The Borneo Post

Paraglidin­g soars as Hong Kongers seek urban release

- By Yan Zhao

HONG KONG: On a mountain slope overlookin­g Hong Kong, Giovanni Lam waits for the right gust of wind to send him soaring skywards, one of a growing number of paraglider­s using flight to escape the dense urban sprawl below.

Patience is rewarded in paraglidin­g, explained Lam, a university lecturer and youth counsellor who brought three novices and heavy equipment on a 40-minute mountain trail hike last month, with the group waiting two hours in the winter chill for the weather to turn.

Once the clouds dispersed, revealing a rolling tapestry of parkland below, Lam ordered his tandem protege Keith Yung to walk against the wind as he pulled on lines attached to the canopy behind them.

Within seconds, the glider caught the breeze and the duo took off.

“Hong Kong is very crowded and there are always many people wherever you go... but once you are off in the sky, you are free,” Lam told AFP.

“It feels like there are no chains or constraint­s.”

With most young Hong Kongers priced out of the city’s eye-watering property market — often living with parents in cramped flats well into their thirties — paraglidin­g is one of a number of outdoor sports that offer release from the stress of the concrete jungle below.

Lam hopes the sport will help his students gain a different perspectiv­e on the city they live in.

With his feet firmly back on solid ground, 22-year-old firsttimer Yung was exhilarate­d.

“The view is very different from what we see on the ground, or even from hiking up a peak,” he beamed.

“It’s like leaping into a new world.”

While Hong Kong is renowned for its skyscraper­s and dense housing blocks, the steep mountains that crown the southern Chinese city tower over any man-made structure, gifting it a wealth of hiking trails and

Hong Kong is very crowded and there are always many people wherever you go... but once you are off in the sky, you are free. It feels like there are no chains or constraint­s. — Giovanni Lam, university lecturer and youth counsellor

outdoor opportunit­ies.

Paraglidin­g has steadily caught on, Lam said, from just a few dozen pilots a few years ago to some 200 active members today.

Lam, 44, first tried it in Bali and has leaped off mountainsi­des across Asia.

But his favourite destinatio­n is still Hong Kong. He rates it “five-stars” for difficulty with fast-changing tropical weather and small landing zones, making it both a challengin­g and unforgivin­g place.

The sport is not without its dangers.

In July, experience­d Hong Kong paraglider Patrick Chung Yuk-Wa — a friend of Lam’s — failed to come back from a flight during squally conditions as a typhoon neared the region.

With grim weather conditions setting in after he was reported missing, it took rescuers five days to locate and retrieve Chung’s body.

The sport also debuted the following month at the Asian Games where an Afghan athlete suffered a spinal injury and a Chinese competitor broke a leg in separate crash landings.

Hong Kong has eight approved flying areas for paraglidin­g. But pilots fear the sport’s growth might be limited by pressure to build on parkland in a city with a major housing shortage.

Two landing zones within the designated flying areas have recently become unusable because of urban developmen­t.

“We can’t fly without landing. It’s a pity that Hong Kong attaches a lot of weight to developmen­t, especially property developmen­t,” Lam said.

“It’s important that we treasure what we have now.” — AFP

 ??  ?? (From left) Yes Chan and Carmen Li watch as university lecturer and youth counsellor Giovanni Lam prepares Keith Yung before they paraglide in tandem from Ma On Shan peak in Hong Kong. — AFP photos
(From left) Yes Chan and Carmen Li watch as university lecturer and youth counsellor Giovanni Lam prepares Keith Yung before they paraglide in tandem from Ma On Shan peak in Hong Kong. — AFP photos
 ??  ?? Giovanni Lam checks his wing before paraglidin­g from Ma On Shan peak.
Giovanni Lam checks his wing before paraglidin­g from Ma On Shan peak.
 ??  ?? Preparing the wing of Giovanni Lam (left) before he and Keith Yung (centre) paraglide in tandem.
Preparing the wing of Giovanni Lam (left) before he and Keith Yung (centre) paraglide in tandem.
 ??  ?? Running to take off from Ma On Shan peak.
Running to take off from Ma On Shan peak.
 ??  ?? Hikers pose for photos as a paraglider prepares to land on Ma On Shan peak.
Hikers pose for photos as a paraglider prepares to land on Ma On Shan peak.

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