A shocking surprise from the sky came has come crashing down again.

Claudell Curry, 82, and his wife, Odell Marie Curry, 83, were sitting in the TV room of their San Bernardino home on Sunday about 9 p.m. when the house shook violently.

“That terrible noise, I never heard a noise like that before,” Claudell Curry said.

It’s no wonder; a chunk of ice the size of a car engine doesn’t strike one’s roof every day. But it did happen Sunday in San Bernardino County for the second time since Nov. 4.

On that day, ice tore a hole in the roof of Brandon Blanchard’s home in Chino.

Federal Aviation Administration spokesman Ian Gregor said at the time that the ice could have formed on the outside of a passenger airliner from a leak in its galley. No one could think of any other explanation for the falling ice.

Blanchard’s ice was clear, as was Curry’s. Blue ice would have come from an airliner’s lavatory, Gregor said.

As in Blanchard’s case, no one was injured at the North Arizona Street home west of the 215 Freeway and north of Baseline where the Currys have lived for 56 years. As Claudell Curry on Monday showed where he found ice outside, two passenger jets soared far overhead.

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The Currys were thankful they had not yet gone to bed Sunday when the ice ripped a hole in the roof the size of a bowling ball and sent debris, including piles of insulation, falling onto their bed in the room next to the TV.

“We shiver every time we think we could have been in bed,” Claudell Curry said. “The wife is still nervous, but we are doing OK. It was quite a traumatic experience.”

Curry didn’t call the FAA on Sunday, but he did phone the police.

“They thought I was out of my mind,” Curry said.

He phoned his insurance company Monday.

“They couldn’t believe it,” Curry said.