Ask any experienced paragliding coach how they identify a pilot who will progress quickly, and they'll tell you the same thing: watch them on the ground. Ground handling — the art of inflating, controlling and kiting your wing without leaving the ground — is the most accurate predictor of in-air competence I've encountered in 20+ years of flying. The pilots who have spent real time with their glider on the ground are calmer, more precise, and less likely to be surprised by the air. Those who skipped it tend to carry a fundamental tension in the air that prevents them from flying as well as their hours would suggest. This guide explains why — and what a week of serious ground handling in Portugal's coastal winds can do for your flying.
What Ground Handling Actually Is
Ground handling — also called kiting — is the practice of controlling your paraglider from the ground without actually flying. You inflate the wing, hold it overhead or at various angles, and use brake and A-riser inputs to manage its position, power, and direction. Done correctly, it creates the muscle memory and sensory library that make in-air inputs instinctive rather than deliberate.
There are two primary modes:
- Forward kiting: facing away from the wing, with the glider inflated and flying overhead behind you. The simplest form — used for light-wind practice and basic inflation checks.
- Reverse kiting: facing the wing, controlling it with crossed controls or natural controls while looking directly at the canopy. This is the discipline that most correlates with in-air skill. When you're reverse-kiting well, you're reading the wing in three dimensions and responding to it directly — the same skill you use to manage an asymmetric collapse in the air.
Why Ground Handling Transfers to the Air
The connection between ground handling skill and air skill is not obvious until you understand what's actually happening. Here's the mechanic:
In the air, a paraglider responds to inputs in the same way it responds on the ground — the wing's behaviour when you apply a brake input, a surge forward, an asymmetric collapse, is essentially the same physics whether you're 2 meters or 200 meters up. The difference is that in the air you have consequences for getting it wrong. On the ground, you don't.
This means that ground handling is effectively deliberate practice of air-handling inputs without the stakes. A pilot who has reverse-kited for 40 hours has felt hundreds of small collapses, asymmetric inputs, surge-and-catch sequences, and recovery moments. When those same inputs occur in the air, they're not alarming — they're familiar.
Conversely, a pilot who has 200 flying hours but 2 hours of ground handling has done most of their flying in passive, static conditions. They fly well in smooth air but struggle the moment the air misbehaves, because they have no ground-level reference point for what it feels like to catch a wing.
What Good Ground Handling Looks Like
A pilot with excellent ground handling skill:
- Can inflate the wing cleanly in a variety of wind strengths and directions on the first attempt, consistently
- Reverse-kites for extended periods without losing the wing to either side
- Can walk backward, sideways, and forward while maintaining the wing overhead
- Actively manages surge and overshoot — letting the wing move forward and catching it with a precise brake application before it collapses
- Can catch an asymmetric deflation from either side without panicking or over-braking
- Has consistent, quiet hands — no jerky or excessive inputs
A pilot with poor ground handling skill:
- Needs several attempts to inflate the wing in moderate wind
- Loses the wing to one side frequently, usually always the same side (indicating a habitual control bias)
- Responds to glider movements with large, reactive inputs rather than small, anticipatory ones
- Holds the brakes too hard as a defensive posture against the wing doing something
Ground handling is uncomfortable for many intermediate pilots precisely because it exposes the gaps that hundreds of hours in the air have failed to address. A pilot who is smooth in the air but struggles on the ground has been compensating — relying on altitude, good conditions, and passive gliders. Ground handling removes those compensations. That discomfort is exactly where the useful work happens.
Why Portugal's Atlantic Winds Are Ideal for Ground Handling Practice
Ground handling in calm air (under 5 km/h) is limited in what it teaches. The wing barely loads and you're essentially practising inflation technique, not active control. To build the sensory library that transfers to the air, you need wind — and ideally a range of wind strengths to train different inputs.
Portugal's Nortada provides this almost daily from April through September:
- 8–12 km/h mornings: ideal for progressive reverse-kiting, walking the glider, and practicing controlled deflations. Not too challenging, not too static.
- 15–22 km/h midday: the wing becomes alive — it surges, it pulls, it responds to every small gust. Managing it at this level demands the precise, anticipatory inputs that transfer directly to active piloting in turbulent air.
- 25+ km/h afternoons: strong practice that builds confidence under load. At these speeds, a wing that gets away from you becomes clear immediately. You learn fast.
The coastal grass areas near Sesimbra allow safe, obstacle-free ground handling practice at all these levels. There's no need for a designated slope — the Nortada provides the lift, the grassland provides the safety, and the coach provides the feedback.
What a Ground Handling Week Involves
The Ground Handling Week at Fly with Behrooz is a structured, progressive programme. A typical week:
Days 1–2: Foundations
Assessment of your current forward and reverse inflation technique. Most pilots arrive with habits — specific ways they hold the controls, specific compensations for weak inputs on one side — that I diagnose on day one. We correct these before building further.
Days 3–4: Progressive challenge
Once your inflation technique is clean, we move to sustained kiting in increasing winds. Target: 20+ minutes of continuous reverse kiting without losing the wing. This sounds easy until you're doing it. We add walking, directional control, and controlled surges as the session progresses.
Days 5–6: Active management
Wind strength permitting, we move to managing the wing actively — deliberately allowing it to overshoot and catching it, practising asymmetric input recovery, and developing the quiet-hands feel that the best pilots have.
Day 7: Integration
If flying conditions allow, a short coastal soaring session to test how the week's ground work has changed your in-air feel. Many pilots notice the difference within the first few minutes — more confident brake inputs, less white-knuckling when the wing moves. It can be striking enough to be emotional. A week on the ground showing up in the first five minutes of the first flight.
Who Should Prioritise Ground Handling
A dedicated ground handling week is the right choice if any of these apply to you:
- You've had a frightening incident in the air (partial collapse, asymmetric, stall) and feel tension now when you fly
- You fly fewer than 5–6 hours per year and feel rusty at the start of each season
- Your inflation is inconsistent — some successful, some messy
- You tense up or grip hard when conditions get lively
- Coaches have told you your active piloting inputs are too reactive or too slow
- You're progressing from P2/EP to P3/CP and want to arrive at the next level with solid foundations
And even for pilots without a specific problem to solve, a week of serious ground handling is worth it. Experienced pilots find refinements they didn't know they needed — there's always something to clean up at the level of small inputs and habits.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I practise ground handling at home? How?
Yes — and you should. Even 30 minutes per week of ground handling in your nearest flyable wind does more for your active piloting than a once-a-month flying day. You need a smooth grass area free of obstacles, wind between 8–20 km/h, and someone to watch or video you periodically. The most common self-practice mistake is rehearsing the same good conditions repeatedly — actively seek slightly challenging conditions to build the adaptive response. A Portugal ground handling week accelerates this because you get 5–6 consecutive days of coached feedback in ideal conditions.
Do I do any actual flying during the Ground Handling Week?
Yes, where conditions allow. The ground handling week is primarily land-based but includes short coastal soaring sessions when the wind window is right. On a typical week, expect 4–5 days primarily ground-based and 1–2 sessions of coastal soaring as application practice. If flying conditions are consistently excellent during your week, we can adjust the balance — the week follows the conditions and your progress, not a rigid schedule.
What licence level do I need for the Ground Handling Week?
The Ground Handling Week is accessible from P2/EP (BHPA Elementary Pilot / EP) level. You need to be able to inflate the wing independently and have basic understanding of your controls. This is the only programme at Fly with Behrooz that does not require P3/CP2 — it's designed partly as the transition step toward that level. Pre-P2 pilots with very limited experience should contact me first to confirm suitability.
Is wind every day guaranteed?
During the peak Nortada season (May–August), wind suitable for ground handling is present on most days. Outside this window, it's less reliable. September and October still have good frequency. If a day has insufficient wind for meaningful kiting practice, I adapt the session — technique work, coaching discussion, video analysis, and theory work on weather and canopy behaviour. The week is designed to be productive regardless of conditions because ground handling training doesn't depend entirely on wind the way flying does.
Ready to invest in your foundations?
A Ground Handling Week in Portugal changes how you fly — not just during the week, but every flight afterward. Contact me to discuss your current level and whether this is the right programme for you.