Granny Skydive Fail

Granny Skydive Fail




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Granny Skydive Fail
WATCH: Skydiving granny, 92, flies over the Ozarks
Published: Mon May 16 2022 | Updated: Tue May 17 2022
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SPRINGFIELD, Mo. (KY3) - 92-year-old Ann Burd is a native of Buffalo, New York, but has lived in Willow Springs since the early 1970′s. Her husband has passed away. She is the matriarch of a family that includes eight children, 22 grandchildren, 20 great-grandchildren, and three great-great-grandchildren is still going strong.
It’s a family that loves to do things together like whitewater rafting or trips to Yellowstone. This past weekend while eating breakfast together, Ann’s grandson James announced he was taking his wife Andrea skydiving for her birthday.
“We got an unexpected response,” said James Simandl.
“I said, ‘Well, I’d like to do that,’” the 92-year-old grandma responded.
“I was in shock,” James recalled. “But she’s lived her life, and she gets to do whatever she wants.”
“I was not surprised,” Andrea chimed in. “She is up for anything.”
“We almost tried to talk her out of it,” said her daughter Cindi Breidt.
“I think everybody should experience something where they can say, ‘Yeah, I did that!’” Ann said in explaining why she decided to give skydiving a try.
So with their 92-year-old granny leading the way, six family members went off in the wild blue yonder, where the only hitch came when it was time for Ann to jump out of the plane.
“Well, I couldn’t get my legs out,” Ann said with a laugh. “They had to push and shove me before I could get out.”
“You really get that adrenaline rush when you first jump,” Cindi said.
“It happens so fast, and you’re above the clouds first,” Ann added. “I’m a believer in angels, so I felt like I was up there with the angels. I said a little prayer, but there was no fear.”
“I screamed just a fun scream,” James said. “It was a war cry for about 30 seconds or more because I felt free.”
“I thought it would be a lot scarier, but it was very calm,” Andrea said. “It felt safe.”
Ann recalled how much she appreciated the chance to see the world from a different perspective.
“The patchwork quilt of all the fields,” she said.
“But at my age, I couldn’t get up,” she laughed.
“We got to do it all together as a family,” Cindi said.
“She’s a legend now,” James said of his grandmother. “She was the first one to jump in the plane and the first one to jump out of it. Always up for the adventure.”
To report a correction or typo, please email digitalnews@ky3.com
Copyright 2022 KY3. All rights reserved.

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The thrillseeker tries to throw his reserve but the lines are also hopelessly entangled
THE last seconds as a skydiver comes tumbling out of the sky to his death have been captured in heart-stopping footage.
The video shows the skydiver leap from the plane, falling towards the ground at break-neck speed in a tragic fall that ultimately claims his life.
At the beginning of the footage, the daredevil can be seen throwing himself from the plane but barely 30 seconds in the skydiver tries to release his parachute and finds the lines hopelessly tangled.
In the dizzying head-cam footage, the skydiver is thrown to and fro in the air as he desperately tries to control the blue and white parachute.
The 36-year-old then tries to throw his second parachute but it appears to be similarly tangled, forcing him to try to untangle the lines.
In the last moments of the video, he can be heard to cry out in fear.
The man was rushed to hospital but died in the ambulance.
The skydiver is understood to have jumped out over the Gatchina district in the Leningrad region with the fateful incident taking place on August 5.
It is believed he jumped out over the village of Nikolskoye.
It has been reported that the man jumped from the Novgorod DOSAAF plane.
Saint-Petersburg authorities are now investigating the man's death.
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April 11, 2022, 9:52 PM · 4 min read
Jordan Hatmaker, 35, recovers in a hospital bed after surviving a botched skydive where her feet became entangled in her parachute, leading to her hitting the ground at 125mph. (Go Fund Me)
Jordan Hatmaker, 35, poses in the hospital in Suffolk, Virginia after a parachuting accident. (Go Fund Me)
Jordan Hatmaker, 35, in hospital shows the injuries to her spine. (Go Fund Me)
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A Virginia skydiver who became entangled in her parachute in the middle of her 13,500ft jump, has not only lived to tell the tale, but is in the midst of preparing for a summit of Mount Everest .
Jordan Hatmaker, a 35-year-old from Virginia Beach, Virginia, just barely survived from the near-death experience, forcing doctors to remark that it was “miraculous” she was not only alive, but not paralysed.
“9 days ago I never knew how much my world would change,” the adrenaline junkie wrote in a 23 November 2021 Instagram post.
She went on to detail how the 14 November jump was her 16th solo jump as an Accelerated Free Fall (AFF) student, making her just shy of receiving an A license, which provides proof that a new skydiver has completed their training and is now cleared to jump without supervision.
“I had a high speed malfunction called a Horseshoe where the bridle wrapped around my leg. The main didn’t come out & my leg stayed suspended up in the air,” the 35-year-old explained.
After her legs became ensnared in the ropes of her primary parachute, she set to releasing her reserve, which unfortunately got sent out in the opposite direction of the first one, leading to what those in the diving community refer to as a ‘downplane’.
“I regained a bit of control & was able to semi-steer myself. @ ~ 300ft, my main deployed too, sending me into an accelerated downplane spiral,” she explained.
It took all of 20 seconds from the moment Ms Hatmaker released the chord to when she hit the ground, where she remained fully conscious before being airlifted to Sentara Norfolk General Hospital in Virginia.
Ms Hatmaker spent a total of 25 days in hospital, five of which were spent in ICU, recovering from a shattered ankle, broken shinbone, a broken back and a spinal injury.
In a video posted to her Instagram feed, just days after the horrifying parachute incident, she provided an update on her recovery and even managed to share some laughs with her family nearby.
“I’ve got a pair of granny pantys around my knees,” she says in the video, before cracking a joke at how uncomfortable the sight must be making her off-camera father. “They’re about as big as the parachute that got me down to the ground,” she finishes, before breaking into as close to a bent over laugh as she can manage strapped into her hospital bed, back brace and all.
After undergoing several surgeries and relentless physical therapy, she was cleared to be discharged on 9 December from hospital to continue her healing process at home.
In a Christmas post shared to her account, just a few weeks after getting wheeled home, she is seen beaming with her family arm-in-arm around her while she stands propped up with a walker and back brace.
“​​Blessed to be home for the holidays,” the caption reads.
A Go Fund Me set up on Ms Hatmaker’s behalf provides the gruelling efforts the thrillseeker went through to to get back on her feet, noting in a January 2021 update that she’s “regained most of the throughout [her] body”.
The fundraiser, which was initiated by a friend of Ms Hatmaker’s, had the outset goal of raising $10,000 to help support the Virginia-native pay her medical bills, purchase gear to aid in her recovery and make up for the loss of funds she would experience from not being able to work while in recovery.
“With the funds, I was able to buy an adjustable hospital bed, additional bathroom equipment not covered by insurance, wheelchair accessories (like a cupholder-woohoo!), an extra walker, and many other things to help make disabled life easier,” she wrote in the latest update on the Go Fund Me.
“The first $1,000 bill just rolled in and I am so relieved to not have to stress about paying these hospital bills. I feel so blessed, as I know not everyone can say the same.”
In a three-month anniversary post of her accident, the adventure seeker revealed that she was up and walking around, without the assistance of crutches or walker.
“I walk with a slow, gangster swagger, but it’s incredibly freeing to leave the walking devices in the car as I stroll around a store or the house,” she wrote.
“I have the 𝗨𝗧𝗠𝗢𝗦𝗧 respect for those whose spinal cord injuries (& other severe injuries/diseases) have left their mobility greatly impacted; along with all the other internal & emotional effects no one talks about. They are the ultimate warriors & my personal heroes.”
In an interview with the Daily Mail , Ms Hatmaker confirmed that she still has her eyes set on climbing Mount Everest Base Camp in November, a trek she’d previously scheduled before the unfortunate accident derailed her plans.
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Skydiver Killed In Fall Had Forgotten Chute On Earlier Jump
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RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) _ An experienced skydiver who was killed after leaping from a plane without a parachute had forgotten to put on a chute before an earlier jump the same day, a federal investigator says.
Ivan McGuire, 35, fell 10,000 feet to his death April 2 while filming an instructor and student at the Franklin County Sport Parachute Center. The fatal jump was his third of the day.
″There was no problem with the first time, during which he videotaped the jump of a student and instructor,″ Walter Rigsbee, an inspector for the Federal Aviation Administration, said Thursday. ″On the second, he forgot to put on his chute but one of the other parachutists brought it to his attention before he boarded the plane.″
McGuire made the same mistake when he boarded the plane for the third jump, but no one noticed, Rigsbee said.
After viewing the tape McGuire made on that last jump, investigators said it appeared McGuire had been reaching for the release pin of a parachute that wasn’t there.
McGuire’s videotaping may have caused confusion, Rigsbee said.
″The harness McGuire wore for the video equipment is similar to that of a parachute. It has the same feel,″ he said.

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