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Rise HelicoptersCategory: Flying schoolsArea: CheltenhamHanger SE34, Gloucestershire Airport, StavertonGL51 6SR Telephone: (01452) 857083 Rise Helicopters are based at Gloucestershire Airport and operate a fleet of eight helicopters all maintained on site, allowing unbeatable availability and serviceability. Rise Helicopters provide helicopter training, helicopter charter, gift vouchers and air experience flights, corporate treasure hunts and much more. The facilities at Rise Helicopters are exceptional offering a large executive lounge, fully furnished balcony, bar and facilities and WiFi at no extra cost. Come and have a go at flying a helicopter, have a go at our hover challenge – it really is a fantastic experience. To find out more visit risehelicopters.co.uk or call 01452 857083. |
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Rise Helicopters at Gloucestershire Airport offer a full range of services. | Rise Helicopters enjoys an impeccable safety record and outstanding reputation. | Take a pleasure flight or learn to fly - either way you'll enjoy fantastic views. |
SoGlos.com review
Rise Helicopters trial lesson









SoGlos.com takes to the skies for an uplifting flying lesson with Rise Helicopters at Gloucestershire Airport.
Learning to fly is a childhood obsession some people never grow out of, while for others it’s a distant dream reserved for the day all five lottery numbers are picked out – for us it was a little bit of both. But as we took the few steps from Rise Helicopter’s head office to a Robinson 22 chopper waiting on a landing strip nearby, we realised it is an ambition made all the more achievable thanks to relatively affordable lessons and Gloucestershire Airport’s location on our doorstep in Staverton.
So, equipped with a combination of excitement, anticipation and a touch of nerves thrown in for good measure, we took our position in the compact little chopper next to Rise Helicopters’ chief pilot, the exceedingly-calm James Kenwright. Before seconds later, after a reassuring clunk of the seatbelt and strapping on a headset, we prepared for the heart-in-the-mouth helicopter take-off we’d been dreaming off ever since watching Airwolf as a nipper.
The rotor blades were fired-up and instructions could be heard from air traffic control centre before we flew higher and higher on a vertical climb that took us above Gloucestershire Airport’s busy runway. It was an odd, but thrilling feeling to be skimming across the skies which James’ description of the feeling of freedom as a ‘magic carpet ride’ fitted perfectly, as we cut through the air with amazing ease.
Travelling at speeds of around 100mph, soon enough Gloucester and Cheltenham were behind us, and we were surrounded by nothing but Tewkesbury’s open fields. Thanks to the cockpit’s excellent visibility, you can expect to enjoy a view of our fine county like you’ve never before seen it. While it would have been easy to sit back and enjoy the stunning vistas, James was soon running through the basics of the helicopter’s controls – much simpler than you might imagine with a cyclic stick doing most of the work.
After asking a question he must have heard a thousand times before: ‘What happens if the engine fails because helicopters can’t glide to safety like an aeroplane, can they?’ James cut the engine. With silence all around, we gently drifted down towards a field, the rotor blades’ airfoil shape creating an upward lift – before the engine was engaged again to push the point home. It was a comfort to begin to understand how safe flying in a helicopter can be, but nothing compared to the demonstration of the Robinson 22 helicopter’s agility.
With grace and style James sent us soaring over fields, manoeuvring around nearby trees and taking us in a rapid 360 – while the grass around us could be seen rustling as the amazing machine dropped in for a visit. Wherever it was told to go the helicopter went, quickly but smoothly making for an experience which is out of this world.
By the time you’ve experienced what the helicopter is capable of – thanks to an experienced pilot with more than 7,000 hours on his logbook no less – taking the controls for the very first time is something you will never forget. ‘Keep your wrist on your knee and make small movements,’ we were instructed, and feeling the helicopter move forward under your command is something everyone should experience if only once. Only when piloting the helicopter for the first time can you experience what skill is involved, with the slightest hand movements changing our course. ‘I can be back on the controls in a split second,’ James assured me – which was comforting as I tried my hand at turning and pointing us in a different direction.
After an exhilarating few minutes, James was back in control and we made our way back towards Gloucestershire airport. Back on the airfield and is was time to have a go at hovering – again made to look like a piece of cake as we danced like a bumblebee over the ground. But, as we now knew from experience, taking the controls and ‘simply’ keeping the horizon straight is no mean feat – with controlled and precise movements of the cyclic stick needed to do the job – with the anti-torque pedals being used make the nose yaw and point us in a different direction.
Setting back down on land after the 30-minute trial lesson and it’s difficult to imagine why we hadn’t embarked on the experience sooner. ‘There are only three things stopping people learning how to fly,’ James commented, ‘money, fear and ability’. But with instruction offered at a fairly affordable rate, seeing for yourself how safe it can be and excellent instruction at your disposal – for this new budding pilot at least the idea of learning how to fly a helicopter has become an exciting new reality. Now if I can just stop humming that Airwolf theme tune.
Rise Helicopters offer trial lessons from £140 and hourly instruction from £220 per hour. Qualifying for your Helicopter Private Pilots License requires a minimum of 45 hours tuition and is normally achieved in 50 to 55 hours. Call (01452) 857083 or visit risehelicopters.co.uk for more details
3 September 2007
James Fryer





