Escaping Cloud Suck

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Eagle Hang Gliding

Eagle Hang Gliding

2 жыл бұрын

Escaping Cloud Suck in a Hang glider

Пікірлер: 413
@Chris.Davies
@Chris.Davies 2 ай бұрын
As I always tried to teach my students: it is infinitely preferable to be on the ground wishing you were in the air, than to be in the air wishing you were on the ground.
@gerrys6265
@gerrys6265 Ай бұрын
ahhh, but nearly as exciting!
@zippythinginvention
@zippythinginvention 28 күн бұрын
My instructor repeatedly told me this same thing. Wise words.
@RobR386
@RobR386 5 күн бұрын
I fly RC and it’s the same mantra, saved many models by simply choosing not to fly when the conditions look sketchy
@mikestephens5346
@mikestephens5346 3 күн бұрын
@@RobR386 yes, exactly the same thing....
@koosnaamloos4291
@koosnaamloos4291 21 сағат бұрын
well it's often much easier to grant the latter wish
@paulmahy
@paulmahy 2 ай бұрын
You could see that storm very clearly and you chose to go up.....
@pjnj042
@pjnj042 2 ай бұрын
And wouldn’t have made it back down if that storm had been moving in a different direction.
@yongyea4147
@yongyea4147 2 ай бұрын
He went way overboard! It's an outrage!!!!
@MrBojunga
@MrBojunga 2 ай бұрын
That’s my point of view
@garrl007
@garrl007 2 ай бұрын
He showed off in front of a female student. That’s all there is to it.
@jimthurman2571
@jimthurman2571 2 ай бұрын
😮😮😢​@@pjnj042
@humnpwr
@humnpwr 2 ай бұрын
A major part of learning to fly certified aircraft is studying meteorology and knowing when not to fly, especially if you’re taking passengers.
@flutetubamorg
@flutetubamorg 12 күн бұрын
My thoughts exactly. First 5 seconds of the video I was thinking that looks like some really active cloud formations in the area. Plus with that much rising air, it's also falling somewhere too.
@grub1962
@grub1962 2 ай бұрын
This video brought back memories of a flight I had and a lesson mother nature taught me about the science of rising air :). Towing on the Prairies of Alberta, Canada. I had just bought my first vario and got into a thermal at about 800 ft. AGL. My vario showed 400fpm as I entered the thermal. I remember thinking, wow, this is like cheating. I circled trying to find the core of the thermal... 400 became 700fpm, then 1000. At 1400fpm I thought, wow, I'm going to make it to cloudbase for the first time. As I made it to cloudbase, my vario was screaming 1500fpm. I decided I would circle one more time just to see and feel the wisps of cloud. Of course it was the middle of july and approximately 80 degrees on the ground. That one more circle, put me into the cloud. I looked down to see the ground and noticed that their was Sleet on the knuckles of my gloves. I decided it was time to get the hell out of there and dove to the VNE speed of my Sport 2. (70mph) I looked over at my vario and it was reading 400fpm UP. It took a few very long seconds to realise what was going on. Of course I questioned my vario's accuracy. Hell i was diving at 70mph, how could I still be going up! Here's the best part. My mind flashed back to 6 months earlier sitting on the toilet, reading the latest Hang glider magazine...specifically, the article on what to do if you get stuck in cloud suck! So the solution was super simple. Instead of trying to dive out of the thermal and creating all that lift with the extra speed I was pouring on to get away. I put my glider into a very high bank angle side slip and spiraled down away from the "Thermals" that were now converging to start forming a thunderstorm. Once free of the good lords grip... I went on to the see the longest cloud street I have ever witnessed. Made a 35 mile cross country flight that day with my new found knowledge. I will remember the sleet on the front of my gloves as long as I live. Thank you for sharing your video and I am so glad you had a flight to remember... with a happy outcome :) All the best, warm winds and no sink! S.C.
@EllipsisAircraft
@EllipsisAircraft 2 ай бұрын
😮😮 what a story! Reminds me of a sailplane guy who told me one of the same, everywhere he looked the cloud base was below him due to the dished upward base he was sucked into. He popped dive brakes and went pure vertical at Vne. As that particular sailplane was actually designed to perform that maneuver. Haha.
@fredread9216
@fredread9216 2 ай бұрын
Wow, wonder why this didn’t work for him. What were you flying.
@DrAElemayo
@DrAElemayo 2 ай бұрын
Did you boil to death when you landed? How is it even possible for it to be that hot?
@kalbic
@kalbic 2 ай бұрын
I hate cloud suck, felt it a few times when I didn't want to and the same thing happened to me. Thanks for the advise about high bank angle side slip, I will practice that.
@Dude8718
@Dude8718 2 ай бұрын
@@DrAElemayo80 degrees Fahrenheit.... not Celsius
@andrewbeattieRAB
@andrewbeattieRAB 2 ай бұрын
On her way home she Goggled “Drone Flying for Beginners.”😊
@testtest-lc4xz
@testtest-lc4xz 2 ай бұрын
Literally from the very first frame of the flight portion of this video and seeing the storm behind you, I knew this was going to be a wild ride. As a private pilot, we are taught to stay at least 20 miles away from thunderstorms. So to fly that close to a thunderstorm in a rinky dink hang glider is a bit crazy. And then to turn back toward the storm and get sucked up a second time was even more cray-cray.
@Maintenance_Mark
@Maintenance_Mark 2 ай бұрын
It's all according to plan when you want to show off for the young hot student and create a "life and death situation" to help get in her pants.
@davinderc
@davinderc Ай бұрын
I mean how else does one get KZbin clicks right? I'm surprised a trainer would choose to take their student up in this weather...
@adventureswitharizonaart6117
@adventureswitharizonaart6117 3 ай бұрын
Next time, just look for lift. Whenever I do, all I find is sink.
@jameswagstaff1962
@jameswagstaff1962 2 ай бұрын
🤣
@marksaul2281
@marksaul2281 2 ай бұрын
😂
@yongyea4147
@yongyea4147 2 ай бұрын
Story of my life.....
@yongyea4147
@yongyea4147 2 ай бұрын
I wash dishes for a living. Happily. 😊
@heraclitus6100
@heraclitus6100 Ай бұрын
@@yongyea4147 lmao
@user-bh8bo5hh9o
@user-bh8bo5hh9o 11 күн бұрын
Not only did the instructor get them outta a terrible situation, his complacent decision to continue his lolly-gagging around the thunderstorm allowed him to further boast of his horrific entanglement with sure death by getting them both back into that same stupid problem he didn't think about before subjecting this poor student into death-defying threats. Great job Jr. Now heres your lawsuit.
@danny-li6io
@danny-li6io 2 ай бұрын
I would love to hear the actual audio instead of the music
@mulletover3832
@mulletover3832 Ай бұрын
I'm actually stuck in an updraft right now, but the 5G signal is great. Wish me luck!
@recursiveidentity
@recursiveidentity 13 сағат бұрын
down yet?
@mulletover3832
@mulletover3832 13 сағат бұрын
@@recursiveidentity nope
@zippythinginvention
@zippythinginvention 28 күн бұрын
My instructor always said "It's better to be on the ground wishing you were in the sky than it is to be in the sky wishing you were on the ground."
@onebridge7231
@onebridge7231 17 күн бұрын
He also lucked out with such a calm passenger. She did great too!
@coryturner9140
@coryturner9140 2 ай бұрын
My instructor got sucked into a cloud at 17,000 feet and came out at 26,000 no oxygen glider covered in ice.. landed in a box canyon in a spiral when he came out. Lucky to have survived that one!
@humnpwr
@humnpwr 2 ай бұрын
Time to look for a qualified instructor
@coryturner9140
@coryturner9140 2 ай бұрын
@@humnpwr he was more than qualified. He started flying in the 70’s was a US hang gliding association board member and set distance records. You’ve obviously never flown in big air out west in the mountains.
@humnpwr
@humnpwr 2 ай бұрын
@@coryturner9140I was already a private pilot in the 60’s and also an honorary member of United States hangliders association in Ontario with an honorary mountain flying certificate. As I introduced the sport in Blue Mountain Collingwood in early 70’s 😂😂😂
@humnpwr
@humnpwr 2 ай бұрын
@@coryturner9140 I’ve had a pilot license since the 60’s. Very important is to check the weather before you fly. Stay at least 15 nm away from thunderstorms, anvil tops. They will shred an airliner to pieces in seconds and your Instructor allowed himself to be drawn up inside one??? I was given an honorary mountain flying license and membership to The United States Hang Gliding Association in early 70’s for introducing the sport in Ontario Canada.
@coryturner9140
@coryturner9140 2 ай бұрын
@@humnpwr the only way to set distance records is to fly on the edge when the cumulus clouds are popping… when the mountain tops are over 10,000 feet the air gets big fast… you don’t even need clouds to make for a dangerous situation. You get katabatic winds in the evening at the same location and the whole valley is going up during the glassoff period and we’ve had people stuck at 11,000 ft after the sun has set…king mountain Idaho is a well known big air location…
@justinf1343
@justinf1343 8 ай бұрын
He’s like “hey, can you help me pull the bar in” 😂
@dennisk5818
@dennisk5818 2 ай бұрын
I'm a glider pilot and would not have thought that the Rogallo wing would have been that good in a thermal. Glad you had a safe landing. I learned the physics of a large CU cloud. I was flying a 1-26 and ended up in the cloud, entering at cloudbase. The convection currents inside this cloud drew me in, gaining some altitude. I quickly responded and leveled by sense, then nosed down, finally punching through the cloudbase. Cumulonimbus clouds, though, have a hell of a lot of energy and getting sucked up in one can run you up thousands of feet.
@rangirua1
@rangirua1 2 ай бұрын
Flying off a hill top with 6 others here in New Zealand quite a few years back. The other 6 had 5min plummets, scratching around for lift. I had over an hour almost vertical in my harness, with the bar as far back as I could get it. Finally spat me out at 9000ft. Scary!
@obee1kanobee
@obee1kanobee Ай бұрын
Which hill top in nz ?
@rangirua1
@rangirua1 Ай бұрын
@@obee1kanobeeTapawera. Out of Nelson
@Dzordzikk
@Dzordzikk 2 ай бұрын
Every bad end starts by bad decission. You are luck that it ends with smile. Next time dońt go to fly with thunderstorm on horizon.
@garystillman2724
@garystillman2724 2 ай бұрын
1970'S SEAGULL PILOT HERE..... 🤣🤣🤣🤣 THE PHRASE DONT MESS WITH MOTHER NATURE, COMES TO MIND. (also from the 1970's!!) 👏👏👏💪 hanging your leg over the cross bar was CLASSIC! 😉
@SimonAmazingClarke
@SimonAmazingClarke 2 ай бұрын
Interesting problem to have. I remember reading an account about two sailplane pilots who jumped out of it as it was getting sucked higher. One opened his chute when he cleared the cloud, the other when he was only a thousand feet. The first one spent the next hour or so going up and down. Frozen from the cold and blacking out with the altitude. He had a frightening day.
@HGAviator
@HGAviator 2 ай бұрын
What happened to the sailplane?
@SimonAmazingClarke
@SimonAmazingClarke 2 ай бұрын
@@HGAviator They parachuted out of is and lost sight of if. Not a clue if the account mentioned it.
@ULFLYER5
@ULFLYER5 2 ай бұрын
Had it happen back in the early 90s. It is amazing how fast the excitement of great I am going up turns to, oh shit I am still going up. Actually thought about cutting the hang loop and using the reserve or breaking the glider. That Pac Air was stronger than I ever knew. Great job staying calm and keeping the student calm as well.
@particleconfig.8935
@particleconfig.8935 2 ай бұрын
don't use the reserve when in that aircurrent >_
@ULFLYER5
@ULFLYER5 2 ай бұрын
@@particleconfig.8935 Read my whole post.
@jpcab9460
@jpcab9460 2 ай бұрын
Great job keeping out of that. I'm PG pilot and got sucked into an OD storm cell once. It was the single scariest experience of my adult life. 11 m/s lift in sopping wet rain and turbulence you wouldn't believe. I ended up stalling and back flying down and out 3000ft before I was out of the white room and got to safety. Just wild
@sandrainthesky1011
@sandrainthesky1011 2 ай бұрын
That sounds way worse than my experience. I must say though, big ears didn't do nothing with my old wing. My new one has reduced line count so might be nearly as good as a stall. Glad to hear you survived!
@DrAElemayo
@DrAElemayo 2 ай бұрын
@@sandrainthesky1011 Big ear (or full assymetric collapse) on one side and spiral on the other. It's a great method to descend fast without the G forces of a normal spiral dive.
@ariffbasri
@ariffbasri 2 ай бұрын
another pilot says collapse your frontal by pulling A in controlled manner
@mbboisvert
@mbboisvert 7 ай бұрын
This is incredible. Thanks for sharing. This serves as a good lesson as to how dangerously strong and large lift can get.
@ecoturismovalle1570
@ecoturismovalle1570 7 ай бұрын
One thing is certain....that lady will NEVER try hang gliding again...
@cptvanier
@cptvanier 2 ай бұрын
It said she was a pilot in training and seemed to handle it with surprisingly little fear... I have no Idea why you would think this. You could be right but I doubt it.
@UTAH100
@UTAH100 2 ай бұрын
She was clueless. She will fly and become a pilot. Should she? Not sure.
@ecoturismovalle1570
@ecoturismovalle1570 2 ай бұрын
@@UTAH100 hopefully!!
@UTAH100
@UTAH100 2 ай бұрын
@ismovalle1570 Some people are simply not meant for certain things. Given her completely aloofness, I don't think she has the requisite mindset of a sober pilot. She would literally smile her way into the ground. I did not see any neural protective connections firing. At crisis time, one needs to turn off the smile; stop talking and posing for instagram and focus on critical task management. Some things cannot be trained. You have to have a pilots instinct. She likely has other skills like shopping and posting online. Being a pilot is not her strength. I could be wrong but I honestly don't think she learned a thing. I think she immediately went online and posted this online for views. She was probalby like OMG- it was amazing. My instructor is the best! OMG- let's grab some Starbucks and go shopping. I can't wait to get my hang gliding pilots license. God help us all. From what I have seen, that will likely not end well for her. Notice a pattern? kzbin.info/www/bejne/o3zJfmeGgLWgrNk&ab_channel=PilotDebrief
@DrAElemayo
@DrAElemayo 2 ай бұрын
@@UTAH100 Please take your sexism elsewhere. This wasn't her mistake. It was fully the instructor's. There wasn't anything she could do as she was literally the passenger learning from the instructor. I bet she's a better pilot than you are.
@robertzeeland
@robertzeeland 6 ай бұрын
I liked this video a lot; as a PG pilot I've always thought you can just yank the bar and honk downwards at a 40 degree angle at 90km/hr. I fly tandem too and I guess a hangi tandem is a bit of a truck, meant to fly stable and damped. Kudos to miss Brooke smiling all the time! All the best, fly free my friend.
@ericoschmitt
@ericoschmitt 2 ай бұрын
Tandems are indeed too stable in pitch. Several luff lines from the king post to the trailing edge hold it up at speed, pitching up the glider. The overall design is not made for steep dives. In his situation I'd try both legs over the bar, hands on nose wire, asking for the passenger's help in doing the same.
@petersmythe6462
@petersmythe6462 5 күн бұрын
You see this is why we should the the people who made the X-29 to design ultralights.
@dominodoggy1
@dominodoggy1 5 күн бұрын
but I have to say I LOVE how by the end of the video your student was right up there flying on the bar with you instead of tandeming behind you. What a way to learn!
@dominodoggy1
@dominodoggy1 5 күн бұрын
Lord I hope I never have to stand on my control bar to get back down.
@petedavis7970
@petedavis7970 10 күн бұрын
That's funny. I think I know the situation he was talking about. I immediately thought about it and thought, "you need to get your knees over the control bar." I read about it back in the 90s. Maybe '93 or so when I was hang gliding. I think the story was in Hang Gliding magazine. Guy was flying in the West. He was caught in something. I don't think it was a thunderstorm, though, but it was a major updraft and the sun was setting (you don't want to fly at night!) and he couldn't get down and he finally got his knees over the control bar to pull it back. The risk with that is you can fall through the control bar and if you do, then you go into a dive that you'll never recover from because you won't be able to get back over the control bar. Probably a lot less risk with a second person who can stay on the back side of the control bar.
@jack-o_lantern
@jack-o_lantern 5 күн бұрын
Although the decision to fly that day was questionable in hindsight, kudos to the instructor for keeping a level head in the situation. He got them out safe, live and learn. Well done.
@al3k
@al3k 5 күн бұрын
What a fantastic way to launch and land. Not seen this before. Love it. Great times.
@dernicolas6281
@dernicolas6281 2 ай бұрын
dark clouds: let's go flying.. can't be that bad. :) At least you weren't under a paraglider. Also there I learnt: getting away is the way, not getting down. Because you won't make it down without getting away first..
@matthiaswindrich9697
@matthiaswindrich9697 2 ай бұрын
Why would a Paraglider have been worse? I don't know much about hang glider but paraglider have multiple ways to loose hight fast if needed. Accelerated Big Ears , Spiral Decent or B Stall. I never saw a Glider reduce its wingspan at will.
@dernicolas6281
@dernicolas6281 2 ай бұрын
@@matthiaswindrich9697 only big ears get you moving away. And you're far slower than a hangglider. I've done all maneuvers in trainings but their decent rate is too slow to efficiently fight a cloud. Yes, also the spiral.. wouldn't want to try spiralling in an emergency situation. Best is to avoid. Really. I've pulled rather big ears for some 10- 15 minutes already, it's not relaxing if you have to come down.
@instrumentenfreak
@instrumentenfreak 2 ай бұрын
@@matthiaswindrich9697 If you can get a 20m/s spiral dive (70km/h without forward speed), you would not last more than a couple seconds. Maybe a minute. This is the fastest way to get down. Big ears will get you around 3-5m/s sink. B-stall ca 10m/s with no forward speed. Maybe throwing the reserve? That'll get you again 5m/s. Thunder storms can generate cloud suck with 100km/h or more, Inside the cloud it can reach over 200km/h. Thats terminal velocity for human bodies.
@dernicolas6281
@dernicolas6281 2 ай бұрын
​@@instrumentenfreakyea - though I've never reached that kind of velocity with a b-stall on my paraglider.. not saying it couldn't be possible. Also check in the video how long the hangglider needed to escape..
@aurelg3367
@aurelg3367 2 ай бұрын
​@@dernicolas6281we have to find the best way and I want to know the descent rate of a 50% collapse with a spiral on the opposite side of the collapse. Or also just a very deep stall (not backfly) But yes, much better to avoid the situation!
@DJClintB
@DJClintB Ай бұрын
The cloud wasn’t the only thing sucking that day
@WebenHad
@WebenHad 7 күн бұрын
I could feel the Adrenaline from my sofa.. the last thing I would have expected is a problem getting that flying raft out of the sky.. Way too cool 😎
@anxietyonline1947
@anxietyonline1947 9 күн бұрын
"In an attempt to gain more control over the glider, I unbuckle my student from her safety harness and drop her into the Mississippi" *Cue happy b roll music*
@Chompchompyerded
@Chompchompyerded Ай бұрын
That would have been a serious no go for most certified pilots. You really need to learn a bit about aviation weather, and think of your passenger before you go up. Maybe you're willing to take the risk, but your passenger isn't informed and can't make an informed decision. You're lucky. This one ended well. Don't go up with a passenger in conditions like that again. It may not end so well.
@ChrisJewell7333
@ChrisJewell7333 7 ай бұрын
Wild ride for sure ! ❤
@paulmadruga9786
@paulmadruga9786 2 ай бұрын
Not to mention they had to be getting pretty cold, since not dressed for the altitude.
@dougelick8397
@dougelick8397 9 күн бұрын
Anyone who's flown a small aircraft knows what those puffy clouds you're flying under mean on humid summer days. A Cessna 152 could take constant pitch and throttle control to reasonably stay at the designated altitude. Some days were *bumpy*. I can't fathom deciding to take to the air and then stay up with a big squall line clearly visible on a hang glider. Seeing anything like that in the distance meant, "we're getting away from that".
@vicky_webcatuk
@vicky_webcatuk 2 ай бұрын
Happy ending! phew that was tense. Theres noting quite like being up in the air when you really want to be on the ground, its not a great feeling, I've had it a few times. Nice to see a water landing, Ive not seen one before x
@AZAce1064
@AZAce1064 2 ай бұрын
Wow, you definitely got some extra air time out of that flight, glad it worked out👍 In the 80s I fought a thunderstorm thermal above Mingus Mountain in Arizona and it sucked me up to 11.500 before I got out to the S/E but landing sites in the forest are a different story. I’m still alive and I’m glad you both are too👍
@GlennD007
@GlennD007 2 ай бұрын
At the beginning of the video you mentioned the decision to fly was based on beautiful clear blue skies above you! Sorry, but I don't see ANY blue sky anywhere in your video, only overcast skies. Your poor pilot decision-making created this whole incident and it could have been avoided.
@ThomasDoubting5
@ThomasDoubting5 Жыл бұрын
I'm looking at the sky and I'm seeing a no flying day ! Customer got her money bet she didn't think she was going to 16 thousand ft mind pmsl 🤣 lucky people
@cantaldo
@cantaldo Ай бұрын
I was a Tandem pilot for years. Your passenger was the best!!!!!
@Worldopain
@Worldopain 12 күн бұрын
I was like "Oh no, they went in the water?!" Then I realized he has floats. lol
@paulh7589
@paulh7589 2 ай бұрын
Damn, that looks dangerous and fun- right up my alley!
@HJESUH
@HJESUH Ай бұрын
Es una experiencia inolvidable... Yo tuve una parecida con una Rumour2 un verano sobre la Muela de Alarilla. En un día de mucho calor, ascendí 500 m. en térmica, y de pronto entré en una zona de fuerte viento y ascenso. Me era imposible bajar, y solo picando a tope conseguía limitar la subida a un +2 m/s; pero era muy cansado y no dejaba de subir y retroceder a pesar de ir a 80-90 km/h. Llegó un momento en que empecé a sentir un frio intensísimo, y se me quedaban los guantes pegados en la barra de control al instante, como me costaba despegarlos sujeté la barra por la goma que la cubría en las curvas. También iba en mangas de camiseta y mi nariz era como una fuente continua de agua. Poco a poco me llevaba hacia atrás porque no aguantaba picando tanto tiempo. Se me ocurrió derivar hacia un lado, y al fin encontré una zona donde la intensidad bajaba y podía descender. Al llegar a 500 m el viento de pronto cesó y el calor intenso me subió rápidamente la temperatura. Había pillado una onda bastante violenta procedente de la sierra, a unos 50 km. Por debajo de 500 m sólo se podía ascender con térmica y era difícil pillar alguna. Ese día solo otra ala lo consiguió y le pasó lo mismo que a mi, pero era una Rumour pequeña y tuvo muchas menos dificultades que yo, que iba con un ala bastante grande en el límite de mi peso. En otra ocasión pillé onda en el mismo sitio, pero esa fue mucho más suave y mucha gente la cogió sin problemas. Es realmente angustioso ver que vas a una situación cada vez peor y sin poder evitarlo... Recomiendo en estas situaciones lo que hice, derivar de lado; o dejarse llevar hacia atrás si hay recogida( yo no la tenía ), pero dudo que se dejara de ascender; y pasar de 35 o 40 ºC a 0ºC con sensación térmica de -5 o -10 ºC y descendiendo... puede llegar a ser mortal( sobre todo si se va en pantalón y manga corta( menos mal que iba con guantes ), por que la onda puede subir mucho e ir aumentando la velocidad a medida que se sube. Me alegro que todo fuera bien. Me viene a la memoria un Campeonato que se hizo en Como, Italia, donde varios pilotos murieron al ser absorbidos por un cumulo nimbo. También han palmado así pilotos de planeador. Saludos
@mrtracyut
@mrtracyut 2 ай бұрын
Well handled. Calm initiative saved the day.
@Raeodor
@Raeodor 11 сағат бұрын
Who would have thought, pointing the nose down would make it go down.
@craiganthony6532
@craiganthony6532 3 күн бұрын
Couldn't think of a better music theme to this than Roblox! 👍
@murrayedington
@murrayedington 2 ай бұрын
Non flyer here. If the updraft was due to moisture being drawn up from the delta, why would you not head inland, away from the river? Perhaps I'm missing something here....
@DrAElemayo
@DrAElemayo 2 ай бұрын
Air humidity comes from land too. The storm cloud just sucks whatever air is under it, it's too powerful for the type of ground to matter.
@Mauriciovideomaker
@Mauriciovideomaker 2 ай бұрын
Just before they got airborne black storm clouds can be seen on the background .Taking off was just a very bad decision .
@BoogerEatingDemocrat
@BoogerEatingDemocrat Ай бұрын
Good thing y'all were wearing those little helmets.
@BrilliantDesignOnline
@BrilliantDesignOnline 2 ай бұрын
There is a story from yesteryear, of a bunch of pilots in Italy flying a site at the N end of a lake (Como?) in Italy on a sunny, blue-sky day, in the 80's(?). A fast system came up the lake and a big Cu popped over the site, which rapidly developed into a CuNim with the associated massive lift. Some were able to land, but a number were sucked up into the cloud, and as I recall, like about six were found frozen solid miles downwind later and some had harrowing tales. I have been flying since 1972 and I cannot remember the details, but perhaps someone else recalls this. I could tell you a few stories of my own experiences. File under: Tandems I had to stand on the control bar, WITH the student.
@lw216316
@lw216316 2 ай бұрын
I went for a demo ride in a glider. We were at 2000 feet and caught a thermal up to cloud base at 4500. It was a hot summer day in Tennesse with beautiful fluffy white clouds mixed with blue sky. There was no wind on the ground at the runway. In a very short time we went from 2000 feet to 4500 feet. I was amazed that the updraft was that strong. I estimated the combined weight of the glider, the pilot and myself to be well over 1000 pounds.
@matthewbustos7
@matthewbustos7 Ай бұрын
I am glad to hear that you are safe. That sounds like a frightening experience.
@dustintravis8791
@dustintravis8791 2 ай бұрын
Updrafts are no joke, glad you made it back down safely. I bet you were exhausted after that one!
@zopilotegalaz1128
@zopilotegalaz1128 2 ай бұрын
Good thing there was no turbulence.
@KeithWhittingham
@KeithWhittingham 2 ай бұрын
Weather forecasts? Pre-flight briefing?
@DrAElemayo
@DrAElemayo 2 ай бұрын
He's an experienced flight instructor, he doesn't need those things
@dougelick8397
@dougelick8397 9 күн бұрын
The black horizon!!!
@CaptainMedoc
@CaptainMedoc 7 ай бұрын
You are a BOSS !
@1fillmanw
@1fillmanw 23 күн бұрын
Lucky to live through it. From the look of the storm that is in the background, I wouldn't of gone up .......
@Birdman953
@Birdman953 2 ай бұрын
Been there done that stuck in a climbing dive. Just when you think that you’ve conquered it and ready to land, bang, up to the same stupid altitude that on a fine day would be a sky out but today even the maize leaves from the farmer’s fields are at cloud base!
@timtaylor1365
@timtaylor1365 Ай бұрын
Never seen float glider like that before - well done you managed very well. You only have one option of landing .
@ldero9520
@ldero9520 2 ай бұрын
Never seen something so dangerous.
@OPNURISYDER
@OPNURISYDER 2 ай бұрын
Very educational! I guess the lesson to be learned is not to try to get down but rather to get away, then down. Thanks for posting!
@UTAH100
@UTAH100 2 ай бұрын
Great job and nice play by play. She may be brave but I don't think she fully grasped the gravity of the danger you were both in. For those questioning the decision to fly- sure, it wasn't the best however probalby 99-100 they would be fine. Some calculated risks are part of the game. We hiked Half Dome- slight clouds but we survived. Same weather next day and woman died when it randomly rained and that granite got very slick like ice (on a blue sky day.) Life is unpredictable.
@particleconfig.8935
@particleconfig.8935 2 ай бұрын
but then again, should she have set a step when that rain started... (anyhow, condolences)
@paramotorIRL
@paramotorIRL Ай бұрын
Great job getting back safe!
@brucemcnair2
@brucemcnair2 2 ай бұрын
What a gutsy student.
@minermann61
@minermann61 Ай бұрын
In the sake of selfie 🤳 we are going to die
@Davemmmason
@Davemmmason 2 ай бұрын
PILOT ERROR , NO FLY DAY
@SteveSalisbury
@SteveSalisbury 2 ай бұрын
Epic stuff. Glad you got away safe. That student got her money's worth on that one!
@PhilippeLarcher
@PhilippeLarcher 2 ай бұрын
she paid to get endangered, cool
@joetriccas
@joetriccas 29 күн бұрын
What we call Luck is really when skill meets opportunity
@mattcorley4266
@mattcorley4266 2 ай бұрын
You had a pile of options from my standpoint. Run Forest run! But, what do I know...
@turbo3177
@turbo3177 2 ай бұрын
"Lethaly Hazardess". Jump in, this guy has taken his safety trainings.
@tangiblewaves3581
@tangiblewaves3581 2 ай бұрын
Oooh yes; had this situation too in my hanggliding days; first, you enjoy the thermals, but this flips quite quickly when you are 2000 meters above the landing zone and it still goes only up 😖
@marco1987warr
@marco1987warr 2 ай бұрын
the gust front winds just by being in the vicinity of that cell don't bear thinking about..
@banalpedant41
@banalpedant41 2 ай бұрын
Hate to say it but it needs to be said. That was stupid even before the flight. Showing more respect right from the get go would have been wise. I can't believe you looked at that cloud and thought, nah, it's cool.
@Lavthefox
@Lavthefox 25 күн бұрын
Cloud suck is pretty wild, happens in planes too! Flying gliders under really strong clouds - its like someone grabs the tail end of your plane and tries to pull you up like its a claw machine.
@kj8476
@kj8476 Ай бұрын
Hi as a hangglider XC pilot I would recommend standing onto the bar, this will increase your speed a lot. Even more compared what you did. Especially with a biplace glider this is easily possible.
@josephconleith9606
@josephconleith9606 Ай бұрын
Glider instructor here .. cloud suck is a well known term. I don’t understand why he didn’t check weather radar, or why did he stay in the updraft. He wouldn’t be welcome at our club - he’s an accident waiting to happen.
@Artur3237
@Artur3237 2 ай бұрын
Oh! That magnificient sky!😂
@_marlene
@_marlene 2 ай бұрын
cool! your student handled it great too, all smiles lol
@_occupations
@_occupations 2 ай бұрын
Bravo d'un ancien pilote de deltaplane des années 80...👍🙌 J'ai vécu une fois un début d'aspiration par un cumulonimbus et c'est très stressant...🙁
@thisflyingpotato4227
@thisflyingpotato4227 4 күн бұрын
6:31 glad she didn't left him hanging
@sleepingeye
@sleepingeye Ай бұрын
I am glad both of You came out of the situation unharmed. And i have to say it is very brave of You to post this.
@jonnyueland7790
@jonnyueland7790 Ай бұрын
I almost lost one of my friends like this, I think he is the person you were thinking about. He was sucked in to a cloud and was covered in ice before his glider broke and he fell though the cloud. when his glider came out of the cloud he was inverted. He also lost his parachute and crashed with the still broken glider. He was lucky to survive! SO NEVER FLY IN CONDISIONS LIKE THAT!
@idahobob180
@idahobob180 11 күн бұрын
Maybe they can design a wing where you can open a window of sorts to reduce the lift.
@Ryan-yo4dg
@Ryan-yo4dg 2 жыл бұрын
Wow, I remember watching this at your Lake City house with the "Flying Gypsies" 😜
@bjornvollheim7303
@bjornvollheim7303 Ай бұрын
One time almost 45 years ago, I got trapped in the under belly of an cumelus nimbus with my hangglider. I had to take several stalls and sideslips to ascape it. When I finely came out of it, I was compleately relocated. I had a nerve wereaking landing in a small opening in a woods field. But he story is only recorded in my mind.
@user-jm8ep4ts2u
@user-jm8ep4ts2u Ай бұрын
Excellent pilot! What altitude was the tow release? Loved the pictures at the end.
@user-xu7qi8vs6x
@user-xu7qi8vs6x 2 ай бұрын
Lesson learned that young lady will thank you for it if she gets in the situation ever on her own or she might become an instructor great fly ing ❤
@fredread9216
@fredread9216 2 ай бұрын
Wow, very scary. That sucks!! So speeding straight ahead got you down faster than a spiral dive? And I don’t suppose you can spin that craft. I recently saw a video of a woman that got sucked up and dumped out at over something like 37,000 feet! And 50 below zero temps. The only reason she lived was that the temps put her into hibernation and the wing iced up and collapsed. ( a paraglide). She tumbled down quickly and came to wing flying again. She was hospitalized for hyperthermia and fully recovered. Wow. Glad you didn’t have to try THAT.
@jewelleryrecoveryspecialis8869
@jewelleryrecoveryspecialis8869 17 күн бұрын
That's sounds amazing. Is there a video? 😂
@ticdelarue
@ticdelarue Ай бұрын
I've been cloud sucked while thermalling with a powered paraglider. It was like riding a wild bucking bronco. My glider was above me, beside me, behind me and under me. I spotted a bright spot to my left and added full power to advance towards it. I popped out of the cloud about 2500 feet above cloud base. The whole incident was less than 30-40 seconds.
@privatepilot4064
@privatepilot4064 Ай бұрын
That sucks. No doubt! Just because a storm is forming is no reason to cancel the lesson, afterall we don’t want to disappoint the ladies or give them the impression you’re not macho. I know, I’ve been there too.
@meFatuations
@meFatuations 2 ай бұрын
I got stuck going up at the point where I was tired and needed to land. Quite scary. It was just before sundown and so time was limited. I don't know how I knew to do this, but I put the glider into a steep turn that was not coordinated. It took a while, but I was able to spiral out of the lift.
@handmethepanda
@handmethepanda 2 ай бұрын
Oh no. The inevitable consequences of my own poor choices.
@drdweeb
@drdweeb 2 ай бұрын
05:47 there's a lightning behind. just under the right arm of the student
@amstein25stolz92
@amstein25stolz92 Ай бұрын
I once flew in the Alps on a hangglider competition when similar thing happened - it was getting dark and there was lift everywhere, The only - and right solution was to abandon the competition and fly as fast as possible (bar at the knees) to where there was the most light. You don't want to spiral down with that altitude above ground which you usually have when flying in the moutains - you will be too exhausted and you don't want to land when the gusts from the thunderstorm will hit you in the landing pattern. Good thermals always mean there is a risk of local cells, so always keep watching the meteo conditions during flight. Interesting the glider with floats - how do you get ashore with it after landing?
@odysseus556
@odysseus556 2 ай бұрын
In Greece we say. Finally good, all good. A lucky day, which fills the bag of experience.
@lore6803
@lore6803 Ай бұрын
"With beautiful blue skies above" 😂
@KumaBean
@KumaBean Ай бұрын
I just chewed off my last fingernail, cheers dude 😂 If memory serves right, there’s a chapter on her experience of being sucked into a cloud in Judy Leden’s autobiography Flying With Condors, an excellent read for anyone interested, it’s more than just a book, it’s an adventure Fly safe 💚
@markplain2555
@markplain2555 2 ай бұрын
As a glide pilot I am intrigued by where the first thermals came from (before cloud suck). You are over a mega river with forests along the banks. Forests tend to give off lift late in the day and Grey clouds build up late in the day. I am assuming that those Forests were super hot during the day and this flight occured late in the day. . Make me curious about install remote thermometers in the forest areas.
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