Posted by Bob K, at the beginning of this blog:
Safety Advisory
The Accident Reporting Committee would like to remind all USHPA pilots of the dynamic risks associated with spring and early summer conditions. In 2013 there were two paragliding fatalities with springtime thermic turbulence as potential contributing factors.
...Pilots are reminded that spring and early summer can present some of the strongest and most turbulent thermic conditions of the year. Pilots face the temptation to fly in strong conditions after a winter of little or no flying. Spring and early summer are when our skills are at their weakest while conditions can be the most challenging and changeable - a potentially dangerous combination.
Recommendations:
Make conservative launch decisions. Avoid mid-day thermic conditions unless your skill level and recent flight proficiency are strong.
Maintain very active piloting focus and execution at all times. This is extremely important when flying under 400ft AGL (launching, scratching, low level ridge soaring, and landing)
Fly with others and encourage, model and support conservative launch decisions.
Fly High, Fly Far and Fly Safe
David Norwood
USHPA - Accident Reporting Committee Co-Chair (Paragliding)
David Norwood, the USHPA Accident Reporting Committee Co-Chair for paragliding, fell to his death under a collapsed paraglider on July 16 after encountering a thermal.
This drives home a simple point. Wishful thinking and chutzpah do not trump reality. Soaring parachutists are dealt a different set of cards than hang glider pilots but they do not recognize this. Hang glider pilots have always known that they must strive to bring their skill set up to match the level of performance of their airframed wing. Soaring parachutists try to do the same thing with their parachutes but for them it is a fantasy. Their "wing" is just cloth and is far from being up to the job. What are they thinking just before impact? "I did everything right - now this! It isn't fair!" Hang glider pilots can only shake their heads. Every time it happens, we know somebody made a very, very bad choice. But few will belabor the obvious.