Pilot jumps from glider at 4,500
feet following mid-air crash
Glider pilot leaps from cockpit and
parachutes to safety after wing breaks off his aircraft in midair
collision
A glider pilot escaped serious injury
after he leapt from his aircraft following a collision with another glider
Photo: Martin Boss/Geoff Robinson
A glider pilot lept
out of his aircraft and parachuted to safety after a mid-air collision at 4,500
feet.
The pilot Andrew Preston, 70, from Banbury, baled out after the wing of
his glider broke off in a collision with another glider during a competitoin in
Cambridgeshire.
Mr Preston, who has been gliding for 19 years and is a
member of Banbury Gliding Club, described how his glider was flipped upside down
in the collision.
He opened the canopy, undid his seat buckle and fell
out of the glider. He escaped with a fractured vertebrae and a cut on his
leg.
Mr Preston, who has done more than 1,000 hours of flying, said: "The
other glider seemed to come out of nowhere. There was a very loud crash and my
glider seemed to immediately tip upside down.
"It was very scary. It was
like a car crash in the air. I was very lucky to get out.
"It all happened
very quickly. I had to open the canopy, then release the buckle and I fell out
of the glider, then pulled the parachute.
"I've done more than 1,000 hours of flying and I
enjoy gliding and competitions - nothing like this has ever happened
before.
"The parachute was very small, so it was a bit like jumping from
a 15ft height and people often break their bones.
"I was extremely lucky
and only fractured a vertebrate in my back and cut my leg on the glider. I was
in shock and spent a few days in hospital, but I am fine now."
Mr Preston
was taken to Addenbrooke's Hospital in Cambridge after the accident.
His
glider crashed upside down in a field near Little Paxton in Cambridgeshire and
the broken wing landed nearby.
The pilot of the second glider was able to
land safely on an airfield near Bedford. The accident in now being investigated
by the British Gliding Association (BGA).
The pilots were taking part in
the week-long Hus Bos Challenge Cup on Saturday afternoon, which had 35
contestants, and each glider was believed to have been flying at around
50mph.
They were flying from the Gliding Centre at Husbands Bosworth, near
Market Harborough in Leicestershire.
The dramatic incident was captured
on camera by Martin Boss, who lives nearby.
Mr Boss, an electronics engineer,
had been in his garden trying to get photos of birds when he saw the gliders
about half a mile away.
The 45-year-old, who used a 400mm lens to capture
the moment, said it was a shock to see the two gliders collide and one start to
break up.
He said: "There were about half a dozen to eight gliders and I
took some pictures of them. Then two of them touched each other, one of the
wings came off, and it went straight down."
Pete Stratten, chief executive of
the BGA, said: "This type of accident happens very rarely, it is a relatively
safe sport but everybody does accept there is a greater risk than climbing on a
commercial aircraft."
He said each glider would have been flying around
50mph and the force of the crash was enough to separate the wing from the
glider.
He added: "The pilot jumped out effectively and the other pilot
landed immediately."
The Hus Bos Challenge Cup runs until Sunday (August 3).
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