You won't find a hang glider pilot, flying along happily, who encounters a thermal and suddenly falls out of the sky to his death in a few short seconds.
Like the dead soaring parachutist above. He had no chance.
No. Hang glider pilots will be happily flying along, encounter a thermal, yell "Yippee!" and crank, bank, and ride that wondrous natural elevator into the sky.
Hang glider pilots do not fear thermals.
That's the number one difference between a paraglider rider and a hang glider pilot.
Paragliders are parachutes that can collapse in normal atmospheric turbulence an kill their pilots - and do, on an almost daily basis, throughout the world, every summer.
Hang gliders are genuine, reliable aircraft designed to perform and survive in normal atmospheric turbulence.
Thermals collapse paragliders.
Thermals don't collapse hang gliders.
In a recent newsletter to members, the Italian Federation of Free Flight, which is much more straightforward and seemingly more honest than the USHPA, gave this warning about paragliding on July 18, 2015, following the three paraglider collapse deaths that led to the closure of Italian airspace on Mt. Blanc to paragliding and, most unfairly, to hang gliding, as well.
"Cogliamo innanzitutto l'occasione per ricordare a tutti piloti di volo libero che il volo in condizioni di sottovento è una condizione particolarmente rischiosa per un'ala floscia come il parapendio. A scuola di volo si insegna che questo è un tipo di volo vietato ai nostri mezzi. Il fatto che ci siano piloti che a volte, sempre più spesso, volano in tali condizioni senza conseguenze negative, non rende questa pratica più sicura, nè per loro stessi nè per chi li osserva. Questo evento ci rammenta ancora una volta che esperienza e capacità non sono dei lasciapassare per ogni condizione. I mezzi recenti, molto stabili finché non chiudono, rassicurano ed invitano ad osare di più ma le leggi della fisica ancora rappresentano un vincolo per tutti i mezzi e tutti i piloti." "We take this opportunity to remind all pilots of free flight that the flight conditions downwind [of a mountain ridge] are particularly risky for a wing as limp as a paraglider. In flight school, we are taught that this kind of flight is denied to us [alt; beyond our means]. The fact that pilots, more often than not, fly in such conditions without negative consequences does not make the practice safer, neither for themselves nor for those who observe them. [The recent spate of paragliding fatalities on Mt. Blanc] reminds us once again that experience and ability are not the passport to all conditions. The [paraglider will seem] very stable until it collapses. [It will] reassure you and invite you to be more daring, but the laws of physics still represent a constraint for all paragliders and their pilots."
http://www.fivl.it/sicurezza/archivio-nesletter-sicurezza/archive/view/listid-3/mailid-107-pillole-di-sicurezza-monte-bianco-vietato-al-volo-libero?tmpl=component Potential pilots should think carefully just what it is they want to achieve by flying. If your ultimate goal is flying Big Air inland, you will be endangering your survival by choosing paragliding because you will have locked yourself into surfing the Big Air on an air mattress. Don't take a noodle to a gunfight. Choose a hang glider. You will not regret it.