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The Hot Air Balloonists Prayer:


May the winds welcome you with softness
May the sun bless you with warm hands,
May you fly so high and so well
that God joins you in laughter
and set you gently back into the arms
of mother earth...



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I am a photographer and all images are my own copyrighted work.
All magnets, key chains, note cards, and bookmarks are my own design.
I attended my first Hot Air Balloon show in 1989 in Albuquerque, NM and have
loved Hot Air Balloons since then. I had the exciting opportunity to take a ride in a Hot Air Balloon
in 2007, and even though I have a fear of heights, it was one of the most exciting experiences of my life.




                                                             

Many people think that the first manned flight was conducted by the Wright Brothers, but the fact is the first human flight took place in 1783 with a hot air balloon constructed by another two brothers: Joseph-Michel and Jacques-Etienne Montgolfier.

                  First Hot Air Balloons                                                           

Even though the Portuguese community claims that their own Bartolomeu de Gusmão was the first man to fly, aviation historians only credit him with the first documented balloon flight in Europe. Using the same technique the Chinese used for their Kongming Lanterns we talked about in the first article of this series, Bartolomeu de Gusmão lifted a small balloon of paper full of hot air about four meters in front of king John V on August 8, 1709. Bartolomeu also attempted to lift himself from Saint George Castle in Lisbon but all he did is fall about one kilometer away.

Returning to the Montgolfier brothers we mentioned earlier, they came from a family of paper manufacturers and came up with the invention by noticing ash rising in paper fires. After a public demonstration of their invention on June 4, 1783, the Montgolfier brothers experimented with unmanned balloons and animal flights.

                          First Human Flight

The first hot air balloon flight with humans on board took place on October 19, 1783. The hot air balloon built by the Montgolfier brothers was essentially composed of cloth bags that were sometimes lined with paper and a smoky fire built on a grill attached to the bottom.

The Montgolfier brothers also conducted the first free flight with human passengers on 21 November 1783 in their home city of Annonay, France.

Also in France, only a few days later in Paris, Professor Jacques Charles and Nicholas Louis Robert made the first gas balloon flight. Their balloon was built based on Henry Cavendish work, the British scientist that discovered hydrogen and its properties and it reached the height of 600 meters above the ground and covered 43 km in two hours before landing in the small town Nesle on December 1, 1783.

Another French inventor was the first to cross the English Channel: Jean-Pierre Blanchard traveled from Dover Castle in England to Guines in France in two and a half hours on 7 January 1785.

                           Steerable Balloons

The hot air balloons previously mentioned were not steerable, that is, they flew were the wind took them. Throughout the XIX century, scientists focused their attention toward developing balloons that could be steered.

The man to achieve the first powered, controlled, sustained flight with a machine lighter than air is considered to be Henri Giffard. He flew 25 km in France with a steam engine driven craft in 1852.

The first fully controllable free-flight was made with La France, a 52 m long, 1,900 m3, electric powered airship powered by an 8-1/2 horsepower electric motor and developed by Charles Renard and Arthur Krebs. La France flew 8 km in 23 minutes in 1884.

However, hot air balloons were generally short-lived and extremely frail. Routine, controlled flights would not come to pass until the advent of the internal combustion engine.

The man who first took advantage of the internal combustion engine on a balloon was Alberto Santos-Dumont, from Brazil. His airship, "Number 6" flew over Paris and steered it to circle the Eiffel Tower and then returned to his takeoff point, the Parc Saint Cloud in less than half an hour.

References

http://www.wikipedia.com

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