Oct 16 - Meet Thomas Sacher, the poster boy of the new paragliding paradigm. Sacher represents the essence of what paragliding has unfortunately become: a parasite upon the right of free men to pursue their dreams without government interference. Participants of extreme sports in a free society are often considered entitled by that society to a certain level of protection and compassion because free-thinkers and risk-takers provide a vital vibrance and vision to societal evolution. But in return, they are expected to exhibit a certain level of responsibility and ethical behavior to avoid becoming a burden upon that society. Hang glider pilots have, for the most part, evidenced this responsibility for decades. But the tide of financial retribution now sweeping across Europe, driven by a desperate necessity to meet the escalating expenses of search and rescue operations, is in large part a response to to a horde of irresponsible, inconsiderate and seemingly sociopathological paraglider pilots. Sacher first found media fame by colliding with a pregnant woman on the balcony of her apartment in Linz in 2010 during a paragliding competition. Then on October 2, he experienced a collapse and miraculously landed on a high cliff ledge. He requested a helicopter rescue, but for some reason, he did not pack up his paraglider.
When the helicopter arrived, the helicopter pilot chose not to lift Sacher off the ledge out of fear the sail could entangle itself in the rotor blades, causing the helicopter to crash and potentially kill everyone on board. The helicopter then landed above the cliff, high above Sacher, and sent down a mountain rescue team to lift him by rope. Despite his protestations, they refused to haul his gear - his paraglider - off the mountain. But they did carry him to safety. Then, on October 16, Sacher enlisted a friend to help him extricate his paraglider from the cliff face. According to reports, they started late, collected the paraglider, but then claiming they were trapped and faced with nightfall, called for another helicopter rescue to take them off the mountain. A search and rescue helicopter arrived, technically unable to refuse such a request, and plucked Sacher, his paraglider and his friend from the mountain. Now accusations arise, angrily, not just from Austria, but from Italy and Spain, while other countries watch, that paragliders are misusing emergency services to the extent of incorporating them as an element of their sport. This reaction has severe implications, not just for Europe but for North America and beyond, for search and rescue response, free-flight site security and insurance availability. Again, I cannot emphasize enough that hang glider pilots must distance themselves from paragliding or they risk losing what little remains for them.
Rick Masters
Mythology of the Airframe
A Plague of Paragliders
October 11, 2011
http://www.cometclones.com/mythology2011.htm