Lisa Olsen Explained

National Team:Canada
Birth Date:7 October 1956
Birth Place:Canada
Updated:21 September 2016

Lisa Olsen (born October 7, 1956) is a Canadian-American skydiver.

Early life

Olsen originally studied at the University of Alberta and was a music major. She considered a career as a flutist in a symphony orchestra. However, after joining the university parachuting club and making her first jump, her goals changed. She transferred to the faculty of arts and, after graduating, went into nursing as a career. She acknowledged that she found her first jump terrifying, and stated that all jumpers are terrified the first time jumping. Over time, however, Olsen came to view skydiving as a learning experience rather than a thrill seeking activity.[1]

Career

Olsen won the Gold Medal in Women's Individual Accuracy at the XIX World Parachuting Championships in Sweden in 1988.[2] Although she had fewer jumps than some of her competitors, she edged out two women from China on the final jump.[3] In 1982, Olsen, along with teammates Brenda Blue, Kathy Kangas, Eileen Vaughan, and Bev Watson, won the Silver Medal in Women's Team Accuracy at the XVI World Parachuting Championships in Czechoslovakia—now Slovakia--[2] after which they posed in bikinis in a 1982 issue of CanPara (Canadian Parachutist).[4] This was the first time a team of Canadian women medaled at the world championships.[5] [2] At the time, Olsen had about 800 jumps.[1]

She later moved to the United States and finished eighth in the Hit'n'Rock competition at the Parachutists Over Phorty Society meet in Jordan in 1997.[6] By 2003, she was living in Carbondale, Colorado and working as an emergency room nurse at Valley View Hospital. By that point she had 2,500 jumps and was training for the 2003 US Nationals, despite still having fewer jumps than many of her competitors. As an emergency room nurse, she well understood the dangers of her sport, but chose to focus solely on performing optimally on every jump rather than on the risks.[3] She did not compete in the Nationals that year.[7] She also served as Chief Judge in Style & Accuracy at the 2004 US National Skydiving Championships.

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: Terror in the skies . July 29, 1983. Lethbridge Herald. May 3, 2018.
  2. Web site: Canadian Medal Winners at the Past WPC's . Canadian Sport Parachuting Association . 2011-05-14 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20110718132317/http://www.cspa.ca/en/competition/canadian-wins-at-wpcs . 2011-07-18 .
  3. News: Condon . Scott . Skydiver aims for world title . 21 July 2020 . . May 8, 2003.
  4. [Canadian Sport Parachuting Association#CanPara|CanPara Magazine]
  5. Web site: Northwestern Ontario Sports Hall of Fame . . 1989 . 2021-11-22 .
  6. Web site: Fourth World POPS meet June 3rd-9th 1997 - Aqaba, Jordan. https://web.archive.org/web/20160304054010/http://www.thepops.org/world/w1997.php. Parachutists Over Phorty Society . dead. 2020-07-21. 2016-03-04.
  7. Web site: 2003 U.S. National Skydiving Championships. Wagner. Tim. 2020-07-21.