Umm... not even sure... Don't try this at home?

Started by afgeo4, June 08, 2008, 02:46:25 AM

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afgeo4

According to Yahoo news:

DUANESBURG, N.Y. - A 29-year-old man leaped out of a plane at 10,000 feet with a camera but no parachute Saturday. His body was found next to a house with a damaged roof, police said.
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Sloan Carafello of Schenectady, who was observing on the flight, followed an instructor, student and videographer out the door, wearing no skydiving gear, officials said.

Police said they did not suspect foul play but would not elaborate.

Robert Rawlins, pilot and owner of the Duanesburg Skydiving Club, said he was flying the single-engine plane and had begun to close the door when Carafello jumped.

His body was found next to a house west of Albany.
GEORGE LURYE

mikeylikey

Some mornings I forget to put my pants on and I leave the house.  This however, sadly beats that.

I am thinking an adrenaline push told his body to jump before his brain said "you don't have a parachute on". 

This is one sad story.   :(
What's up monkeys?

addo1

 Sonds a little cheesy for a fact.. I think I will pass on this stunt, lol..  ;) 
I think they were just having a little "lets not think about what we are doing" day..
Addison Jaynes, SFO, CAP
Coordinator, Texas Wing International Air Cadet Exchange


National Cadet Advisory Council 2010

JC004

camera but no parachute?  wrong bag?

If you wanted to off yourself from and airplane, I would generally imagine that you wouldn't need to take a camera with you.  Something strange here.

And "house with a damaged roof"...as in he damaged it, or as in "if you wanna check out the site, it's the one over there with the crappy roof"??  Strange how the media words things sometimes.

SSgt Rudin

I can even imagine that ride down, just knowing you have about a minute left. I would at least try to get close to the instructor and try to hold on to him as he deployed his chute. That may or may not be possible, IDK I've never been sky diving.
SSgt Jordan Rudin, CAP

smitjud

Wonder if this had anything to do with Travis Pastrana's chuteless jump?  Trying to copycat and no one wants to admit that it didn't work out quite so well?  Should be interesting to see the rest of the story....

For those that never saw the Pastrana Jump:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-94i8YEeiIM

-and-

http://expn.go.com/expn/story?id=3055619&no_cache

Plane Loco

By Alyssa Roenigk
ESPN The Magazine
(Archive)

Travis Pastrana lives his life on the edge. Recently, he jumped over it.

On Wednesday, September 26, Pastrana hopped a flight from his home in Davidsonville, MD, to Arecibo, Puerto Rico, to perform a stunt he's been dreaming up for more than a year. The next morning, four members of his group skydived from a single-engine Cessna from 12,500 feet. Pastrana performed his jump wearing only sunglasses, socks and surf trunks while holding a can of Red Bull.

He was not wearing a parachute.

The jump was the latest in a string of stunts the motocross legend is filming for his next video Thrillbillies, the fifth installment in his Travis and the Nitro Circus series. While it may not be the most dangerous stunt Pastrana has performed, it is his most shocking. In his past stunts, Pastrana has taken his life into his own hands. This time, he placed it in the hands of three men he'd known for less than a week.

Best known for landing the first freestyle motocross double backflip at the 2006 X Games, Pastrana has a reputation for tempting the limits of possibility. Earlier this year, he revealed two stunts he was hoping to perform by the end of the year. The first—to duplicate his 1999 BASE jump into the Grand Canyon on a dirt bike, but with a girl riding tandem—he checked off his to-do list in March. The second—skydiving without a parachute—seemed better suited for a Hollywood stunt crew. Then, two weeks ago, he proved a 24-year-old action sports star would do just fine. "It sounds crazy to most people," he said back in January, "but it's very possible."

Possible? Yes. Pastrana is not the first person to skydive without a parachute and survive. But he is very possibly the least experienced, with only about 100 jumps and a beginner's rating to his credit. For that reason, he had a difficult time finding accomplices. "Xtreme Divers in Puerto Rico was the only non-third-world drop site that would consider letting us do this," Pastrana says.

Even then, it took several months and many phone calls before he tracked down experienced jumpers Timmy McMaster, Scott "Plamber" Palmer and Bill Halsey—the men who were ultimately responsible for saving his life once he exited the plane. "I have almost 7,000 jumps, and there is no way in hell I would do what he did, but I grew up racing motocross, so when I got a call to do a stunt with Travis Pastrana, I said, 'I'm in,'" says Halsey, an instructor at The Parachute Center in Lodi, Calif., who documented the stunt.

Before the men agreed to take the assignment, they wanted assurance Pastrana was talented enough to safely perform the jump. So during a break in his rally-racing schedule in mid September, Pastrana flew the three men to his home in Davidsonville. They then drove to a drop zone in Williamstown, NJ, to choreograph the jump. "If I felt there was any chance he was going to die, I would have told him to find someone else," Halsey says. "I didn't want crying kids coming after me, saying, 'You killed Travis Pastrana!' I couldn't live with myself." By the third practice jump (Pastrana wore a parachute for all but the final jump in Puerto Rico), the men were convinced the stunt could be performed with minimum risk.

"He's good at everything he does," says Palmer, who had the most responsibility of the three men. Once Pastrana jumped, threw a few flips and steadied himself on his stomach, McMaster "docked" him by grabbing hold of his hands. Palmer then flew to Pastrana, hopped on his back and hooked his own parachute to a climbing harness Pastrana was wearing under his shorts, towing him in for the landing. "Right before we jumped, I had a moment. I thought, in two seconds, I'm going to be his last chance for survival. It's all up to me now," Palmer says. "Then I looked at Travis. I've seen a lot of people jump, and I've seen a lot of fear. And there was none." Then, one by one, they jumped.

"I had complete confidence in them," Pastrana says. "It was a lot of fun."

So what's next? "We're already talking about the next stunt," Palmer says. "He'll think of something to top it. He has a great mind."

JUSTIN D. SMITH, Maj, CAP
ALWG

"You do not lead by hitting people over the head - that's assault, not leadership."

-Dwight D. Eisenhower

mikeylikey

^ That is pure insanity.  He should not be allowed to market his videos, and should be put away in some mental institution somewhere. 
What's up monkeys?

SAR-EMT1

Don't the Golden Knights do something like this?
C. A. Edgar
AUX USCG Flotilla 8-8
Former CC / GLR-IL-328
Firefighter, Paramedic, Grad Student

JohnKachenmeister

Another former CAP officer

JayT

Quote from: afgeo4 on June 08, 2008, 02:46:25 AM
According to Yahoo news:

DUANESBURG, N.Y. - A 29-year-old man leaped out of a plane at 10,000 feet with a camera but no parachute Saturday. His body was found next to a house with a damaged roof, police said.
ADVERTISEMENT

Sloan Carafello of Schenectady, who was observing on the flight, followed an instructor, student and videographer out the door, wearing no skydiving gear, officials said.

Police said they did not suspect foul play but would not elaborate.

Robert Rawlins, pilot and owner of the Duanesburg Skydiving Club, said he was flying the single-engine plane and had begun to close the door when Carafello jumped.

His body was found next to a house west of Albany.

I'd say his problems are over.
"Eagerness and thrill seeking in others' misery is psychologically corrosive, and is also rampant in EMS. It's a natural danger of the job. It will be something to keep under control, something to fight against."

PHall


SAR-EMT1

Grand Champion at the Darwins, may God be with his family.
C. A. Edgar
AUX USCG Flotilla 8-8
Former CC / GLR-IL-328
Firefighter, Paramedic, Grad Student