2ND Amend. Issues & Anything Else I Want
This is a place to discuss Second Amendment Issues Along with Issues I Feel Relevent or Not........
About Glocker


Member Since:
July 08, 2006
Last Signed In:
December 12, 2007
Profile Views:
2476
Blog Views:
2274
View Profile
Send a Message
Send To A Friend
Sign Guestbook
Add as a Friend

Previous Posts
More on Sandy Berger's Theft.
Sandy Berger Pleads Guilty
Skydiver Celebrates Christmas Early (And Uses All 9 Lives)
In U.S., women go wild for hunting......
Profiling: A Quiz
Philanthropy Expert: Conservatives Are More Generous
More Proffesional Athletes Are Carrying Firearms For Protection
A Humorus Look at Gun Control
Archives
November 06
December 06
January 07
February 07
March 07
April 07
May 07
June 07
July 07
August 07
September 07
October 07
November 07
December 07
January 08
February 08
March 08
April 08
May 08
June 08
July 08
August 08
September 08
October 08
November 08
December 08
January 09

"That the said Constitution shall never be construed to authorize Congress to infringe the just liberty of the press or the rights of conscience; or to prevent the people of the United States who are peaceable citizens from keeping their own arms..." 
Samuel Adams 

The Constitution preserves the advantage of being armed which Americans possess over the people of almost every other nation...(where) the governments are afraid to trust the people with arms.
James Madison

 

Subscribe!
RSS 2.0 feed RSS 2.0
Add to My Yahoo
Add to My Google
Add to Bloglines
Add to My AOL

Share!


Glocker - > 2ND Amend. Issues & Anything Else I Want -> Skydiver Celebrates Christmas Early (And Uses All 9 Lives)
Skydiver Celebrates Christmas Early (And Uses All 9 Lives)

How lucky is this guy? Have any of you ever leaped out of a perfectly good airplane before, or had an inclination to do so?

I would say this guy recieved an early Christmas present. And the folks at the end of the article, seems luck was also on their side...............

 

 

I'm going to die, skydiver thought as he fell 15,000ft . . . into a bush

·  Horror plunge as both parachutes fail

·  He survives as brambles break fall

 

A skydiver who had both parachutes fail during a 15,000 ft (4,000m) jump was spared death by the prickly branches of a blackberry bush.

Michael Holmes, 25, from Jersey, went into a spin when his main parachute became tangled during a two mile drop over Taupo, in New Zealand.

He was convinced that he was going to die when his auxiliary parachute failed, but escaped with a punctured lung and a broken ankle.

Mr Holmes’s ordeal was captured on a helmet-mounted camera, which continued filming even after he landed.

He landed in a blackberry bush, 30 metres from a carpark, where firefighters rushed to the scene to cut him free.

Mr Holmes, a skydiving instructor from Taupo Tandem Skydiving, recalled the incident, which took place on December 12, from his bed in Waikato Hospital. “When the second parachute didn’t open I realised it was all over,” he said. “I was going to die. You don’t have much time to say goodbye. I just said: ‘S**t I’m going to die’.”

“The next thing I remember is seeing friends, firemen, ambulances and police dogs.”

His ordeal was witnessed by John Siddles, a local man, and his 18-year-old son, Adam. The pair were at a nearby lookout watching the parachutists to decide if they wanted to try it themselves.

“One of the skydivers was coming down and going round and round,” Mr Siddles said. “He looked like he was all tangled up or something. He just came down, straight down. It looked like it had opened but it’s hard to say.

“We drove to the site where the skydiver landed and asked if we could help, but fellow skydivers had landed nearby and had things under control. It was a bit yucky. We decided it’s not for us.”

Constable Mark Bond of Taupo police said that a dog handler driving past was flagged down by a member of the public who thought the parachutist might be in trouble.

Mr Holmes, the youngest British person ever to qualify as a skydiving instructor, has been active in the sport for seven years. He was found unconscious after he landed in a conservation area in Five Mile Bay, Taupo, and was airlifted to hospital.

Hugh Barclay, a spokesman for Taupo Tandem Skydiving, said that due to the location of the landing there was some difficulty extracting Mr Holmes.

He said that the company will make no further comment pending an investigation by the New Zealand Parachute Industry Association.

New Zealand has up to three non-fatal accidents annually out of 70,000 solo parachute jumps.

Skydiving has its origins in the military and has been practiced since the early 1900s. Competitions first started in the 1930s and it became an international sport in 1951.

 

Lucky escapes

  Flight Sergeant Nicholas Alkemade survived a fall estimated to have been 18,000ft during the Second World War by landing in a heavy snowdrift. He had leapt from a blazing Lancaster bomber

  In 1972 Vesna Vulovic, a Yugoslav air stewardess, fell 10,160 metres (33,000ft) without a parachute, and lived after a DC9 passenger jet blew up over the former Czechoslovakia. She landed in woodland

  In 1993 New Zealander Klint Freemantle, 22, plunged 3,000 feet into a 3ft-deep duck pond. He emerged almost without a scratch

  The French parachutist Didier Dahran survived after being sucked into a cyclone that sent him spinning up to 25,000ft in 1993. He was in the air for two hours

Posted in these Groups:
Topics:
posted by Glocker on Thursday, December 21, 2006 at 09:08 AM
Report a Violation
Viewed 228 times
0 comments from 0 users

  (You need to be signed in to leave a comment)

BAKERSFIELD.COM HOT TOPICS:

Advertisement