August 30, 2015
VF61 of the Italian Vigili del Fuoco (Fire Brigade).
VIDEO
http://www.unionesarda.it/articolo/cronaca/2015/08/27/soccorsi_nelle_campagne_di_teti_dopo_lo_schianto_di_un_parapendio-68-432214.html#
In this video, VF61, a 1988 Augusta AB412ep of the Italian Vigili del Fuoco (Fire Brigade), hoists the body of Pasquale Maoddi, an employee of the Italian energy giant ENEL. The Augusta AB412ep is powered by twin turbines and can survive the loss of one engine within the Helicopter Dead Man's Curve.
Maoddi, who died in the collapse of his paraglider near Lake Cucchinadorza, was flying below the Paragliding Dead Man's Curve at the time. He was the one-thousand, three hundred and seventy-fourth global paragliding fatality that I am aware of.
To help visualize the size of this number, consider that three fully loaded 747-8I jumbo jets are capable of carrying only 27 more passengers.
About 2010, after I had been investigating global paragliding accidents for a couple of years, I had a dream. I was hiking through a jungle in South America when I came upon a crashed 747. The jumbo was intact, having come in at a shallow angle, smashing the jungle trees flat in a long narrow path. I climbed up through the broken hull and encountered row upon row upon row of dead paraglider passengers, all strapped into their seats, wearing helmets, radios, variometers. All dead. I stumbled out of the plane and glanced down the trail of devastation to see the tip of the tail of another 747 rising out of the forest. At that time, I had no inkling that there would be a third. It is mind-numbing to realize, now, that they will soon begin boarding a fourth jumbo, probably before the end of the year.