If you intend to fly from hills then a hill training school
will provide the most appropriate initial training, fully relevant from
the start.
If you live in a flat area and have a tow club nearby then it could be
best to learn at a tow school. However most tow pilots will soon want
to launch from hills. Initial hill training followed by a "conversion
course" is the best option and still cheaper even if travel and
B&B are included.
The conventional way to learn aerotowing is to train and develop skills by hill flying. Once the hill pilot has the Pilot(Hill) rating (CP Hill + 25 hours) and is familiar with their glider they can take an aerotow conversion course with their local club for the Aerotow rating. This tried and trusted method has been successful for over 15 years of aerotowing hang gliders.
There are currently 8 hang glider aerotow clubs in the UK compared to nearly 50 hang gliding hill clubs. The range of micolights used by the UK aerotow clubs fly very fast. They are best suited to towing "sport" or "performance" class hang gliders.
At South Downs Hang Gliding we offer a hill Conversion course run by professional instructors. With this endorsement you can fly at hundreds of hill sites around the UK.
Learning to fly at a hang gliding hill school is cheaper, simpler and more appropriate if you want to fly from hills and mountains.
At South Downs Hang Gliding the full course takes only 9 days,
one day at a time when it suits your diary. Some people prefer to come
for one day per week, others prefer a few days at a time. (To stay
current, each day should not be more than one month apart). Each day
you progress through the BHPA syllabus.
We do not walk up hills carrying hang gliders! On the low training
flights we use the breeze and wheels to let the glider blow itself
uphill, very little effort, and within a few minutes, the glider is
back ready for another flight. All higher flights are retrieved by
vehicle.
From the start the hill student learns how the air behaves near hills
and develops the skills necessary to fly safely near the ground.
After only 9 training days the student will have achieved more than 60
solo flights. That is 60+ launches and landings! All the time learning
and experiencing the right weather for hill flying. Further
airtime is completely free. The student pilot being able to make their
first soaring flights at a hill club where they can fly for hours on
the up-slope wind. The CP(Hill) rating is awarded after demonstrating
three soaring flights of at least 10 minutes each.
A winch or aerotow can be essential in flatlands and a real asset to a school where suitable training slopes are lacking. However, solely launching from a flat airfield and being pulled into the air, takes away a large part of learning the sport and will often lead to a poor launch technique and simplistic site assessment when transferring to hill flying.
Tow students learn extra hazards such as line-breaks, lock-outs, weak-links, etc, that are only involved when relying on towing equipment. There is more to go wrong and is reliant on other people. If you want to fly hills then all this is unnecessary. Note that the CP (tow or aerotow) only qualifies you to fly by tow launching, but not from the hills. CP(aerotow) pilots can find it difficult to leave their "airpark" school and will continue to pay for all flights, having obtained what amounts to a "restricted" flying licence.
Flightpark training, CP(tow or aerotow), is an expensive way to learn to fly hang gliders. For similar money the average hill student can pay for all their training, buy a glider and have money left over towards a hang gliding holiday!
South Downs Hang Gliding
Gibraltar Farm, Firle, East Sussex. BN8 6NB
Tel. 07890 362648
E-mail: info@southdownshanggliding.co.uk