Neal M.
Yelp
More Ride for the Buck! A 45-60 minute commercial balloon ride in Albuquerque goes for $375/adult. My wife and I have taken five of these and I'd say closer to 35-45 minutes. This ride was 1 hr and 20 minutes! There is good scenery in Albuquerque with the gently flowing Rio Grande and the Sandias, but it pales in comparison to the Rio Grande Gorge with the Sangre de Cristo Mountains as backdrop.
Rio Grande Balloons price is $325/adult. This is slightly higher than the other Taos balloon offerings ($285 and $300). I can't speak for the latter, but I can speak to our other five commercial flights: You get what you pay for. This was my wife's and my 6th balloon ride. This 6th ride is like comparing riding in a Mercedes to riding in a compact economy car on a rough road, that is, there is no comparison. We didn't know what we had been missing! Read on.
Bonus: Photos and videos -- FREE! On our previous five balloon rides there was no photographer. Sol uses his smart phone to take pictures of us in the basket. His ground crew also takes pictures and videos from below! When you complete the ride, you go to the Rio Grande Gorge Bridge picnic area for a traditional post balloon ride celebration. Set you smart phone to airdrop. Sol will explain how to do this. Within seconds you will have photos and videos of your flight! By the way, you will enjoy the post balloon flight tradition and Sol tells it better than anyone.
Sol has his personally trained crew of four. Our other flights had a crew of two and paying passengers helped set up and take down. Let me tell you, Sol's balloon and sundry equipment is professionally unpacked and repacked by the people who know how to do it. Yes, you can help, but the point is this balloon is ready to fly when it is unpacked, and ready to fly again after it is repacked. That's important.
The pilot, Sol, is also the owner of the company and the balloon you are going to be riding in. I am retired Air Force with over 5,000 hours of flight time. Sol is a professional; a pilot's pilot. His preflight is the most thorough I have seen for a hot air balloon. He guides his crew of four to set up the balloon launch. If they hook something up, he reinspects it on his preflight inspection. A good flight starts with attention to detail and safety. Maybe since my other balloon flights were not with the owner, it makes a difference. But I believe that Sol is just a safety-detail guy.
Sol briefed us on landing after we got into the basket. For landing we would be crouched down with our backs against either the middle partition or the basket wall with our backs facing the direction of landing. In all of my other rides we were standing up. My wife hurt her back on flight 5 in Albuquerque when we bounced and flipped over (winds were about 12 mph on landing). Not good. Sol's landing safety position must be uncommon sense. Excellent!
You're not going to ride with a better pilot. Sol contacted a small private plane flying over to check on winds aloft. This is important to navigation because in this area the wind direction aloft is often opposite of that at, say, 2500 above the ground. That way you can navigate better down the canyon and return to a landing spot of your choosing.
Sol knows how to lead a conversation and get people to participate. As if the balloon ride wasn't enough, he puts everyone at ease and opens conversation between passengers. He encourages questions -- so ask! One question asked was "How do you control the flight of the balloon?" Easily understood answer!
Landing. By landing the winds had crept up to probably 10 mph. This happened probably during the last minutes of our approach. But Sol had us in position. He had selected a smooth, sandy field to land in that was pretty free of vegetation. He greased it in with a steady flat drag of the basket. When we came to a stop the basket was at a 45 degree angle, paused there and then gentry settled. My wife was ecstatic with the landing.
Let's go again!