
Soldier
was strapped to him, landed safely using skills learned on TV
updated 12:55 p.m. MT, Mon., Feb. 2, 2009
CHESTER, S.C. - Strapped to his dying
instructor a few thousand feet from the ground on his first skydive, Daniel
Pharr found himself floating toward a house and some trees.
The military taught the 25-year-old soldier
not to panic. And TV taught him to pull the toggles on the already-deployed
parachute to steer.
So Pharr grabbed the right handle and pulled
to avoid the house and tugged again to miss the trees, landing safely in a
field about a third of a mile from their intended landing spot.
Pharr said he
wrestled out of the harness binding him to his instructor, George
"Chip" Steele, and started CPR trying to save him from an apparent
heart attack.
Steele was later pronounced dead, but the
tragedy could have been worse: Other instructors at the skydiving school told
Pharr if he had pulled the toggle too hard, the chute would have spun out of
control, and he could be dead, too.
"They told me afterward that it was
amazing that I knew to do that. This is my survival instinct at that point. I
just kind of did what I had to do," said Pharr, taking a break Monday from
his job at Fort Gordon near Augusta, Ga.
Christmas gift
The jump was a Christmas gift from Pharr's girlfriend. The two went to
Skydive Carolina in Chester on Saturday to jump from 13,500 feet in the air
while attached to instructors.
Steele, 49, gave instructions as the plane
climbed. He told Pharr he loved skydiving, having jumped more than 8,000 times.
They were the last of about 10 skydivers to
jump out of the plane. Pharr enjoyed a minute of free fall as the cold air
rushed by.
"He pulled the chute," Pharr said.
"It got super quiet. It's eerily quiet up there. I made the comment to
him, 'It's surprising how quiet it is.' And he's like: 'Welcome to my
world.'"
A few seconds passed, and Pharr asked his
instructor another question. This time, Steele didn't answer. Pharr repeated
his question. No answer.
"And then I just looked up at him and he
looked like he was conscious, but just talking to him, I realized something was
wrong," Pharr said. "So at that point I realized I was just going to
have to do what I had to do to get down to the ground and try to help
him."
The pair ended up about a third of a mile
from the airstrip where they were supposed to land, blocked from the spectators
by trees. Pharr's CPR failed to revive Steele.
"My only thing walking away is that I
wish I could have helped him," Pharr said. "I tried as hard as I
could — all my training, I did everything I could."
Mom, girlfriend
waited nervously
After paramedics arrived and stepped in to diagnose Steele, Pharr asked them to
call his girlfriend, Jessica Brunson, and mother, who was watching from the air
strip.
Pharr's mother said all they knew at the time
was from a brief message on another staffer's radio: A tandem pair was down and
it didn't look good.
"It was an eternity," Darlene
Huggins said, when asked how long it took her to hear her son's message he was
safe. "No, really, it could have been 10, 15 minutes."
After talking to authorities, Pharr got to
see his girlfriend, who he said kept her composure. "Once she saw me, she
was in tears," he said.
Huggins said she asked the Lord to keep her
son safe. "I just give the glory to God. He was just covered with that
hedge of protection that us mamas pray for," she said.
Initial indications are Steele died of a
heart attack. Chester County Coroner Terry Tinker said he would wait for a
written report from Monday's autopsy before releasing an official cause of
death.
Skydive Carolina General Manager James La
Barrie released a statement saying it appeared Steele, a test jumper and
instructor, died from a medical problem. No one answered the phone Monday at a
listing for Steele in Sumter.
'Once-in-a-lifetime
story'
Pharr had to work Sunday, so he immediately went back to Fort Gordon, which is
home of the Signal Corps, the communications nerve center of the Army, and
deals heavily in military intelligence.
He joined the Army a year ago, leaving his
job in Columbia selling alarm systems because he wanted to serve the country like
his two grandfathers and get money to go to college. When asked what he does,
Pharr laughed and said "can't tell you."
Fellow soldiers have been asking him about
his jump for the past two days. "It's a once-in-a-lifetime story, and I
told them I hope I never have to top it," Pharr said.
Pharr wants to jump again, but it looks like
his first skydive will be his last.
"My family has told me I have to keep my
feet on the ground," he said.