Wednesday, 11 April 2012

Horrible impact at Mt Tamborine



On Monday the 9th of April, I was ridge soaring at Mt Tamborine on the Gold Coast, Queensland, Australia. I had my right wing facing the hill and I had good height and separation from the ridge. Suddenly I was hit by a strong bullet type thermal on my left wing. It pushed my left wing upwards and sent me turning right in strong sink toward the ridge. I weight shifted left to counter act the turn and steer out of it but nothing was happening. Realising my only option was to speed up and turn right I weight shifted right and speed up but it was too late and I'd lost too much height.

I clipped the 35m high treetops and began plummeting to the ground. I was now just a passenger. Branches in face, then bang.. hit a 6inch thick branch which broke off. Bang again hit another thick branch which broke off. Then crunch, bang I hit the ground. Fortunately I think my right wing hit the ground first and crumpled, which broke a lot of my fall.

I couldn't breath and desperately tried to get some air, but nothing. I was winded and had partially punctured lungs. Finally I was able to get small bits of air in my lungs. I was still zipped up in my harness head down in the forest. It took a while to get out of my harness, but once I did I realised that except for being shaken and in a lot pain, I was basically alright and had survived with no broken bones. It was a miracle.

Getting out of there took hours, lots of help, ant bites, leeches, mossies, stinging leaves and branches. But I'm out and will make a full recovery.

The lesson here is if you get kicked toward a ridge and you have enough height, steer with the kick. Had I just turned right after being kicked I would've been able to turn over the treetops and get away from the ridge.

3 comments:

zhenshi said...

Great that you are going to make a full recovery. Well done to all who helped with the rescue and thanks for the insight into the incident - I think sharing these experiences, and how we react to them may help prevent another accident in the future, though I must say the unpredictable strong lift and sink like that is more than a little scary!

Unknown said...

I'm happy you are going to recover mate, that was a long fall!

Anonymous said...

Man, glad to hear you are ok. I've never seen such a trashed glider tho.
Pete S