Taking Flight And Taking Risks
My dad and I are both commercial pilots. He was flying a skydiving plane on a really windy day, I was flying a coastal lifeguard patrol in the same area. His passengers jumped out at the normal height and I heard him request a descent with ATC. I’m flying down the coast, near the coastal strip that he was meant to land at to refuel before flying back to home base.
ATC try to get in contact with him to ask if he had descended yet, I’m listening laughing to myself because I thought my dad had just changed frequencies by accident, I was mentally prepping the burns I was going to give him. Then I get a call on my radio on the coastal strip broadcast frequency (pretty much an advisory frequency for the country strip, because there’s no control tower) letting me (and other traffic) know that there was a crash at the airport and to avoid the area.
Suddenly it dawns on me that Dad hasn’t responded to the traffic controller, and he was meant to have landed about now. I jump on the radio, asking anyone if it was a skydiving plane. They aren’t sure. The passengers in the back have no clue what’s happening, the wind is getting worse and the turbulence is throwing us around. We turn around, and I call the airport and ask for the rego of the plane, they can’t give it to me. At this point Im freaking out, calling Dad using my Bluetooth headset, he’s not picking up. I call Mum and ask if she’d heard from him, and she hasn’t, I told her I’ll call her back. She starts freaking out before I hang up.
I call the airport again and beg them, like full pleading. They tell me the rego and a cold shiver runs up my spine as I realize it was his plane. He’s rushed to hospital but they can’t tell me any more.
We rush back to home base, land, get out and I scream home in my car. We call the police to get some details and they tell us the hospital and that he is stable. We get there and it turns out his plane flipped mid-landing because of a sudden change in the wind. He broke some ribs, tore his shoulder and bruised his neck but ultimately he came out ok and still flies today.