Page Six -THE MICHIGAN DAILY Saturday, June 12, 1976 Hot ai baloons; A heal : By SUSAN ADES P eRA1UTES, hang-gliders, sailplanes, kitcr - In my loftier moments I fan- cied' ntvef wingrek across the country- side su'-nnded from one of those exotic aerial creatures More often though I kissed the ground cnd cherished the secur- ity of knwing I'ci never have the means te live out the drem. Yet, one day oppor- timity id knock gad I soon found myself bcneth a billowmg balloon which from lONft feyl cast its majestic shadow over a ratc;%«-)rk of midwestern farms and fieW. itllooning, I discovered, was than jus' a way to get -om the land of Oz back to Kansas - ilo-ethy never knew what she was missing. Still, I couldn't blame her if she lost inx' desire to soar through the air after jeeing the wirarCs balloon wisked into th( :-nitltuous winds of the upper strato- sptfhre , before scores of screaming munch- T- ea-r my fretful mind the day of my er't ad' enture I searched for the truth ti-n' blloon'ng ir the written word. Per- us n' book on the history of the sport, I only found iti e:ed with gruesome tales of pioneers turned human meteors as they t'lned to eat' solo . . . their balloons lef+ hrm- on cloud somewhere. J'ff V-'nilsteit the person who was go- ,g to Ahw me te world from this new lterspctive, had sen flying balloons for ne Sears an dcding the gripping elev- enth hor belre flight time I tried to remitd myself of just that. But the mem- ory that he, a foriter aerobatics pilot, had also set the world altitude record in bal- laoricg onr wei1 before, by skimming the he'sscns at 41,000 feet, was not the com- fort I was searching for. For all I knew he raw noting but a thrill-crazed zombie with no particular attachments to such as hy delights as being alive. T1AT THUPSDAY AFTERNOON, ironic- ally, was a great day to be alive. The vind was so soft a leaf couldn't ride on it and the sky was clear and inviting. All the odds were :n my favor. - No ninchkin entourage was at Hudson Mills Park to see me off and no flying i;onkeys were on hand to prepare the bal- loan for takeoff. Instead about seven en- thusiasts inclu"-isg Jeff, my photographer friend Steve and iayself lent our muscle- poite:r to-the inflation effort. The propane burners spat flames into the li-ip green and vellow nylon sac and the bdltooin began to mushroom into the sky. As the lot air breathed more and more ;i.- into the monster it became harder to cntrol, rbich is where I came in handy. i 'as relegated to the tug-of-war post -sheg with three W'her volunteers, my job thg 5" help direct the balloon into its unright position I was just beginning to feel the power of this heaven-destined creatiire. iutt it was not yet my turn to be swept aw y by chis 'a.s of upward force. Two 14-year girls were first in line - friends of eff who were getting the $100 balloon ride free as a sort oh driayed Christmas gift. (I dohddered when I was informed that the bulk of the price goes for insurance. So I stayed behind to witness the first great up- isig from the ground floor. The balloon ,td off effortlessly as though it were a roere soap bubble, the brilliant sphere shrinking gradually against the sky as it climbed. OPPiNG INTO THE CAR, Steve and I were off to "track" the balloon from helow - a task reminiscent of trying to catch a falling leaf. The balloon has little mied of its own and is ruled tyranically by the wind. Knowing no paved byways, it sailed across fields, lawns and marshlands. Our temptation was to graze along direct- ly -Iow, bulldozieg the car through alfalfa fields and rose-dotted gardens, we took to the roads nonetheless in an effort to keep a step ahead o' the balloon. I.ike a rotund inanimate pied-piper, the craft :-tracted a string of followers be- Imv, some afoot, some astride bikes, but most by car. The scene was replete with born-honking, waving policemen and un- forgettable expressions. "One time in ny ballooning career," says Jeff who us used to being part of the sper tacle, "I watched a guy (his car) smasa right into the back of another guy. One was stopped in the middle of the road - it was a dirt road out in the county - with his head ,ticrkig out the window like this," he craned his neck out striking a giraffe-lke pose, "and blam!l!" Jeff macked his hands together for effect, "the other guy who was looking, but was not stopped, went smacko right into him." Gallons of gas later, the balloon began its descent into a bristling field of corn- hsrk stumps. Abadoning the car at the side of the road, Steve and I high-stepped it thrugl to the balloon at a healthy trot. We arrive on the spot just in time to act as human anmhors to prevent'the balloon frmm whi'nsicaity casting off towards the clouds again. IT WAS MY TURN. ttefore I could itter my last prayers a ielmet was placed on my head and I climbed into the 4 by 5 wicker basket. My eyes fixed upward to the cavernous inside of the oalloon, 1 hardly noticed we'd left the ground. I searched my emotions for a trace of fear but found only exhilaration as i watched n awe the ground fall out from underneath roy feet. Not a whisp of wind brushed my face, not a tilt of the basket could be felt. This was not the roller coaster ride I'd antici- pated, not even the elevator ride designed to transplant my stomach into my throat. This was as tranquil as I'd imagined a trip to heaven would be like as a child. This was being on cloud nine. I leaned over the side of the basket and marveled at the world while Jeff ex- plained the mechanics behind this peace- ful ride. "The serenity is the great part of it. You see, the balloon is moving in the great mass of air, it can't go any faster or slower than the air goes . . . conse- quently we're always in the calm and the little breeze you feel is the change in the direction in the wind.". SINCE THE ONLY power a pilot has over the craft is in his ability to order it up or down, Jeff and I shared the basket with three propane tanks and an array of temperature and altitude monitoring de- siees which fascinated me though not enough to distrct my attention for long from the fantasy unfolding b helow. The propane feeds the flame which keeps the air inside the balloon sufficiently hotter than the air outside in order to keep the balloon rising. The release of fuel into the brner is followed by a jetstream of fire that roars so l1ud it can be heard for miles around and in the dark illuminates te balloon so it resembles a giant light- bulb. Between blasts, Jeff talked about his love affair with His sky-creature. "Flying a balloon across a field like that," Jeff said, scanning the surroundings in n half-moon sweep of his helmeted head, "everything's a challenge - to control it, make it do what you want to do . . . get is down to four or five feet above the sur- face of the trees . - -" Coicis chimp c'f elms reached up and bru outtem of the basket at that very snagging our soth motion te Suddenly Jeff s face grew pens hi eyes searched the terrain, ",Ir seen it before," he exclaimed pot a marshland brimming with wild and exotic bird calls. "And its j to get down into these places wb body can get 1s-n and look, justs I the voice trailed off as we spt ducks in a pond below. When we got to a height of aro feet, Jeff assumad the role of a to a-d as he pivoted slowly around basket, I followed suit. He pointed Ann Arbor Burton Tower and the ing homesteads of Pinckney, Chel Den-ter, all from one vantage pin AFTER A HALF-HOUR of floati the landscape, Jeff spotted a site he couldn't resist - a small larger than the diag and certainly nizrre a choice. I thought he was bit when he begar to maneuer ' tion I couldn't retrain myself fI in, "Are you serious?" "Sure I am," he replied with gar, "We're going to get our .. hw's that?" "Iine." I lied not savoring the of swimming aslnoee. To my extr sre Jeff missed the mark bya ret'rs and so we were off up i anain Tie blond-ha red, mustachioel turer has had successful aquati do-ns before, mae the time he n balloon between the banks of t River creating a traffic jam of on a cross-bridge as far as the see. Brt Jeff s first balloons more tragic fate. "The thing a Moby Dick and it landed up on tom of tile Rum River," he lau plaining that was in his former he -linnesota. CUTTING TOGE tHER his best ei tone, Jeff told the story of his l]ton encounter. "I was reading th s ction in a Minneapolis paper he began, "and advertised in it air balloon for sale. Well this w and there was no ,hot-air balloo' on then . . . as far as the sport cerned there was none. I don't I just called and it was for sale backs which was really cheap The Saturd -Magaz was cheap, it was oa-a-a-d news letting the "bad ' drag until itr ears. "It didn't have any of the fa ment like I've got 'ow," he equipment being defined not onil of 21st century gadgets but by weight vehicle as well. By Jeff the Moby Dick must have res whale more than a balloon. It w heavv - duty army surplus fa tire truck burros of cast iro "We never flew that thing Jeff assured me, " was alwayt death of it." More recently however Jeff