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Balloon Ride Business
On The Up
Author: Stephen Turner,
for www.rideballoon.co.uk
Interested in going up, way up into the air
for a hot air balloon ride? Do you love seeing the world as
a soaring eagle does? If so, you are not alone, for the balloon
ride business is booming. Read this article to find out what
has changed in the balloon ride business over the last ten
years, and what this means for UK balloon enthusiasts and
balloon ride operators.
Ten years ago it was all very different in
the world of ballooning. You could expect to travel some considerable
distance to find a balloon ride operator to take you into
the air for a hot air balloon ride. You might even have to
leave your own country. If you were lucky, there would be
a small number of balloon ride operators somewhere near you,
and if you were unlucky, there would be none.
The good news is that all that has changed
in the balloon ride business. These days a balloon ride can
be had pretty much wherever you wish: Brazil, Russia, Chile,
Surrey, South Africa, Spain, Gloucestershire, Namibia, Costa
Rica, Kenya, Hertfordshire and, let us not forget, little
old Australia and the United States of America.
That I am able to throw a few counties in
England into my list of exciting ballooning locations from
around the world is a sign of high times for the balloon ride
business in the United Kingdom. It's good news for any one
like me who loves the idea of taking a balloon ride in Kenya,
but is too poor of time and money to book the flight out there.
Australians and Americans, blessed as they
are in their respective countries with numerous stunning locations
that are ideal for balloon rides, might legitimately say that
the United Kingdom is not blessed with the most ideal of flying
conditions for a balloon ride. We Brits might sigh and agree
that (even if we do get up in the air) our balloon ride will
just disappear into a constitutionally guaranteed grey sky,
where the best sight from our basket will be a steaming cup
of tea. But the truth is rather brighter. Most flights take
place early in the morning, when the weather is calmer, and
if you get up into the air, it's because the conditions are
right for flight, and so you will get a great view.
I have been taking photographs from way up there for ten years,
and my photo albums speak of the ballooning beauty that is
Great Britain.
Of course the weather can disappoint. Too
much wind, or the wrong type of wind, will keep you on the
ground, ruining your day. But there is usually another one
following it, so there is time to try again.
There are over a hundred commercial balloon
ride operators in the United Kingdom just waiting to get you
into the air. The statistics are impressive: there were around
80,000 balloon ride passengers in the United Kingdom last
year. And if you don't trust the statistics, trust the pilots.
Many of our pilots are highly experienced Australian and American
pilots, and if the flying or the business were poor, they
would not be here.
So why not make yourself one of the 80,000?
Bring your friends, the family, who ever you want. It really
is jaw-droppingly beautiful up there. It's another world and
you just do not want to come down. But with business the way
it is, you don't have to for long.
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