Three women to leap 14,000ft in powerful tribute to loved ones
Three local women are preparing to take a 14,000ft skydive in support of Treetops Hospice, each motivated by powerful, personal experiences of the charity’s care.
Collectively, their experiences illustrate the scope of support provided by Treetops, which offers counselling, emotional and wellbeing services, and Hospice at Home care for people approaching the end of life. Last year alone, the Treetops team supported over 2,000 patients, delivering more than 34,000 hours of care.
The skydive will take place at Skydive Langar in Nottingham, one of the UK’s leading parachute centres, where the participants will freefall at up to 120mph before their parachutes deploy for a controlled descent.
All three women have already surpassed their fundraising targets, showing the strength of community support behind them.
Melanie turned to Treetops after the sudden death of her husband from lung cancer. Although she had known of the hospice for years, she never expected to need its counselling services.
“I didn’t want to burden my family and friends with the depth of my grief,” she said. “Inside, I was going through an incredibly painful and overwhelming time.”
Her counsellor, Shirley, became “a real anchor”, who “walked beside her through some of the hardest moments”.
She said: “Treetops became a lifeline for me.”
Despite a lifelong fear of heights, Mel signed up. She said: “It felt like the right challenge at the right time,” adding that she knows her husband “will be looking down, cheering me on.”
For Kerri, Digital Lead at Treetops Hospice, the skydive falls on a deeply significant date – her mum’s birthday and her wedding anniversary.
She said: “Last year the most devastating thing happened, I lost my beautiful mum, who was my best friend.
“It was traumatic… but Treetops helped me through it.”
With support from colleagues and Treetops’ bereavement counsellors, she slowly began to rebuild. When Kerri saw the skydive date, she “just knew” she had to take part and explained: “Mum always pushed me to live my life to the max, so that’s what I’m doing.”
Her fundraising target of £432 will help Treetops provide expert care in the community, as well as provide the bereavement counselling that supported both Kerri and Mel when they needed it most.
Farrah, 23, is also jumping in memory of her mum, who died unexpectedly in August 2025. As an only child of a single-parent family, she was left with no immediate family.
“I was absolutely shell shocked,” she said. “My mum was the light of every room she walked into.”
Farrah’s mum had always hoped to do a skydive herself, but her asthma meant she was never able to take part.
“So here I am… gearing up to jump out of a plane at 14,000ft in her honour.”
Her mum supported Treetops for many years, and Farrah is determined to continue that legacy. “Mum always reminded me to ‘live life to the fullest’, so I’m taking her spirit with me.”
Though their individual experiences differ, Melanie, Kerri and Farrah share a determination to give back to the charity that supported them and to help ensure others can receive the same care.
The skydive at Langar in May will give them the chance to honour their loved ones and raise funds to help Treetops continue delivering essential care across the community.
To find out more about taking part in a challenge for Treetops: https://www.treetopshospice.org.uk/get-involved/fundraising-with-treetops/events-and-challenges/
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