Wednesday, December 17, 2025
ADVT 
Travel

Skydiver dangles at 15,000 feet after parachute catches on plane's tail in Australia

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 12 Dec, 2025 09:57 AM
  • Skydiver dangles at 15,000 feet after parachute catches on plane's tail in Australia

Australian accident investigators on Thursday released dramatic images of a skydiver’s parachute becoming entangled on an airplane’s tail, leaving him dangling at 4,500 meters (15,000 feet.)

The skydiver, Adrian Ferguson, used a hook knife to cut himself free and sustained minor leg injuries during the incident on Sept. 20 that began at Tully Airport in Queensland state. The pilot and 16 other parachutists on board the Cessna Caravan that day were not hurt.

The Australian Transport Safety Bureau released the video with its report on its investigation into the mishap.

The plane had reached the desired altitude where the skydivers were planning to execute a 16-way formation jump. A 17th parachutist was at an open door waiting to record video as the others jumped.

Ferguson was leaving the plane when the ripcord of his reserve chute became snagged on a wing flap, the report said.

The chute released and immediately jerked Fergson backward. He knocked the camera operator clear from the plane and into a free fall. Ferguson's legs then struck the trail’s horizontal stabilizer before the chute tangled around it and left him dangling.

Ferguson used a knife to cut 11 lines that enabled him to fall from the plane with part of the torn chute.

He released his main chute, which fully inflated despite becoming entangled with remnants of the reserve chute, and he landed safely.

Meanwhile, most of the other skydivers had jumped. The pilot was left with two skydivers aboard battling to control the plane with part of the chute still tangled around the tail.

The pilot made a mayday call and was prepared to bail out wearing an emergency chute. But Brisbane air traffic authorities decided he had enough control of the plane to land safely at Tully. It landed without incident.

“Carrying a hook knife — although it is not a regulatory requirement — could be lifesaving in the event of a premature reserve parachute deployment,” the bureau’s chief commissioner Angus Mitchell said.

Picture Courtesy: Jarrad Nolan/Australian Transport Safety Bureau via AP

MORE Travel ARTICLES

VIRUS DIARY: The coronavirus came, and she kept on training

VIRUS DIARY: The coronavirus came, and she kept on training
I’d been training for the Austria trip for years. The Winter World Masters Games are the Olympics for masters athletes – people 35 years and older.

VIRUS DIARY: The coronavirus came, and she kept on training

WATCH: WHAT TRAVEL LOOKS LIKE DURING COVID-19

WATCH: WHAT TRAVEL LOOKS LIKE DURING COVID-19
Planning to travel soon or wondering what air travel will be like in the future? We find out answers to your travel related questions with Gurleen Chhatwal of Spring Travels in Surrey from requirements, prices and more. 

WATCH: WHAT TRAVEL LOOKS LIKE DURING COVID-19

VIRUS DIARY: Dreams of Buffett songs and warm distant shores

VIRUS DIARY: Dreams of Buffett songs and warm distant shores
Working from home. Unwilling to go anywhere. Getting tired of the pine trees outside my spare bedroom window.

VIRUS DIARY: Dreams of Buffett songs and warm distant shores

VIRUS DIARY: Have toilet seat, will travel

VIRUS DIARY: Have toilet seat, will travel
Others raised eyebrows in Zoom calls, silently judging our desire to spend a nonessential week at the beach in South Florida, the U.S. epicenter of the coronavirus pandemic.

VIRUS DIARY: Have toilet seat, will travel

The Covid-19 Effect on Your Travel Plans

The Covid-19 Effect on Your Travel Plans
With stringent stay-at-home orders, countries sealing borders, drop in the number of operational flights — we have been forced to abandon the travel bug within us.

The Covid-19 Effect on Your Travel Plans

COVID result cuts short 1st Alaska cruise of stunted season

COVID result cuts short 1st Alaska cruise of stunted season
The first cruise in an already decimated southeast Alaska cruise season came to a devastating end Wednesday when a small ship carrying 36 passengers had to return to Juneau because one of the guests had tested positive for COVID-19.

COVID result cuts short 1st Alaska cruise of stunted season