This article was supposed to be written on Monday…
but the sky has its own schedule.
It’s Wednesday now, well… what can I say.
This text was meant to be ready, as always, on Monday. I even had a beautiful, fully formed introduction in my head. But try sitting down at the keyboard when your entire day is shifted. The alarm screams at 4:00 AM, and your consciousness fades around 8:00 PM because your body simply says, “stop, that’s enough for today.”
There’s no time here for boredom, silence, or calm reflection. Everything happens faster than my hands can write, and no description can truly capture what’s happening in the sky.
Every hour brings new emotions,
new attempts, new “puzzles” arranged in the air. I’m involved emotionally, physically, and photographically in building a large formation in the Florida sky.
And that means the publication had to wait.
Because when history is being created in the sky, the ground must give way. That’s just how it is.
And that’s what reality looks like here. The daily agenda is adrenaline; instead of peaceful writing — another jump, another call, another change in the lineup. And I am in all of this up to my ears.
Life on a record schedule follows its own calendar, its own clock, completely ignoring my rhythm.
The emotions from the three women’s records hadn’t even had time to land, and already above my head another chapter of history is being “assembled.” Right now, at this very moment.
The magic number: 107.
As I write this, the fifth attempt to set a 107-way formation is in progress.
It’s the second day of refining the lineup, the synchronization, and this entire cosmic mandala. You have to dance on the wings in the air, having literally a few dozen minutes and zero margin for error.
As if that weren’t enough, they’re not only breaking records — they’re creating a whole new dimension of women piloting large formations.
Carmen Juneau, between one base formation and the next, set a record as a female pilot for a 36-way.
Just like that. As if it were just another item to check off the list:
“parachute — check, jumpsuit — check, piloting record — done.”
The sky is alive here. Women are writing history in real time, and all of us are witnessing something that will become legend any moment now.
Returning, in writing, to the emotions from a week ago.
The women showed that nothing is impossible, and I have the honor of being at the very heart of it all.
Three days. That’s all it took for 25 incredible women and three indispensable camera flyers to conquer the sky over Jump Florida Skydive. These brave skydivers rewrote the history of world records.
The previous women’s record dated back to 2007! And here, now, right before my eyes, something has emerged that not long ago sounded like a dream on the edge of absurdity.
And yet — women are no geese, they have their own language (and their own sky!).
And just like that… they conquered the world.
November 13, 2025 — 16-way sequential — 2 points.
Meaning: the girls built a 16-way diamond, and then, just to top it off, swapped places in the formation.

fot. Cat Isgrigg – USA
November 13, 2025 – second record – 21 women in a sequential jump – 2 points

fot. Cat Isgrigg – USA
Third record – November 14 – 23 women – 2 points

25 Female Skydivers, One Vision, and Unbelievable Focus
Bringing together so many talented, mentally and physically strong skydivers in one place is an accomplishment in itself. Each of them has a different story, a different style, different experience — yet in the air they must become a single organism. A unified, synchronized, perfectly planned project with one goal: to break a world record.
This is not just a jump.
It’s logistics, precision, hours of briefings, mental preparation, analysis.
Then — absolute focus in that one crucial moment that lasts only a few minutes.
The international power of women — beyond borders and divisions
In the sky, women from Canada, the United Kingdom, the USA, Poland, and the Czech Republic meet one another, along with participants born in Belarus and Russia who now live in the United States. Together, they form an exceptionally diverse and international community.
Up there, there is no politics, no prejudice, no noise, no emotionally charged divisions.
What matters is the person, the passion, and the goal.
They prove that even though the world can bombard us with negativity, manipulation, and fear, more than 13,000 feet above the ground a different law reigns: the law of mutual support and trust.
One Polish woman among the record-setters — and a pride that lifts you off the ground
Among this remarkable group is one Polish skydiver — Justyna — who, with her talent, determination, and courage, is writing her name into the history of world skydiving. Her presence adds a personal and deeply moving note to this event. It’s not just a record — it’s a reason for pride, an inspiration, and proof that dreams have no boundaries.
And me? I have the honor of witnessing this history
A chronicle from the sky and the ground — my mission in this story
During this event, I play the role of the person weaving all the threads into one narrative. Up close, I accompany each participant, capturing their emotions, energy, and concentration. I talk to them, listen, and catch the things you can’t see from the outside: the stress before boarding, the thrill after a successful jump, the pride after completing another formation.
At the same time, I collect material from every source I can.
Footage from the sky, jump recordings, photos taken by the other women.
All of it will eventually create a full, multidimensional picture of these three intense days.
After the event, from all these scattered pieces of history, I’ll assemble a single whole — a film. It will tell the story of the record through the lens of people, their emotions, and their shared mission. I give this history shape, rhythm, and a memory that will last for years.
And I love every moment of it. Because it’s not every day that you stand next to an event that is about to enter world-record history.
Determination, passion, and rising above all barriers
This record is not just a formation in the air.
It is a symbol of:
• determination that does not back down from any challenge,
• passion that connects people across cultures, languages, and continents,
• a shared goal that makes every step, every jump, every breath meaningful,
• the strength of women who know how to work together, support one another, and rise above every barrier.
This isn’t just about flying.
This is about the fact that when women decide to do something together — they do it spectacularly.
Waiting for what comes next
And now… we wait.
The team, the sky, this entire wild, colorful, international tribe of people who decided to do something that, on paper, looks like science fiction.
Because what’s happening now — women together with men — is a different level of scale.
Coordinating 8 planes, 107 skydivers, 5 camera flyers. Full synchronization, perfect stability, concentration, physical strength, mental resilience when adrenaline hits like a hammer…
This is not “another attempt.” This is architecture in the air. A choreography that lasts minutes and requires years of experience.
We are all witnessing something that could happen at literally any moment.
The sky is stretched tight like a string. The planes are ready. People in helmets and jumpsuits take their last deep breaths. Every movement, every gesture, every glance matters.
And we stand on the ground, feeling in the air that electric silence before something huge.
If they manage to assemble the entire formation today, we will witness the most beautiful proof that when people join forces, the sky is no longer the limit.
And that’s exactly what we are waiting for now.
With hearts pounding, full of hope, and the awareness that history is once again standing a kilometer above us, ready to descend to the ground in the form of a record.
Any moment now.
A few photos of the girls and a few shots of the large formation, as a preview of the full gallery.











