Hahahahah you have no idea sandee ive competed in 5 countrys worked for 3 paragliding companys and i was intentionally being vague and suger coating paragliding if you want to talk stats for anyone who cares the brits crunched the numbers and being the only country in the world to do so came back with paragliding being 8 times more dangerous and likely to die then rideing motorbikes.... what makes this statistic really fun is they have a tiny flying window and barely fly at all and they ride motorbikes in some of the most dangerous conditions available.
No other sport apart from freediving will a world champion regularly die during a heat thru no fault of theyre own.
To give you some perspective on how we train i have to practice blacking out from gforces over the water while im blacking out i need to be aware of who or what is around me as im spiralling towards the ground i need to calculate how long i have before i loose peripheral vision and colour. While im trying to pump blood back into my head i need to still be reading my instruments.
This is considered basic training for anyone doing crosscountry. If your pushing the kms (check the recent french title where 5 guys did over 400kms will be up on every ozone newsfeed) you must be able to handle your g forces otherwise you will be in a situation where you are unable to go DOWN.
THINK ABOUT THAT
Cant get down. Sounds like time to drop the eva link
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Tldr from a dusty little outback hill in nsw eva managed to get sucked up to 9946 meters thats a kilometer higher then mt everest
Also another fun little statistic
Coastal flying i wholely believe is more likely the pilots fault for dieing rather then the weather conditions. Boreing soaring as we call it is well mostly boreing. You can just sit in the liftband and boat about.... or you can copy someone who is doing tricks... actually... everyones doing tricks today.....maybe i should try some! Next minute theyre dead.
The most dangerous thing about coastal flying IS its relative safety in comparison to inland flying. Everyone pushes theyre boundrys more and more and they grow unawarw that theyre "getting away with it" rather then actually being qualified.
Since november 23 i have had 4 people die that ive been friends with/flown with just in australia.
I wouldnt be surprised at all if that numbers actually higher and just because i dont have facebook im unaware of it. Have to wait for the AIRS safety reports to come out every other month.
So who has more accidents inland or coastal? Apparently... its coastal! Who would have thought the more "safer and accesable" coastal flying would result in more deaths?
Theres another fun statistic and that is that the vast majority of pilots seem to be computer scientists or engineers (you know the bit on the tisms who cant dance variety) because the majority of flying is about compartmentaliseing your mind its about boxing your fears and dealing with them and about makeing solid decisions and haveing alternatives. Every second needs a plan a b and c
I personally have about 3 solid close calls a year for the last 12 years.
Have you nearly died 36 times doing something recreationally?
Most people stop after a couple.
I consider myself a very conservative low airtime pilot in comparison to my red bull stickered friends.
Some of whom you can learn about how when your paraplegic if you dont pull your ballsack away from your thigh it can get a little green and smelly. Or how you can feel small open wounds on your butt or legs from slideing in and out of your wheelchair so they never heal. You know all the fun stuff they dont tell you about as your doing a little "boreing soaring"
But its not all doom and gloom theres plenty of storys of being shot at by millitant groups in developing countrys or the usual kidnappings and imprisonings.
Or how world champion wing suiters can take up speedflying (apparently safer) and land seamingly normal even ON FILM but there was a 8 inch high mound of dirt in the field that you barely tapped and now you gotto use a pee bag FOR LIFE
If you had anything to loose... would you nearly die a few times a year? Thru no fault of your own? You can say its no different then crossing a road all you want but when your in the middle of a cascade of collapses being ragged dolled in the sky with lines ripping your limbs off i assure you it is not the same as crossing the road or driving on a highway at night.
You dont find to many sports where the worlds best acrobatic pilots and cross country pilots openly speak about theyre fears and doubts and scares.
But the intermediate syndrome pilots with less then half a dozen years experience think its all safe and fun and exhilirateing etc etc
I watch the later of them die every year sometimes im on scene.
Here we go... just to give you some perspective on that point.... i watched my friend get blown back and get a collapse and crash from maybe 100 meters away... (my first 8 or so years i would RUN TOWARDS THEM with my radio trying to organise more help as i run with dinner plate eyes... ) and i just took note of the spur he was trying to climb out from suited up and took off flying because I KNEW that theyre would be a helicopter coming to take him to tamworth if it was a good crash or newcastle if it was a bad one (surgery etc) so i knew i had to get up and away from the hill ASAP
So i quickly launched and got out of there before the chopper came.
Thats the difference that truly understanding this sport will do to you. You must be able to compartmentalise everything not unlike how i believe active military are taught to. (One the guys i was helping learn to fly was actually a 1 footed sandy )
I originally only started teaching kiteing so it would help me teach paragliding. But theres a much darker difference between a student dieing and a friend you fly with eat with drink with and live with at competitions. So i dont teach paragliding because ive seen just what does to someone when they have a student die even if its not during the course.
It will make you question far to much