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Wheel-Well
Stowaway Syndrome:
How to survive to
Hipoxic Hypoxia
In 1970
Armando Socarras jumped to one's Iberia DC-8 wheel well and
traveled from Havana to Madrid, surviving to extreme ambient
conditions. Just arrived to Iberia Medical Service this
amazing story prompted me to study Hypoxia as never. This is
the story such as happened (JMªPérez Sastre)
Link where this could be found

"Stowaway"
Armando Socarras Ramirez
The jet engines of the
Iberia Airlines DC-8 thundered in earsplitting crescendo as
the big plane taxied toward where we huddled in the tall
grass just off the end of the runway at Havana's Jose Marti
Airport. For months my friend Jorge Perez Blanco and I had
been planning to stowaway in a wheel well on this flight,
No. 904-lberia's once-weekly, nonstop run from Havana to
Madrid! Now, in the late afternoon of last June 3, 1970, our
moment had come.
We realized that we were
pretty young to be taking such a big gamble; I was
seventeen, Jorge sixteen. But we were both determined to
escape from Cuba, and our plans had been carefully made. We
knew that departing airliners taxied to the end of the
11,500-foot runway, stopped momentarily after turning
around, then roared at full throttle down the runway to take
off. We wore rubber-soled shoes to aid us in crawling up the
wheels and carried ropes to secure ourselves inside the
wheel well. We had also stuffed cotton in our ears as
protection against the shriek of the four jet engines. Now
we lay sweating with fear as the massive craft swung into
its about face, the jet blast flattening the grass all
around us. "Let's run!" I shouted to Jorge.
We dashed onto the runway
and sprinted toward the left-hand wheels of the momentarily
stationary plane. As Jorge began to scramble up the
forty-two-inch-high tires, I saw there was not room for us
both in the single well. "I'll try the other side!" I
shouted. Quickly I climbed onto the right wheels, grabbed a
strut and, twisting and wriggling, pulled myself into the
semidark well. The plane began rolling immediately, and I
grabbed some machinery to keep from falling out. The roar of
the engines nearly deafened me.
As we became airborne, the
huge double wheels, scorching hot from takeoff, began
folding into the compartment. I tried to flatten myself
against the overhead as they came closer and closer; then,
in desperation, I pushed at them with my feet. But they
pressed powerfully upward, squeezing me, terrifyingly
against the roof of the well.
Just when I felt that I
would be crushed, the wheels locked in place and the bay
doors beneath them closed, plunging me into darkness. So
there I was, my five-foot-four- inch, 14 0-pound frame
literally wedged in amid a spaghetti-like maze of conduits
and machinery. I could not move enough to tie myself to
anything, so I stuck my rope behind a pipe.
Then, before I had time to
catch my breath, the bay doors suddenly dropped open again
and the wheels stretched out into their landing position. I
held on for dear life, swinging over the abyss, wondering if
I had been spotted, if even now the plane was turning back
to hand me over to Castro's police. By the time the wheels
began retracting in, I had seen a bit of extra space among
the machinery where I could safely squeeze. Now, I knew
there was room for me even though I could scarcely breathe.
After a few minutes, I touched one of the s and found that
it had cooled off. I followed some aspirin tablets against
the head-splitting noise and began to wish that I had worn
something warmer than my light sport shirt and green
fatigues.
Up in the cockpit of Flight
904, Captain Valentin Vara del Rey, forty-four, had settled
into
the routine of the overnight flight, which would last eight
hours and twenty minutes. Takeoff had been normal, with the
aircraft and its 147 passengers, plus a crew of ten, lifting
off at 170 mph. But, right after liftoff, something unusual
had happened. One of three red lights on the instrument
panel had remained lighted, indicating improper retraction
of the landing gear.
"Are you having difficulty?"
the control tower asked.
"Yes," replied Vara del Rey.
"There is an indication that the right wheel hasn't closed
properly. I'll repeat the procedure."
The captain relowered the
landing gear, then raised it again. This time the red light
blinked out.
Dismissing the incident as a
minor malfunction, the captain turned his attention to
climbing to the designed cruising altitude. On leveling out,
he observed that the temperature outside was ?41 degrees
Fahrenheit. 1nside, the pretty stewardesses began serving
dinner to the passengers.
Shivering uncontrollably
from the bitter cold, I wondered if Jorge had made it into
the other wheel well and began thinking about what had
brought me to this desperate situation. I thought about my
parents and my girl, Maria Esther, and wondered what they
would think when they learned what I had done.
My father is a plumber, and
I have four brothers and a sister. We are poor, like most
Cubans. Our house in Havana has just one large room; eleven
people live in it-or did. Food was scarce and strictly
rationed. About the only fun I had was playing baseball and
walking with Maria Esther along the seawall. When I turned
sixteen, the government shipped me off to vocational school
in Betancourt, a sugar-cane village in Matanzas province.
There I was supposed to learn welding, but classes were
often in interrupted to send us off to plant cane.
Young as I was, I was tired
of living in a state that controlled everyone's life. Having
dreamed of freedom, I wanted to become artist and live in
the United States, where I had an uncle. I knew that
thousands of Cubans had gotten to America and done well
there. As the time approached when I would be drafted, I
thought more and more of trying to get away. But how? I knew
that two planeloads of people are allowed to an leave Havana
for Miami each day, but there is a waiting list of 800,000
for these flights. Also, if you sign up to leave, the
government looks on you as a gusano -a worm- and life
becomes even less bearable.
My hopes seemed futile. Then
I met Jorge at a Havana baseball game. After the game we got
to talking. I found out that Jorge, like me, was
disillusioned with Cuba. "The system takes away your
freedom-forever," he complained. Jorge told me about the
weekly flight to Madrid. Twice we went to the airport to
reconnoiter. Once a DC-8 took off and flew directly over us;
the wheels were still down, and we could see into the well
compartments. "There's enough room in there for me," I
remember saying.
These were my thoughts as I
lay in the freezing darkness more than five miles above the
Atlantic Ocean. By now we had been in the air about an hour,
and I was getting lightheaded from the lack of oxygen. Was
it really only a few hours earlier that I had bicycled
through the rain with Jorge and hidden in the grass? Was
Jorge safe? My parents? Maria Esther? I drifted into
unconsciousness.
The sun rose over the
Atlantic like a great golden globe, its rays glinting off
the silver-and- id fuselage of Iberia's DC-8 as it crossed
the European coast high over Portugal. With the end of the
4,636-mile flight in sight, Captain Vara del Rey began his
descent toward Madrid's Bara- Airport. Arrival would be at 8
A.M. local the captain told his passengers over the
intercom, and the weather in Madrid was sunny and pleasant.
Shortly after passing over Toledo, Vara del Rey let down his
landing gear. As always, the maneuver was accompanied by a
buffeting as the wheels hit the slipstream and a 200-mph
turbulence swirled through the wheel wells. Now the me went
into its final approach; now a spurt of flame and smoke from
the tires as the DC-8 touched down at about 140 mph.
It was a perfect landing-no
bumps. After a brief postflight check, Vara del Rey walked
down the ramp steps and stood by the nose of the plane
waiting for a car to pick him up, along with his
Nearby, there was a sudden,
soft plop as the frozen body of Armando Socarras fell to the
concrete apron beneath the plane. Jose Rocha Lorenzana, a
security guard, was the first to reach the crumpled figure.
"When I touched his clothes, they were frozen as stiff as
wood," Rocha said. "All he did was make a strange sound, a w
of moan."
"I couldn't believe it at
first," Vara del Rey said when told of Armando. "But then I
went over to him. He had ice over his nose and mouth. And
his color. . ." As he watched the unconscious boy being
bundled into a truck, the captain kept exclaiming to
himself; "Impossible! Impossible!"
The first thing I remember
after losing consciousness was hitting the ground at the
Madrid airport. Then I blacked out again and woke up later
at the Gran Hospital de la Beneficencia in downtown Madrid,
more dead than alive. When they took my temperature, it was
so low that it did not even register on the thermometer. "Am
I in Spain?" was my first question. And then, "Where's
Jorge?" (Jorge is believed to have been knocked down by the
jet blast while trying to climb into the other wheel well
and o be in prison in Cuba.)
Doctors said later that my
condition was comparable to that of a patient undergoing
"deep-freeze" surgery-a delicate process performed only
under carefully controlled conditions. Dr. Jose Maria
Pajares, who cared for me, called my survival a "medical
miracle," and, in truth, I feel lucky to be alive. A few
days after my escape, I was up and around the hospital,
playing cards with my police guard and reading stacks of
letters from all over the world. I especially liked one from
a girl in California. "You are a hero," she wrote, "but not
very wise." My uncle, Elo Fernandez, who lives in New
Jersey, telephoned and invited me to come to the United
States to live with him. The International Rescue Committee
arranged my passage and has continued to help me. I am fine
now. I live with my uncle and go to school to learn English.
I still hope to study to be an artist. I want to be a good
citizen and contribute something to this country, for I love
it here. You can smell freedom in the air.
I often think of my friend
Jorge. We both knew the risk we were taking and that we
might be killed in our attempt to escape Cuba. But it seemed
worth the chance. Even knowing the risks, I would try to
escape again If I had to.
Note: There are some
words and parts of words missing, you fill in the blank, I
left it as is.

Man Lying in a Hospital Bed
Original caption:
Armando Socarras Ramirez, a
young Cuban, lies in a hospital bed after he fled from
Havana in the subzero, unpressurized front wheel compartment
of a jet airliner flying to Madrid. Ramirez, 22, tumbled out
nearly frozen when the jet landed and said a companion,
Jorge Perez Blanco, 16, fell to his death in their double
escape attempt. He is in serious condition from exposure. |