Just got a phone update from Wesley's Dad. He has a broken humorous, but
it's pretty badly broken as I understand it... busted in 3 places and his
father mentioned the possibility of nerve damage. He is to have surgery
tomorrow to have a plate put in. Wesley passed his thanks along to all who
were able to help out. I hope to have an update in a day or two but can't
be sure his Dad will continue to call my cell. I'm not sure which hospital
he went to but his family did mention one in Chambersburg.
From my perspective today was a beautiful flying day but with a pretty
strong inversion. We were all scraping along the ridge for some nice enough
flights about 700 or 800 over. On landing Wesley got tripped up in some
rolling terrain with some VERY large gopher holes and whacked pretty darn
hard trying to run it out. I immediately thought it was a hard enough
landing to be concerned about injury. I watched from 2000' or so and back
on the ridge to see if he'd pop up from it but nothing. The thing that
worried me was no movement under the glider and nobody moving towards him to
help. The place he landed shielded him from the view of anyone on the
ground and I think I was the only one in the air to see it. I headed out to
the LZ. Still took me a while to get there spiral down and do my own little
whack about 100' from him. By the time I got there all I had been looking
at for the last 10 minutes were a pair of non-moving legs sticking out and
as I ran over I was a little concerned what I might find. Wesley was matter
of fact and said "I think I broke my arm but I'm OK otherwise.... Thanks for
coming John, why don't you take a minute to catch your breath". Hah... I
was relieved and more help arrived soon to care for him.
John
-----Original Message-----
From: Scott [mailto:
sw@shadepine.com]
Sent: Sunday, October 30, 2005 7:45 PM
To:
hg_forum@chgpa.org
Subject: Nice Pulpit day...with a minor incident.
Arrived at the Pulpit around 1pm to find Shawn Ray on the ramp (without his
glider, of course) in honkin' winds (avg18, g23). Mark C and Carlos W had
just left to drop a car in the LZ. Winds seemed to be backing down, though,
so when Gene Towns, Rich Donahue, John Simon, Wesley Comerer, Cragin, and
Brian VH showed up I drove down to the LZ to plant a sock.
Mark C was on the ramp ready to launch when I returned. Winds were down to
around 15. Mark got above the ridge quickly, and was followed by Carlos and
Wesley. I got set up while Cragin, John, and Shawn launched Rich. Then
Cragin, Shawn and I launched John, and I launched next with help from
Cragin, Shawn and Chris McKee, who was just spectating with a friend
today---thanks guys.
BTW, Shawn Ray is puttin' some serious assistance money in the bank, so
we'll all owe him once he's flying again (hopefully by January he says).
I found smooth lift on the ridge, punctuated by occasional light thermals,
nothing very strong or punchy. Got to around 200-300' over, which of course
wasn't as high as Mark.

Not long after I launched, I heard Wesley (who
had already landed) radio for help in the LZ. "I had a really bad landing
and think I may have hurt myself pretty bad," he said. I thought "Oh no--not
again! I'm a curse!"
Mark responded, asking Wesley if there was any bleeding. Wesley responded
calmly, saying no bleeding, and he didn't think the injury was
life-threatening, but that something was definitely very wrong with his arm,
and he might have broken it.
Meanwhile, a radioless John Simon was worried sick because he saw Wesley
whack hard on landing, and didn't see any movement under Wesley's glider for
several minutes. John flew out to land as close to Wesley as possible, and
was relieved to hear Wesley say "It's okay, I just hurt my arm bad." Mark,
Cragin and Carlos all landed to help Wesley. By the time I landed, they were
in the process of splinting Wesley's upper arm with a couple of tip battens
and the velcro ties from his Eagle.
We got Wesley out of his harness, then Mark, Cragin and Carlos got him into
Carlos' car while John and I broke down his glider and carried it to his car
by the road. Fortunately, Wesley's parents live close by (Chambersburg), so
they were able to drive over and carry Wesley to the hospital and drive his
car home.
Wesley explained that he had a good approach and landing, but had to run out
his touchdown a few steps and tripped when he stepped in a hole---this
wasn't surprising, as he ended up close to the steep bank and uneven ground
right between the upper and lower halves of the primary LZ. Bad luck!
So it was a beautiful day for flying, minus Wesley's unfortunate accident.
We hope he'll let us know the damage and that he's okay! We're all hoping
for a speedy recovery Wesley! I got 50 minutes on the ridge, and I think
everyone else (including Wesley) got some decent airtime as well.
I really needed a good high flight---my first since Bill Priday's death. It
was a major morale boost to get back in the air again.
Scott