
- A young Wellington woman suffered a fractured nose, black eye, and possible concussion from a flying drumstick at Wellington鈥檚 Homegrown.
- The drumsticks were thrown into the crowd by Stan Walker鈥檚 drummer at the end of his performance.
- Alyssa Ta posted on TikTok urging performers not to throw hard objects into crowds.
A Wellington student who suffered a fractured nose, black eye, and possible concussion after being hit by a flying drumstick at Homegrown believes she鈥檚 lucky it wasn鈥檛 worse.
Festival-goer Alyssa Ta, 20, attended the event on Wellington鈥檚 waterfront for the first time earlier this month to see electronic dance act Synthony, but said things went awry when she felt a 鈥渢hud鈥 on her face at the end of Stan Walker鈥檚 performance.
Ta said she was in the middle of the Waitangi Park mosh pit and had turned to leave when she felt a 鈥渉ard smack鈥.
鈥淚t hurt like hell, the impact was quite hard鈥, she said.
Ta said she didn鈥檛 see the drummer throw his drumsticks but quickly realised what had happened.
鈥淚t had bounced off my face and onto someone鈥檚 back鈥, who Ta said then picked up the drumstick off the ground.
She sought medical attention from paramedics at the event, who assessed her face which she says was immediately swollen and bruised.
Ta says she was in the middle of the crowd when she was hit by the flying drumstick. Photo / Andy McDonald.
The drumstick had fractured her nose and possibly caused a minor concussion Ta said.
鈥淭hey advised to get that checked out the next day which I didn鈥檛.
鈥淢y friends said that they possibly thought I was [concussed] because I was quite sensitive to light, I had a black eye on the side where it nearly hit my eye and I would just forget some things that I would say.鈥
After being given paracetamol and an icepack, Ta said she was 鈥渢hankfully鈥 able to go enjoy the rest of the festival.
鈥淚 was quite lucky because it was on my nose, just missing my eye by like one inch.鈥
Ta wants performers to stop throwing hard objects into the crowd, after she was left with a black eye, fractured nose, and suspected concussion. Photo / supplied.
The incident happened on Friday, March 14. Ta said she鈥檚 mostly recovered now but still has light bruising.
The near miss prompted Ta to take to TikTok, posting a video of her with Wellington Free Ambulance paramedics, captioned 鈥渄ear performers. please don鈥檛 throw hard objects into the crowd鈥.
The festival-goer took to social media to share her experience, which caught the attention of the drummer. Photo / TikTok.
鈥淚 think it should change, soft objects like shirts or a guitar pick that鈥檚 small is fine but when it鈥檚 quite hard, and especially when it鈥檚 an overhand throw can be quite dangerous.鈥
The post caught the attention of Stan Walker鈥檚 drummer who threw the sticks, Ross Nansen, who commented 鈥渙ops so sorry my bad hope you are ok鈥.
鈥淗ope it didn鈥檛 ruin your weekend, again so sorry, won鈥檛 be throwing sticks out again :)鈥, Nansen said in a thread on the post.
Ta said she also direct messaged Nansen who was 鈥渞eally apologetic鈥. She said she doesn鈥檛 hold it against him.
Alyssa Ta says she didn't see the drumstick coming but felt a 'hard smack' on her face. Photo / supplied.
Ta said she emailed Homegrown to report the incident in the hope it would prevent something like this happening again but hasn鈥檛 received a response.
Homegrown did not respond to ob体育接口鈥檚 questions about the incident.
A Wellington Free Ambulance spokeswoman said they treated 121 patients over the two days Homegrown was held. Four patients were transported to hospital for further treatment.
She would not discuss specific incidents citing patient privacy and confidentiality.
Nansen and Stan Walker鈥檚 management also did not respond to requests for comment.
Ethan Manera is a multimedia journalist based in Wellington. He joined ob体育接口 in 2023 and is interested in local issues, politics and property in the capital. Ethan is always on the lookout for a story and can be emailed at [email protected].
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