Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Paraglider brings passion for sport to Utah

Chance sighting in ’89 develops into career

- By DOMINIC VALENTE

PROVO, Utah — Ken Hudonjorge­nsen peers into the deep blue New Zealand sky — the year is 1989 — and he sees someone flying up there above the hills.

While perplexed at the sight of people hanging from large, sheetlike wings floating effortless­ly in the air, Hudonjorge­nsen was thoroughly hooked.

“Once we found out what it was, I looked over to my wife and said ‘I have to go do that.’ And so we did,” said Ken Hudonjorge­nsen, the founder and director of Two-Can Fly Paraglidin­g, a paraglidin­g school based in Sandy.

“Ever since ’89, I haven’t been able to stop,” Hudonjorge­nsen said. “I’m addicted.”

Hudonjorge­nsen and his wife had been in New Zealand teaching quality-of-life classes but decided to take a break in 1989, the Daily Herald reported.

“We decided to take a break on teaching and decided to just not do work for a while. We decided on two years. Those two years never ended. Here we are.”

Hudonjorge­nsen immediatel­y began to paraglide seriously and on a regular basis until the normal trajectory of a hobby turned into a career and a passion. After thousands of flight hours, navigation, prep hours and training, Hudonjorge­nsen opened his own business.

“I was sitting there with a buddy one day, and he just says to me, ‘You do this all the time, why don’t you make a business of it?’ and the rest is sort of history, I think,” Hudonjorge­nsen said.

Paraglidin­g, however, is a lot harder than it looks. “While it may be the most simple aircraft we have, it is also the most difficult to master,” Hudonjorge­nsen said.

Because of the lack of an engine and landing gear, paraglidin­g is a sport that takes finesse, balance and a keen sense of timing. Once one has the paraglidin­g wing spread out, it’s the pilot’s job to wait for the perfect moment where enough wind has filled the sail-like wing and to turn it around, face downhill and start to descend into a takeoff. From there, one hopes the wind has enough strength to carry you into the air, taking flight.

According to some of his friends, Hudonjorge­nsen has pioneered or has helped pioneer 98 percent of the flight routes in northern Utah. Pioneering is the act of driving — or in most cases, hiking on foot — to find a takeoff spot, and then by trial and error, make dozens of flights from that spot until one finds a suitable landing spot and a proper flight pattern that takes advantage of optimal wind conditions as well as thermal activity in the atmosphere.

The act of pioneering takes a lot patience, endurance and creativity.

“When you’re up in the air like that, you get lots of surprises,” said Jeff Silk, a friend of Hudonjorge­nsen and a longtime paraglider. “You have to be ready for anything, really. The wind can change in a flash.”

Hudonjorge­nsen offers one-time lessons as well as tandem lessons, for those who are beginners. In his classes, he offers rates at $110 per lesson. He also offers tandem flights, in which he directs the flight under his expertise and the person flying with him can just sit back and relax. These flights will run you about $125, according to his website.

As a fully certified paraglider, he also has the rare ability to train people towards their certificat­ion in paraglidin­g, which will run someone about $1,850.

While Hudonjorge­nsen is excited about teaching those who are interested in learning the art of paraglidin­g, he is much more interested in spreading the love and passion of the sport that he has to those in his community.

“There’s just this magical feeling you get when your feet lift off the ground and you’re in free flight. I mean we say we are three-dimensiona­l creatures, and that’s true; but we live on this plane, 24/7. And when your feet lift off the ground, there’s nothing like it.”

Just like any other sport, once you do it enough, you get picky. Hudonjorge­nsen and his friends say that after thousands of flights, sometimes the biggest thrill comes only after one has ascended thousands of feet into the air, where temperatur­es are freezing, and the buzz of the world can’t be heard.

“Sometimes I’ll only be up there for a bit, if the winds aren’t optimal. I don’t always have the best flights. However, even after some 40,000 flights, I always get that rush of having my feet leave the ground. There’s nothing quite like it.”

 ?? DOMINIC VALENTE/THE DAILY HERALD VIA AP ?? Neil Hansen and Ken Hudonjorge­nsen take flight while paraglidin­g above Provo, Utah.
DOMINIC VALENTE/THE DAILY HERALD VIA AP Neil Hansen and Ken Hudonjorge­nsen take flight while paraglidin­g above Provo, Utah.
 ?? DOMINIC VALENTE/THE DAILY HERALD VIA AP ?? Ken Hudonjorge­nsen carries his paraglidin­g equipment Aug. 25 to the takeoff zone at Inspiratio­n Point above Provo, Utah. He has pioneered many of the flight routes in northern Utah. Pioneeerin­g is finding takeoff spots and suitable landing sites.
DOMINIC VALENTE/THE DAILY HERALD VIA AP Ken Hudonjorge­nsen carries his paraglidin­g equipment Aug. 25 to the takeoff zone at Inspiratio­n Point above Provo, Utah. He has pioneered many of the flight routes in northern Utah. Pioneeerin­g is finding takeoff spots and suitable landing sites.
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