A British paratrooper whose parachute failed to open correctly sustained only “minor injuries” after a 15,000ft fall took him through the roof of a house in California, crashing into the kitchen in a burst of insulation and roofing material.
The soldier, who was not immediately named, jumped out of a plane during a High Altitude Low Opening (Halo) exercise, a technique used by special forces. He lost control as he approached the ground near Camp Roberts, in Atascadero.
According to a local TV station, KSBY, the accident happened around 5pm on 6 July.
Several neighbours saw the parachutist spiraling in the air. Photographs from the scene showed a hole in the tiled roof of the home and a soldier, wearing SAS uniform, in the kitchen surrounded by debris.
Neighbours rushed to the house.
“I ran in to make sure he was OK and I checked on him and his eyes were open but I wasn’t sure if there were any injuries. I didn’t want anyone to move him,” Rose Martin told KSBY.
“It’s a miracle in my estimation, really. I mean, who lands like that without a parachute and lives?”
Linda Sallady, the homeowner’s mother, said: “Came through the roof, through the tresses and there’s not that much damage in the house. It’s amazing. It’s mostly the ceiling, the sheetrock. He missed the counters, appliances, everything.”
Atascadero police said the parachutist was “conscious but stunned with complaints of pain but no visible serious injuries”.
He was taken to the hospital for treatment.
The British Ministry of Defence said in a statement: “There has been a parachuting incident involving a British soldier training alongside American allies in California. The soldier received minor injuries and is recovering well.”
Nice of him to drop in...
Nice of him to drop in...
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Re: Nice of him to drop in...
Must have been hair-raisingLinda Sallady, the homeowner’s mother, said: “Came through the roof, through the tresses"
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Re: Nice of him to drop in...
Ahh the British gift for understatement.The British Ministry of Defence said in a statement: “There has been a parachuting incident involving a British soldier training alongside American allies in California. The soldier received minor injuries and is recovering well.”
Okay... There's all kinds of things wrong with what you just said.
Re: Nice of him to drop in...
Nice one.MajGenl.Meade wrote: ↑Mon Jul 12, 2021 5:21 pmMust have been hair-raisingLinda Sallady, the homeowner’s mother, said: “Came through the roof, through the tresses"
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Re: Nice of him to drop in...
The homeowner should have poured him glass of some nice Paso Robles cab from that area, but it doesn't sound like they even offered him water.
Re: Nice of him to drop in...
Obviously even a twisted parachute will slow a skydiver somewhat. Had he hit a "tress" or a rafter, or the ground, even though he was not near terminal velocity, he'd have probably been killed.
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Re: Nice of him to drop in...
As was told to me when I took skydiving lessons back in my younger days, "it's not the fall that kills you, it's the sudden stop at the end." (I was also told that if my 'chute didn't open, just bring it back and we'll give you another one).
So long as he was falling under a streamer 'chute (which would prevent him from reaching anything close to terminal velocity) and then hits enough compressible/crushable/compactable stuff at the end to take off even more of the final speed so the stop isn't quite so sudden, it is possible to survive a parachute malfunction.
Although I wouldn't want to try to make a career out of it .....
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Re: Nice of him to drop in...
It probably helped to keep his feet together too, otherwise one those infamous tresses could have cut him in two. The streamer probably slowed him even more as it funneled through the holes he created before he hit the floor. I'll bet it still hurt.
A friend of Doc's, one of only two B-29 bombers still flying.