Top Gun Flight School

At iParaglide Top Gun Flight School, we take pride in having taught over 1900 paragliding students in our 26 years of operation.

We are the the longest running school based in Metro Vancouver. Due to our central location, we are the only school that flies all of the relevant kiting parks, training hills and mountains within a 3 hour radius of Vancouver.  This empowers pilots to get to know the key training and flying spots early, optimizes and accelerates learning, and allows them to grow into great future pilots.  

We have the reputation of being an industry leader with an emphasis on engineered safety systems, quality instruction, the finest equipment and a positive learning environment for fun and empowering flying.

We offer the highest level of accreditation, with Senior HPAC and Advanced USHPA paragliding instructors, who coach from first flight to expert paraglider pilots and teach and qualify new paragliding instructors.

Top Gun References

We recently graduated a CF-18 Hornet Pilot from our Top Gun iP2 Novice Paragliding Pilot program.  Read about his impressions of iParaglide.

Social Links

iParaglide Location

Located at 962 - 51st Street Tsawwassen, near Vancouver, BC, Canada, for all your paragliding needs. We are ideally situated just minutes away from the finest training hill at Diefenbaker Park.

iParaglide Flying Sites

We are central to paragliding sites in the Vancouver, Chilliwack, Pemberton, Whistler, Bellingham and Seattle area so students enjoy maximum variety and we can work with weather to optimize selection of the best location each day.

Right Stuff Equipment

We regularly test fly the latest paragliding gear and select only the very finest for our iParaglide Right Stuff Paragliding Equipment Store. This ensures our paraglider pilots enjoy a state of the art performance and safety advantage to accelerate their learning curve.

Paragliding Webcams/Wind Stations

Vancouver Paragliding Webcams - get a view of cloud base to plan your paragliding cross country flight adventure.

Woodside Mtn Webcam

Woodside Wind Station

Bridal Webcam

Bridal Wind Station

Chilliwack Webcam

Hope Webcam 

Pemberton Webcam

Tsawwassen Webcam

Bellingham Bay Webcam

Tiger Mtn Webcam 

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Thursday
Nov102011

How Much Does It Cost?

When we go to the park to kite our paragliders, we get a lot of questions. People want to know if we've just landed from somewhere ("we wish"), if we're sky drivers ("nope"), what's in our harness ("mostly air; it serves as an additional layer of protection for our backs"), and why we're doing what we're doing ("practicing ground handling makes us safer on the launch and in the air"). One of the most common questions is how much the equipment costs.

I can give them a rough breakdown of the cost of the paraglider, the reserve system, the harness, and the lessons, which does add up to a bit of an intimating sounding number. But do not cheap out on the equipment or classes; they are keeping you safe.

My partner, Russ, and I bought all our equipment and our P2 course together; doing it all at once for two people made for quite the bill. But, as I always tell those people in the park, paragliding is the least expensive way to become a pilot, and it is an incredible bargain to gain the ability to fly. To get to glide through the air at 3000 feet, just you and your wing and the wind (and sometimes a beautiful bird or two), is worth every penny you will spend and then some.

After Russ and I made our big purchase, we went out to get the other equipment a paragliding pilot needs: a helmet, gloves, and boots with good ankle support. The first two were pretty straight forward: go into a skateboarding store and pick the right size for your head, then go to a hardware store for a couple of leather gloves. Done. The last though... there are a lot of choices out there for boots. And we did a silly thing: we cheaped out. We went to a bargain shoe store. Our only excuse is that we'd spent so much money so quickly, and this was something we felt we could control the budget for. Mistake!

If you've already spent over $4000.00 on lessons alone for two people, plus equipment, saving $100 on boots is silly. Also, it is a waste of money. See, one of the first things we did with our new wings was go to an early morning slope soaring session to practice our launches.

Early morning means dew. The grass on that hill is wet. And within half an hour of being out there, our feet were wet too.

From the training hill, we were off to the mountain. No time to go home and change; we were going paragliding in soaked socks all day.

The next day that we weren't flying, we went to an outdoor specialty store and bought better boots. I highly recommend Gore-Tex; my feet are dry no matter what. And those cheap boots that got worn once sit in the back of my closet.

Another reason to invest in good boots: Once you are comfortable paragliding, you will be almost lying down in your harness, which means a common photo from a helmet camera looks like this:

If your boots are going to be all over FaceBook, they might as well be nice.

Reader Comments (2)

Nice boots, Melissa!

November 21, 2011 | Unregistered CommenterJim DeLaHunt

That's fun! Yes, I'll make sure my boots are that nice next time.

November 24, 2011 | Unregistered CommenterLance Morrisey

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