Woman overcomes fear of flying by doing 17,000-foot skydive

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By Izzy Hawksworth via SWNS

A woman whose dad was killed in a plane crash has overcome a fear of flying to do a charity skydive in his memory.

Pip Nix’s dad Gerry Davitt, 42, and her grandad Larry Davitt, 67, died after their aircraft burst into flames and crashed into a field in 1999.

She admits she’d been a ‘bad flyer’ ever since the tragedy but bravely jumped 17,000ft out of a plane to raise money for charity over the weekend.

Pip, 35, said: “It was incredible – it dawned on me when I was dangling my legs out of the plane, that I hadn’t really prepared myself for this part.

“The free fall was amazing and then the parachute when up and you just swoop from way to the other way because of the wind.

“I think my dad and grandad would be so overwhelmingly proud – I know for a fact I felt my dad was on the plane because of all the bumps and wobbles.

“It was like he was giving the plane a nudge just for a laugh.

“I think they would be really proud though and when we was descending, I called out the names of my loved ones that I had lost.”

Larry and Gerry were on the aircraft alongside Paul Blackburn and Kenneth Moore when the plane crashed onto a field in Hemingbrough, North Yorks.

Pip says her dad was flying the plane when ‘several things came together’ that meant there was nothing he could do to prevent the crash.

She was still in primary school when it happened and says she remembers being told by her mom and headteacher that they had been killed.

Pip said: “I had just turned ten and it’s really interesting because I have really clear vivid memories of some parts of it but don’t remember other parts of it.

“I had been at a sleepover at a friend’s house the night before, so I didn’t get to even see my dad that morning.

“I had go to primary school and the classroom doors were always open – but they had been shut which was really odd.

“The headteacher came to the door and took me into the office and my mom was there and I could see that she was obviously really upset.

“They explained that daddy and grandad were in the plane and that there had been a really bad accident – I got upset and asked if they were okay and she said no.

“My best friend was leaning against the wall and she remembers hearing me scream really loudly, but I don’t remember that – which is really weird.”

Pip has also paid tribute to her dad and grandad and says she has ‘so many memories’ with them both, which she ‘remembers fondly.’

The married-mom-of-one said: “I have so many memories – my grandad was Irish and they had these beautiful thick accents which I remember fondly.

“He was a taxi driver – so we always called him grandad taxi.

“There is so many things I remember about my dad, he loved nothing more than to wind people up and he was a real practical joker.

“He was a real hard worker and he built a really successful business from the group up.

“He grafted a lot and he did that to provide us with a really incredible life and a really incredible childhood.

“He loved his family and as soon as he would come home from work, he would put his dressing gown on and would watch TV with us.

“He was such a kind soul and knew so many people – everyone really respected him and liked him a lot because he was a genuinely good guy.”

Pip, who works in children and young people’s mental health, chose to raise money for Cruse Bereavement Support as they provided her with therapy after the accident.

But she says so many children are unable to have bereavement support, because the services are so underfunded and overstretched.

Pip, of Hambleton, near Selby, North Yorks,. said: “Every death is traumatic but this one was even more so, because of the nature of it – light aircrafts don’t fall out of the sky every day.

“It brought a lot of complexities and there was a lot of media and police involvement and they came to us pretty soon as we lost them and they were amazing.

“Their counselors are all volunteers, but you can’t volunteer unless you’ve been bereaved yourself.

“They gave us counseling as a family and as individuals – so those two opportunities were just invaluable.

“I believe my counselor was sent from my dad.”


 

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