BFL410 | 9.8.2021

Bryce Schunke

from United States of America38 years

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7

BASE SEASONS

1800

SKYDIVES

1400

WS SKYDIVES

350

BASE JUMPS

100

WS BASE JUMPS
  • Date & Time: 9.8.2021, 11:10
  • Location: High La Mousse, Lauterbrunnen, Switzerland
  • Category: BASE Fatality
  • Object Type: Earth
  • Cause Of Death: Mis-pull
  • Clothing - Suit: CorvidExpert Wingsuit by Squirrel
  • Canopy: Hayduke7 Cell - Vented by Squirrel
  • Container: Stream2 Pin by Squirrel
  • Packing & Setup: Slider Up BOC Short Start
  • Weather: Sunny, Winds light and variable
  • Possible Factors: Altitude awareness, Extracted Pilot Chute too late, Proximity flying

What do we believe happened?

We have been talking with those closest to him at this stage we do know he has jumped alone and video is with Police for investigation. We will have more information in coming days/weeks.

 


https://www.20min.ch/.../un-base-jumper-se-tue-a...
https://www.20min.ch/.../basejumper-stuerzt-in-den-tod...
https://www.instagram.com/bryce.schunke/...

 

UPDATED 1ST NOV 2021

On July 10, Bryce and his mate Gabe started a BASE trip through Italy and Switzerland. By the time he died, Bryce had done between 70 and 80 wingsuit BASE jumps in one month. He was very confident and feeling great in his suit. His start numbers were impressive. Bryce was an experienced and good wingsuit pilot in skydiving but he wasn’t very experienced in BASE. When Gabe and his friend started their BASE trip, Bryce mentioned that he wanted to do more technical jumps.

On August 9, Bryce told Gabe in the morning that he felt tired and that he would join him for a jump from High Nose. Bryce changed his plan spontaneously and went up to High La Mousse to do his sixth jump from there.

We have footage from Bryce’s GoPro (chest mount) and from his Insta360 (helmet).

00:00 Exit
00:03 Bryce turns right, flying the “right line”
00:33 Disconnecting from terrain, flying towards the Alpinebase Hostel
00:45 Flare
00:48 He goes back to pull and doesn’t get the pc out, immediately tries again (2nd mispull)
00:50 Bryce is sure that the pilot chute is out and brings his arms forward for riser control
00:52 He realizes that the canopy isn’t opening and reaches back for the third time
00:54 Pilot chute is finally out (weak pull) and inflates with no hesitation next to his body
00:55 Bryce impacts with canopy out but no line stretch, primary stow still in place

A few days before the accident, Bryce and Gabe talked about mispulls in wingsuiting. Bryce said that he never had any issues pulling.

Bryce and Gabe came to Lauterbrunnen to practice their exits and starts. After jumping in the valley for a couple of days, they wanted to travel to Walenstadt to attend a course in terrain flying. Bryce got quickly bored in Lauterbrunnen and started to fly proximity.

The day before he died, two of his close friends had a chat with Bryce. They were worried about his new bad habit of pulling low. Bryce already landed in water after a low pull from Altissimo a few weeks earlier.

Bryce didn’t wear any gloves or extra layers of clothes on his last jump. He lost his life because he initiated his opening sequence too late. If he disconnected from the terrain three seconds earlier, if he started to flare and pull three seconds earlier, he would be still with us.


1. Don’t pull low. It’s just not worth it. We can all have mispulls or severe line-twists. There is always a first time.
2. Fight complacency. Don’t get too confident.
3. Listen to your close friends. If they’re worried for you, they might have a good reason.
4. Don’t jump when you’re physically or mentally tired. Long BASE trips can be very exhausting. Take a day off and relax.

Marcel Geser (SBA), James Boole

Contact

Missing something?

Can you help us with incident interpretation? We are interested in any details regarding personal experience, gear, weather conditions and any other circumstances related to the incident.

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