The incredible images have captured at the time a man named Triple-0 after he broke his back in three places in a horror paragliding accident that has called “the worst situation of life.”
The student of the University of the Gold Coast, born in Hawaii, Maverick Robbins, was collapsed in an unstable sandy heavy at about 260 feet by a 330 -foot cliff after he crashed in Rainbow Beach in Queensland, Australia, while parapina.
The legs hanging from the fall of 20 meters, Robbins had broken his back in three places and could not feel his legs.
The images have captured at the time he called Triple-Zero when he made a grimace of pain.
“What do I do? Shot,” he said while waiting for the operator.
“I am in Rainbow Beach paragliding on the south side. I have starred in the paragliding in the sand,” Robbins told the operator.

“I’m in Rainbow Beach paragliding … I’m in the sand dune, I think I need a helicopter.”
His paragliding friend and partner, Vinny Brazier, knew that something was wrong when he flew fits Robbins, who did not give a thumb up when he was asked if he was fine.
“I ran to MAV to evaluate his condition. I helped adjust his legs, so he had a better hanger on the small bush and the sand that sustained it,” Brazier said.
The crew of the Queensland fire department and a LifeFlight rescue helicopter rushed to the scene, with Robbins and both seeing that the helicopter approached in a flight radar application.
“When the helicopter sounds appeared, it was the greatest relief,” Robbins said.
He could that LifeFlight team and rescue teams sink him, who said “without a doubt” saved his life.
“They are real life superheroes,” he said.
Robbins said Hey experienced many thoughts and emotions while he was up to security.

“I was thinking about the fate that had to be in a country with rescue helicopters,” he said.
“The final scene of The Hunger Games was to play in my mind when Katniss was locked in the helicopter.
“What they did for me cooled a second chance in life.”
He said he wanted to become a helicopter pilot when he was a child, that it was now something he has to do.
Three months later, Robbins was able to swell for the first time from the accident, as well as meeting with his rescuers QFD and LifeFlight.
“I don’t think we should live in fear. And I think we need to do things that make us feel alive and love to do,” he said.
“I know they are risks to the paragliding, but for me I do not fly again to be a loss much more. It’s great to do something that I love again.
“Lifeflight managed to get me out of my life’s sausage situation. I am excited to be alive.”
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