What exactly is it?
Developed from parachuting canopies, modern paragliders can be soared effortlessly on windward slopes, and flown across country in good conditions. It‘s the same freedom that hang glider pilots enjoy, but a paraglider is more portable and a little easier to learn to fly. They are more hampered by strong winds than hang gliders but are easier to land in small fields.
What can you do with one?
Many paraglider pilots strive to perfect their skills in cross-country flying. A summer sky filled with fluffy cumulus clouds provides abundant - but invisible - lifting currents which pilots use to gain altitude. Setting off on such a day, either towards a pre-selected goal or just drifting where the wind will take you, is one of the most breathtaking experiences available today. Most pilots will talk of the sense of privilege they feel when drifting from cloud to cloud, in almost total silence, watching the landscape unfold beneath them as they navigate across the sky.
Do they always need a hill?
Paragliding is not limited to upland environments. Tow launching, the launch technique use in the flatlands, uses an engine-driven winch to pull pilots aloft where they search for lift like their hill flying friends.
Paraglider Types
Today hill schools and tow schools use paragliders which can stay aloft in good lift conditions and, with experience, be flown on cross-country flights. Paragliders are rated and tested and a BASOA registered school will train you on a paraglider that is rated for a beginner.
How much do they cost?
Paragliders are not cheap, although they represent one of the least expensive ways to get into the air. A new paraglider suitable for a recently trained pilot will little bit expensive, secondhand canopies can be obtained for much less. Apart from a glider you need a harness, helmet, flight suit and boots; later in your flying career you may choose to buy instruments and other useful accessories.
Paragliding is a great community. You‘ll often find championship-winning pilots comparing notes with novices; both know that theirs is perhaps the simplest and most intuitive way of flying yet devised. If you want to enjoy the challenges that only being truly at one with the elements can provide, book a training course today!
Learning to fly a paraglider
Expect a full course at a Borneo Air Sport Ozone Adventures to take around ten days of flyable weather. You might also consider a short "taster" course or a limited Elementary Pilot certificate.
Training is usually conducted on a gentle slope. Your instructor will explain how the canopy is laid out, inflated and controlled by its brake lines; you‘ll then take it in turns with other members of your group to have your first short training hops.
When you‘ve become adept at ground handling, controlling airspeed and making gentle turns, you‘ll probably go to a higher hill for longer flights. The instructor may even take you up dual on a special canopy to demonstrate an exercise. As things fall into place you‘ll learn to soar - to stay up in favourable winds and make longer flights.
In the classroom you‘ll cover flight theory, meteorology and basic air law and sit a simple exam. With a positive assessment from your instructor on your flying, normally on your own the canopy, you‘ll be given a BASOA Club Pilot rating enabling you to fly in the club environment. You‘ll find that DIY takes a back seat when you‘ve discovered the unlimited freedom of the sky!
You can also learn to fly in an airfield environment, using a winch to tow you aloft. Training takes less time and you can convert to hill flying later if you choose to. For more information on learning to fly, finding a training school, Borneo Air Sports Ozone Adventure will provide all this.