Paramotor Slalom World Championships

Jérémy Penone of France won the second FAI paramotor slalom world championship (solo footlaunch category) which closed on 5 July 2015 in Legnica, Poland. Wojciech Bogdal (PL) took the solo trikes title. The first three national teams were Poland, France and Spain. The eight-day event started 27 June, but was sadly marred by the death of the Lithuanian competitor Rolandas […] …read more

Source:: Cross Country – International Free Flying Magazine

Icaro Apus hike-and-fly harness

Icaro have unveiled their new lightweight reversible hike-and-fly harness. The Apus is a seatboard-less design, with an airbag and a 3.5cm foam back protector. The back protection can be changed for a thicker version or removed entirely to save weight, and there is also a tough Lexan plate to protect from sharp objects. The harness comes with buckles […] …read more

Source:: Cross Country – International Free Flying Magazine

View from the Back: Bornes to Fly on a tandem

Cross Country’s Marcus and Charlie King entered this year’s Bornes to Fly weekend-warrior hike-and-fly race with a tandem wing. The race started in torrential rain from the shores of lake Annecy in May. As X-Alps competitors Stanislav Mayer and Eric Rehnfeldt, along with around 90 percent of the field, sprinted nimbly out of the start gate in the pouring rain and […] …read more

Source:: Cross Country – International Free Flying Magazine

Twisted: Theo de Blic Interview

Ed Ewing interviews Théo de Blic, the 21-year-old French acro dude who invented the Twisted Infinite tumble. Théo flies 500 hours a year and last year he and his former mentor Horacio Llorens stood together on every podium in every acro competition they entered. His first paraglider flight was with his dad at the age of just two-and-a-half, with tandem […] …read more

Source:: Cross Country – International Free Flying Magazine

Into the Andes: South American adventure

Swiss pilots Thomas Rüesch and Ueli Neuenschwander found a place for a flying adventure where they could explore new places and fly over sites rarely seen from above. Flying in the Andes meant not only over-flying snowcapped 6,000m mountains, but salt flats, patchwork flatlands, tropical rainforests, volcanoes, trout-filled lakes and ancient Incan ruins. The pair started in Perus’s Sacred Valley near Cusco, then moved […] …read more

Source:: Cross Country – International Free Flying Magazine

Dean Eldridge, 1965-2015

Ozone friend and legendary PPG pilot, Dean Eldridge, passed away after suffering injuries in a tragic paramotoring accident on July 7th. Dean was a skilled veteran and a dedicated educator in the PPG scene. Dean’s efforts to improve safety and education in the PPG world will be felt for a long time to come, and the flying community will suffer for his loss. We are deeply saddened by his passing, and our thoughts are with his family.

Dean’s accident occurred during figure-8 slalom flying. Sadly, there were no witnesses and there is no way to accurately determine the precise cause of the accident. The inherent dangers of slalom flying should give everyone pause for thought, but for now our deepest thoughts are for the passing of a legendary pilot and the loss to his family.

…read more

Source:: Ozone Paramotor