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Exhilarating Hang Gliding lets you Fly like an Eagle
AdrenalinePages.com,
June 29th 2001
Anyone who has ever dreamed of flying can live the fantasy by taking a hang gliding lesson in Marin County. San
Francisco Hang Gliding Center (SFHG), has opened Mt. Tamalpais State Park for commercial tandem hang gliding
and paragliding instruction.
Berkeley native
Bodhi Kroll and his English wife Hayley Marsden-Kroll
started the San Francisco Hang Gliding Center five years ago when they
decided they wanted to teach hang gliding from the top of Mount
Tamalpais.
Before SFHG came on the scene, going hang gliding in the
area meant owning a glider and knowing how to fly. Now owner
Bodhi Kroll teaches novices on a special tandem, or
two-person, hang glider. The gliders fly over Mt Tamalpais, 10
miles from the Golden Gate Bridge, over redwoods and homes,
and land on the north end of Stinson Beach. Some have
described the landing as so soft it was difficult to say when the
flight was over.
Kroll says he was a child when he started having vivid dreams
of flying. He also enjoyed bird-watching and was fascinated by
their flight. He was a teenager when he saw a hang glider and
recognized that hang gliding could allow him to live his dreams.
Kroll has been flying for about 17 years. He learned the trade by working for a hang gliding company in Australia. His
students have included an eight-year-old boy and an 83-year-old man.
Once at Mt. Tamalpais, the glider - which is collapsible for
easy transport - is assembled. Slide rods in the wings keep the
glider stable, although steady winds can appear to be tugging
the glider from the pilot's hands. Solo hang gliders average 145
- 150 square feet, and tandem gliders are almost twice as large
at 210 - 220 square feet with a 37-foot wingspan. Each student
is fitted with a full-body harness, attached to both the instructor
and the glider for safety. In addition to hang gliding for
beginners, SFHG offers paragliding - described as an
experience more like floating than flying.
A paraglider employs a parachute that is laid out on the
ground. The pilot takes a few steps and the chute opens and
lifts him or her into the air. A paraglider can initiate turns, but a
hang glider can dive and climb and dip. Kroll believes the majority of the public - even those who are afraid of heights -
can learn to love hang gliding. For reservations or more information, call (510) 528-2300.
Kroll explains that only 120 people in the United States are certified to
perform tandem hang gliding, which takes more training and a special
exemption from the Federal Aviation Administration. SFHG currently
employs six instructors all of whom are certified by the United States
Hang Gliding Association.
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