Pilot, 76, walks away
from plane crash with just minor injuries after deploying emergency
PARACHUTE
IT was lucky for Karen Dean that she wasn't in the
mood for a spot of sunbathing yesterday morning.
For just before 11am, a
light aircraft fell out of the sky and crashed into her back garden.
Both
she and the 76-year-old pilot had miraculous escapes after the Cirrus SR22 hit
the ground.
Fortunately the 200mph aircraft's fall was slowed by an
emergency parachute - and then cushioned by Mrs Dean's conifer trees.
The
unnamed pilot was able to stumble from the wreckage with only minor injuries,
and a relieved Mrs Dean spoke of her shock and relief that catastrophe was
avoided.
The plane even managed to avoid her greenhouse, summer house and
shed.
The 50-year-old mother of two was inside her £250,000 semi-detached
home in Cheltenham when she heard a 'whirring sound'.
'It got louder and
louder and then I thought all hell was breaking loose,' she said. 'I ran into my
garden and there was this huge plane.
'The pilot clambered out and was
walking around a bit dazed. I was in shock. I was so scared.'
Mrs Dean,
a project manager for Boots, was working from home yesterday. She joked of the
damage done to the property: 'That was the only part of my garden that we had
done up, so I'm a touch annoyed that it's wrecked now.
'If they let me
keep the plane, which they won't, it would make an incredible water feature.
Charlie Dimmock would be jealous.'
Neighbour Jeannie Bowers, 46, added:
'There was a big pop and banging sound and then a whoosh of air. The parachute
went up and the plane slowly came down towards the ground gently turning and
hanging from this parachute.
'It just gently came down and landed on the
conifers in Karen's garden.'
The Cirrus aircraft, worth around £200,000,
was written off in the crash which left one wing almost completely torn away and
the other bent at a 90-degree angle at the tip.
Emergency services were at the scene in minutes and
took the pilot to hospital, but it is understood he suffered only minor
injuries.
He was helped from the wreckage by builder David Shatford, 30,
who was working on a nearby property.
He said: 'I looked around and saw
this plane coming straight towards me. It was about ten feet away and I had to
jump off the scaffolding.
'Next thing I knew the plane had smashed into
the trees.'
The pilot, from London, was heading for Gloucestershire
Airport at Staverton, which sent its Rescue and Fire Fighting Service to the
scene to make the plane safe.
His soft landing came courtesy of the
aircraft's Cirrus Airframe Parachute System - an emergency device which has been
credited with saving at least 70 lives.
Records show the aircraft was
built in 2008 and is registered through Southern Aircraft Consultancy in
Suffolk.
No one from the firm was available for comment.
HOW THE
PARACHUTE WORKS IN A CIRRUS SR22
In the event of an emergency, the pilot
pulls a red chord which is in the ceiling of the cockpit.
Once the chord
is pulled a solid-fuel rocket is deployed out of a hatch which covers the
compartment where the parachute is stored.
As the rocket carries the
parachute rearward from the back of the plane, harness straps are
released.
Within seconds, the 65inch diameter canopy unfolds which begins
to control the plane's descent.
According to Nick Tarratt, UK agent for
Cirrus, pilots have only had to deploy the parachute a handful of times
worldwide.
He said: 'The aircraft is the only production aircraft to have
a parachute built in.
'The idea came from the plane's designers, brothers
Alan and Dale Klapmeier after Alan had a mid-air collision.
'It inspired
them to produce an aircraft with a built in parachute.
'It is a real
success story, because this man has been able to walk away
alive.'
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