2,800' AGL used to be standard jump altitude for a hop & pop, but that was a few years before I earned my PPL and came to understand how airplanes work.
A group of us had been asked to do a demo jump into a friend's birthday party at an airport, so we took the twin Beech. The winds were around 20 knots, I couldn't collapse my canopy upon landing, and so I was dragged across a taxiway face down. The nylon webbing of a leg strap was almost completely burned through, so the rig wasn't safe to jump until repaired. The winds were even higher the next day, and we lost an engine on the return flight. Over the airport everyone bailed out and several were injured due to hard landings and being dragged. I was forced to stay with the aircraft, and knew that I was going to die - you know, with that dead engine and all.
If given the option today, I'd choose the airplane over the door.