ve got a long time.’ He said that was pretty important and pretty key. And then give him an extra 10 minutes on the way up to kind of reset himself where he needed to be for that jump.”
The jump itself was a spectacular feat. Aikins showed his target from the plane looked like a postage stamp from almost five miles up. He was able to maneuver and do flips to prepare for landing. He locked hands with the other three skydivers, including Farrington, to make different formations. It really looked like another jump, until three of them pulled their ripcords and Aikins kept falling. Let’s have Aikins describe what happened next.
“It’s pure focus,” Aikins said. “It’s funny, because I hear the same story with athletes, whether it’s a baseball player or football player or someone in the Olympics. Or a Navy SEAL going on a raid into a building to rescue somebody. I never thought that I would experience it the same way they describe things,” Aikins continued.
“In that moment your focus and training kind of just takes over.”
Luke Aikins
“You’re almost on autopilot,” Aikins said, “which is very cool because the physical acts you’re not really thinking about. It lets you focus on all the external stuff that goes into making that jump happen. Where I need to be. What’s the wind doing? Where do I need to move? How do I set up? What’s happening next? Everything slowed down so that baseball looked huge coming at me. They call it being in the zone, or whatever you want to call it. I always thought that I’d experienced that, but in that moment from like 5,000 feet down it was all just automatic. I had to say to myself to roll over.
“I had to roll over onto my back. I actually had to look blind at the sky just before I hit the net. But I knew I wasn’t going to drift off the net because of all the practicing and stuff we’d done. That moment in that jump everything was hyperly slowed down.”
A couple seconds before hitting the net, Aikins flipped so that his back would hit the net and his body would bend accordingly. Even though he hit the net just outside of the middle, he knew he was safe. He gave himself a moment to soak in the gravity of the accomplishment, and when the net was lowered to the ground he stood up with fists raised in triumph.
“When I saw the net come up at the corners and it rolled me into the middle, I vibrate thinking about that,” Aikins said. “It made my whole body, even now, that is a rush and a feeling that I’m afraid to chase because I’m afraid that I’ll never experience that level again. I think if you chase that, it’s like a guy on drugs chasing that first high. The feeling was unbelievable, and that feeling of accomplishment in that moment. I kicked and waved my arms for a second when I was in the net. And then I stopped and didn’t move at all. Everyone was worried for that split second because I wasn’t moving. What I’d done at that time, I did what Mike Gervais, the sports psychologist told me. ‘Make sure you take a moment to enjoy this.’ After that, rah, let out that emotion and really scream after I landed in the net. I took a second, took a breath and I couldn’t believe it. We did it.”
04

MEET ANDY

Farrington is a big part of that “We,” both for Plane Swap and throughout Aikins’ career. Though he’s six years younger than Aikins (48), Farrington (42) has more of a brotherly relationship with his cousin. The two own homes on the same 40-acre plot in Washington state. Both their homes have airplane hangars and plenty of area to skydive. Their children have grown up about as close as siblings, and like Aikins, Farrington was skydiving on his 16th birthday before getting his driver’s license.
Andy Farrington Copper Peak

Andy Farrington Copper Peak

© Red Bull Content Pool

Farrington is an accomplished athlete in his own right. An expert in wingsuit flying and able to perform skydiving acrobatics, Farrington has been one of the go-to people for some high-profile jumps. He won the inaugural Red Bull Aces Wingsuit race in 2014. He was one of the many wingsuit flyers who lit up the night sky over Los Angeles in 2019 during the most recent Super Moon. BASE Jumping around the world has been his calling card. He’s also been in movies, and even made several wingsuit jumps from the Sears Tower in Chicago during a movie filming.
His search for that hard-to-find feeling in flight is one of his motivating passions when it comes to his own flights of fancy. “BASE Jumping off a rock or like a solid platform, the first section where it's like no air and you feel this speed just starting to pick up and pick up and pick up is a pretty surreal feeling like if you're going through trees or in between little cliff lines and all that,” Farrington said. “There's nothing that makes you feel more like a superhero than that. I mean, it's a childhood dream. It's the closest that you're flying by yourself. You’ve got some nylon around you and you do have a parachute on and everything, but when you're in the trenches and the trees and everything, it's a surreal experience for sure.”
Andy Farrington Rampage

Andy Farrington Rampage

© Red Bull Content Pool

Farrington will continue to push the envelope, as he finds many new destinations to conquer for never-before-seen jumps where he’ll be “flying wingsuits past some pretty iconic locations, whether it be Mount Rushmore, the St. Louis Arch or the Hollywood sign, or the Space Needle in our hometown, or flying by some pretty iconic locations and maybe cap it off at the Statue of Liberty.”
05

PLANE SWAP

That made Farrington a natural to partner up for Plane Swap. The pair work closely near daily on making refinements at their home bases. Occasionally they trek down to San Luis Obispo, CA for more training sessions with the lead engineer on this project, Paulo Iscold. The focus is on thrilling the world with another event that will be talked about for years to come.
“The goal is, I’m going to fly one, he’s going to fly the other one. Nobody else in them,” Aikins said. “We’re going to go up to 14,000 feet. We’re going to put the planes in a formation dive at the ground, with the speed brake out where they’re locked in where there’s no way out and they can’t fly away. We push them over into this dive. Now they’re on a trajectory headed straight to the spot over the desert. At that point, I’m going to get out of my plane, he’s going to get out of his plane, and we’re going to switch planes.”
Planes Dive at Sunset

Planes Dive at Sunset

© Michael Clark / Red Bull Content Pool

Already they have done practice jumps from planes using the speed brake specially created for their Cessna planes. The goal is to be able to successfully get into the second plane, though that one will already have a pilot. Both talk about an almost unspoken language they have with each other, where a hand movement or head bob will signal the other whether they need help or are going in a different direction mid-freefall.
What’s exciting about this feat is how they are challenging the laws of gravity to suit them to make this unprecedented stunt a reality.
“It's taking almost every notion of flight and almost like crumpling up and throwing it away.”
Andy Farrington
“Like we're trying to create some drag. We're trying to make the airplane fly straight down at a reasonable speed, and kind of making it so it works for our needs… With the science behind it and the data and everything that we adjusted and tweaked and made it work so that it's really close to being the way we want it.”
Don’t miss this first-of-its-kind aviation spectacle on April 24th exclusively on Hulu where Luke Aikins and Andy Farrington will raise the bar in aviation artistry and bravery.