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For the 49th year, the Helen to the Atlantic Balloon Race & Festival is underway

Posted 11:31AM on Thursday 2nd June 2022 ( 1 year ago )

The nation’s only long-distance hot air balloon race lifted off at 7 a.m. from Wilkins Field in Helen.

In its 49th year, the Helen to the Atlantic Balloon Race & Festival is the South’s oldest balloon event.

The race winner is the first person to cross I-95, or whoever is ahead at sunset Friday, June 3.

But not all the nearly 20 balloons that inflated and lifted off are headed to the coast. Many fly locally to promote Helen – Georgia’s Alpine Village.

Craig McDonald is a Helen original when it comes to the sport of ballooning. He got his start in the sport when the first couple of hot air balloons were introduced to the town.

“I've been around ballooning since 1972, when Pete Hodkinson and Lanier Chambers bought balloons to kind of get things started here, and I started out crewing, helping them a little bit,” McDonald said. “And then Tarp Head started the same way I did, and then he ended up manufacturing balloons. And I kept a balloon of my own up until probably 10 years ago. So, I’ve flown up here for 40 years, but it was just time for me to kind of retire.”

The race begins in Helen and the finish line is Interstate 95, anywhere between Maine and Miami. The shortest distance is 225 miles, and the race usually takes two days.

Thursday morning’s weather was ideal for the race and the local mass ascension.

“I think that's a good direction that first balloon Jonathan Wright from Albuquerque took off,” McDonald said. “That's always a good direction. So, it's not toward any national forest or any kind of danger or anything. Should be a lot of open fields and good landing spots.”

At last report, Wright, the 2021 and 2017 race winner, was nearing South Carolina.

“He probably will fly until lunchtime,” McDonald said. “Because he's solo and he's going all the way to the coast, he'll drop down and refuel and then try to make it on to the coast one day if he can.”

The race becomes a crew event as well since the balloons are limited to 40 gallons of propane – enough to last approximately four hours. If crews are not there to refuel the balloon quickly once it lands, valuable time is lost.

McDonald says the use of a single launch location has quantified the balloon festival event for Helen.

“I think when we started using this field that was donated by the Wilkinses, it put all the balloons together in one spot,” McDonald said. “For years, Helen started building up and there’d be two or three balloons on one little patch of grass and two or three on others. We can all be here and on the other side of the creek there's plenty of room for spectators. Before, you could not tell what kind of crowd you had. And this is a really big event that a lot of people come out and support it.”

Balloonists not competing in the race will participate in local events at 6 p.m. Thursday, and around 7:30 a.m. and 6 p.m. Friday and Saturday, weather permitting. Balloons will only fly for one to two hours, and there are no ballooning activities during the middle of the day.

There is a $5 parking fee (supporting local non-profit organizations) for those visiting Wilkins Field off Bruckenstrasse in Helen to view the balloons, and there are opportunities for the public to assist with the inflation of the balloons or be part of a chase crew that follows the balloon.

The Helendorf River Inn serves as host and headquarters for the event, as it has since 1974. Those planning to drive into town to see balloons should call Balloon Headquarters at (706) 878-2271 to make sure it is not raining or too windy for balloons to fly.

Jonathan Wright of Albuqerque, N.M., is the first to lift off promptly at 7 a.m. He is competing in the 49th Helen to the Atlantic Balloon Race.
Crews add heated air to fill the envelope of one of the balloons.
Craig McDonald holds the basket as balloon pilot David Bristol prepares to take Helen Police Chief Aletha Barrett and City Clerk Marilyn Chastain for their first balloon flight.
Crews work to inflate many of the balloons for Thursday morning's mass ascension in Helen.
A propane burner is used to heat the air inside the balloon envelope.
Helen Police Chief Aletha Barrett and City Clerk Marilyn Chastain assist with inflating David Bristol's balloon Thursday morning.
One of the balloons lands off Bottoms Road just off Ga. 17 in Sautee.
A crowd gathers across the creek to watch the balloons take off.
Two more racer-style balloons take off from Wilkins Field in Helen.
The late Pete Hodkinson of Habersham County, a developer responsible for rallying Helen businessmen to revitalize the city as an Alpine Village, coined the theme "From the center of the world to the edge of the Earth". He said locals feel Helen is the center of the world, and in Columbus' day, the Atlantic Ocean was the "edige of the Earth".
Balloons of varying shapes, colors, and designs inflate on Wilkins Field in Helen.
It can be a tight squeeze to inflate nearly 20 hot air balloons on a couple of acres, but balloonists and crews are cautious to ensure safe results.
Airspace around Helen can get a little crowded between 7 and 8 a.m. on balloon race day as nearly 20 balloons share the sky with a helicopter and a half-dozen drones.
A colorful balloon shines against the morning's blue sky over Helen.
Sunlight reflects off this balloon envelope, resembling stained glass.
A balloon rises high above Wilkins Field in Helen after takeoff Thursday morning.

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