Shellby-Kate Collins and Mark Southwell

Shellby reached for the sky to fund-raise for RNLI

Thanks to George for this latest news from Cowes RNLI. Ed


Twenty year old Shellby-Kate Collins has ended her link with Cowes lifeboat on, quite literally, a high note.

In addition to surrendering her crew-member’s pager at her last training night at the station she handed over £120, raised for the RNLI from sponsors of her first parachute jump.

Adrenalin junkie
Furthermore Shellby, of Mill Hill Road, Cowes, disclosed this jump earlier this year was no one-off flight of fancy; since then she has become something of adrenalin junkie, having now sky-dived more than 50 times.

So proficient has she become, in fact, that she has now become a qualified instructor.

Forsaking the sky for the sea
The jumps, from up to 15,000 feet, have all been achieved from a Black Beech 99 aircraft at Dunkeswell, Taunton, Devon. But for a while she is forsaking the sky for the sea, having rejoined a ship as an apprentice deckhand that services wind-turbines off Denmark.

Her ambition, though, is to find a job in the Dunkeswell area so that travel is no longer a problem when she resumes her dare devil jumps.

A popular crew member
Station operations manager Mark Southwell said:

“While with this station Shellby has been a very popular and very able boat crew member, and we are very sorry to lose her.”