<p>Photos from the 44th annual Lost Prairie Boogie.</p>
<p>Photos from the 44th annual Lost Prairie Boogie.</p>
<p>With 30 years experience in skydiving and more than 1,600 jumps
under his belt, Joe Pete still celebrates after a good jump Friday
morning during the Lost Prairie Boogie.</p>
<p>Photos from the 44th annual Lost Prairie Boogie.</p>
<p>Photos from the 44th annual Lost Prairie Boogie.</p>
<p>Photos from the 44th annual Lost Prairie Boogie.</p>
<p>Photos from the 44th annual Lost Prairie Boogie.</p>
<p>Sergei Yaromich repacks his parachute in preparation for another
jump at the 2011 Lost Prairie Boogie.</p>
<p>Canopies fill the skies during the 2011 Lost Prairie Boogie. As
of Friday afternoon 213 people had registered to be part of the
44th annual skydiving event.</p>
<p>Divers perform a "dirt dive," where they practice the moves they
will execute during freefall, moments before loading onto the plane
during the 2011 Lost Prairie Boogie.</p>
<p>Skydivers load onto the DeHavilland Twin Otter plane that will
take them to their jump height of 13,000 feet above the surface. A
maximum of 23 jumpers can be loaded into the planes brought to
Skydive Lost Prairie by Skydive Arizona.</p>
<p>Photos from the 44th annual Lost Prairie Boogie.</p>
<p>With 30 years experience in skydiving and more than 1,600 jumps
under his belt, Joe Pete still celebrates after a good jump Friday
morning during the Lost Prairie Boogie.</p>
<p>Photos from the 44th annual Lost Prairie Boogie.</p>
<p>Photos from the 44th annual Lost Prairie Boogie.</p>
<p>Photos from the 44th annual Lost Prairie Boogie.</p>
<p>Photos from the 44th annual Lost Prairie Boogie.</p>
<p>Sergei Yaromich repacks his parachute in preparation for another
jump at the 2011 Lost Prairie Boogie.</p>
<p>Canopies fill the skies during the 2011 Lost Prairie Boogie. As
of Friday afternoon 213 people had registered to be part of the
44th annual skydiving event.</p>
<p>Divers perform a "dirt dive," where they practice the moves they
will execute during freefall, moments before loading onto the plane
during the 2011 Lost Prairie Boogie.</p>
<p>Skydivers load onto the DeHavilland Twin Otter plane that will
take them to their jump height of 13,000 feet above the surface. A
maximum of 23 jumpers can be loaded into the planes brought to
Skydive Lost Prairie by Skydive Arizona.</p>