A Hot Air Balloon passenger's emergency guide
If You Have to Land the Balloon Yourself A passenger's emergency guide — for a Temecula flight, when the pilot is down and you are the person closest to the burner. By Stephen "Pseudo Publius" This is a realistic what-to-do-if essay, not a flight manual and not a substitute for FAA training. Nobody reading this is qualified to fly a balloon. The goal of this writing is to keep you alive long enough for a trained person on the ground to help you — and to prevent the worst common mistakes a frightened passenger would otherwise make. If the pilot is incapacitated, your first priority is the cell phone, not the burner. Read on. First: Breathe. The Balloon Is Not Falling. If the pilot has just collapsed, or fallen, or is otherwise not flying the craft, the most important thing to understand in the first five seconds is this: the balloon is not going to plummet. A hot air balloon without a pilot is still a balloon. The envelope above you is full of hot air...