This seems like good time to post links to the two still photos of the jump salutes, plus the ground elapsed times, dialogue, and comments in the Apollo 16 Lunar Surface Journal:
AS16-113-18339HRhttps://www.nasa.gov/wp-content/uploads/static/history/alsj/a16/AS16-113-18339HR.jpgAS16-113-18340HRhttps://www.nasa.gov/wp-content/uploads/static/history/alsj/a16/AS16-113-18340HR.jpgApollo 16 Lunar Surface Journal (condensed version below) https://www.nasa.gov/history/alsj/a16/a16.alsepoff.html#1202523120:25:23 Duke: Hey, John, this is perfect, with the LM and the Rover and you and Stone Mountain. And the old flag. Come on out here and give me a salute. Big Navy salute.
120:25:35 Young: Look at this. (Pause)
[John walks into view and waves his right arm in and out at shoulder level to position the restraining cable so that he can salute.]
120:25:40 England: That's a pretty outstanding picture here, I tell you.
120:25:42 Duke: Come on; a little bit closer. Okay, here we go. A big one.
[John bends his knees slightly, springs about a meter off the ground, and salutes. He is off the ground about 1.45 seconds which, in the lunar gravity field, means that he launched himself at a velocity of about 1.17 m/s and reached a maximum height of 0.42 m. This superb picture is AS16-113-18339. Note that John's total weight - body, suit, and backpack, is about 30 kilograms or 65 pounds. In Houston, Tony chuckles with delight.]
[Jones - "John's jumps says to me he's got a great deal of confidence this early."]
[Duke - "His balance was really extraordinary."]
120:25:49 Duke: Off the ground. Once more. (Pause) There we go.
[John's second jump lasts about 1.30 seconds and, consequently, his launch velocity is about 1.05 m/s and his maximum height is 0.34 m. This picture is AS16-113-18340.]
120:25:54 Young: (Garbled) (Pause)
[While John walks toward him, Charlie takes the Hasselblad off his RCU bracket and gives it to John.]
120:26:05 Young: I'd like to see an Air Force salute, Charlie, but I don't think they salute in the Air Force.
[Charlie reaches the flag and bounces around to face John.]
120:26:08 Duke: Yes, sir; we do.
120:26:09 Young: (Laughing)
120:26:10 Duke: And fly high and straight and land soft.
120:26:13 Young: Okay, Charlie, say when.
120:26:15 Duke: Here we go.
[Charlie salutes. The picture is AS16-113-18341.]
120:26:16 Young: Do it again.
120:26:17 Duke: One for you. Okay, wait a minute; one more.
[These pictures are AS16-113-18342 and 113-18343.]
120:26:19 England: This looks like a good time for some good news here....
120:26:20 Young: Okay.
120:26:21 Duke: (To Young) Got it?
120:26:21 England: ...The House passed the space budget yesterday, 277 to 60, which includes the vote for the Shuttle.
120:26:30 LM Crew: Beautiful. Wonderful. Beautiful.
[John and Charlie return to the Rover. Once again, Charlie does a leisurely skip, getting slightly off the ground each time. John takes the Hasselblad off the RCU bracket and walks back.]
120:26:33 Duke: Tony, again I'll say it, with that salute, I'm proud to be an American, I'll tell you. What a program and what a place and what an experience.
120:26:42 Young: And I'll say it too.
120:26:43 England: So am I.
120:26:44 Young: The country needs that Shuttle mighty bad. You'll see.
[John became the Chief of the Astronaut Office in 1975 and, later, appointed himself to command the first Shuttle flight. STS-1 was 36-orbit mission launched on April 12, 1981, the twentieth anniversary of Yuri Gagarin's Vostok 1 flight. The pilot - and only other crewmember - on STS-1 was Robert Crippen.]