in a flat area with no obstacles and no slopes it is quite safe to practice groundhandling. in a certain windrange (15 - 25 km/h) you can also make very floaty jumps. But a word of warning: those 24 sqm paragliders are no toy. better carefully watch many groundhandling videos, before you try it yourself. or start in very low wind conditions - not above 15 km/h. and get yourself a lightweight and small paraglider (<5 kg). in fact, the smaller a glider you can get (<22 sqm) the better.
Correct me if I'm wrong, but I would assume a paraglider like this (trainer ?) would make a much better 'kite' for jumping than most kites would. For smaller floaty jumps (say under 10ft) how safe are these 'generic ground handling' paragliders?
in a flat area with no obstacles and no slopes it is quite safe to practice groundhandling. in a certain windrange (15 - 25 km/h) you can also make very floaty jumps. But a word of warning: those 24 sqm paragliders are no toy. better carefully watch many groundhandling videos, before you try it yourself. or start in very low wind conditions - not above 15 km/h. and get yourself a lightweight and small paraglider (<5 kg). in fact, the smaller a glider you can get (<22 sqm) the better.
hercion 8 months ago
Correct me if I'm wrong, but I would assume a paraglider like this (trainer ?) would make a much better 'kite' for jumping than most kites would. For smaller floaty jumps (say under 10ft) how safe are these 'generic ground handling' paragliders?
quedecree 8 months ago