Refresher is not bureaucracy. It's when the system recalibrates after a break, an emergency, or a change. Knowing when it's needed and what to expect changes the risk curve.
Motor learning research (USPA SIM Section 4) is clear: procedures requiring rapid response under stress decay faster than "slow" skills (exit, pattern, landing). A skydiver who hasn't jumped for 90 days loses little in freefall attitude but loses a lot in cutaway reaction time. Refresher restores exactly this: automatic response.
Formal refresher is not the same as "doing a couple of jumps to warm up". Refresher includes: repeated ground drills, verbal procedure check, gear inspection with rigger, first jump under observation. It's a structured system to ensure correct reaction is still available under pressure.
Italian community practical indicator: break longer than 60-90 days. USPA "currency" codifies 60 days for A license, 90 for higher licenses. Above these values: refresher recommended. Above 6 months: refresher usually mandatory at most schools.
After cutaway, low-altitude line-twist resolved, off-target landing — any event that activated the system. Post-emergency refresher is not punitive: it's calibration. Adrenaline changes perception, procedure needs to be brought back to automatic level.
New container, main downsize, reserve change, AAD replacement. Each system element has slightly different geometry — muscle memory must recalibrate. A gear-change-focused refresher eliminates friction.
Not a technical "refresher" but a mandatory operational brief: DZ landing pattern, local altitudes, specific aircraft, no-fly areas, alternate landing point. This briefing is required by most DZs on first jump.
Many Italian DZs require seasonal refresher at season start (March-April) regardless of days off. Prudential practice that reconvenes community after winter. Check calendar with your school.
First wingsuit FFC (First Flight Course), first canopy-piloting camp, first freefly sky jump (post-tunnel): every transition opens new discipline-specific emergency modes. Refresher is integrated into the specialisation course.
Emergency procedures review, regulatory updates, local DZ changes. Typically conducted in classroom or briefing room, documents provided.
Practical drill with hanging harness: cutaway pull + reserve pull, correct body position, focus management. Repeated until fluid automatic motion.
Complete kit inspection with rigger/instructor: bridle, BOC, handles, AAD activation, reserve inspection date. Pre-jump corrections if needed.
First jump post-refresher with observing instructor. Focus: clean exit, deployment at altitude, pattern, on-target landing. Debrief after.