A8 THE SPOKESMAN • TUESDAY, AUGUST 9, 2022 Sports+Outdoors Paraglider Ari DeLashmutt flies after taking off from Pine Mountain in Central Oregon July 27, on his way to break- ing an Oregon state record for distance traveled in a single flight. Ben Horton/Submitted photo More Information The full 25-minute interview with DeLashmutt can be found on The Bulletin’s YouTube channel and at bendbulletin.com/ sports. ARI AIR in the To learn more about paragliding, DeLashmutt hosts a podcast on the sport called Ari in the Air. He also has instructional videos on his YouTube channel under the same name. Redmond’s Ari DeLashmutt sets state paragliding distance record BY BRIAN RATHBONE CO Media Group A t 11:46 a.m. on July 27, Ari DeLashmutt took flight in his Ozone Zeno paraglider from Pine Mountain, Cen- tral Oregon’s popular para- gliding spot. He climbed to 9,000 feet in the air, crossed into Christmas Val- ley, then to Summer Valley, then flew across the entire Warner Mountain Range in Southern Oregon and Northern California. When he finally landed 65 miles south of Alturas, Califor- nia, on U.S. Highway 395 nine hours after takeoff, he had trav- eled 230 miles — breaking Rea- vis Sutphin-Gray’s June 2018 Oregon state record of 198.2 miles for a single flight. According to the unofficial USA Paragliding distance records, the 33-year-old DeLashmutt’s state-record flight ranks in the top five in the country. “It is the pinnacle of adven- ture,” said DeLashmutt, known online as Ari in the Air. “The size and the scope of the game that we are playing — it is hard for me to explain that. Literally, I crossed multiple mountain ranges. I went from the center of Oregon and down very far into California.” Paragliding is an adventure sport in which the pilot is har- nessed into a canopy-like para- Ben Horton/Submitted photo Paraglider Ari DeLashmutt prepares to take off from Pine Mountain in Central Oregon July 27, on his way to breaking an Oregon state record for distance traveled. chute and uses the wind and air pressure to fly and maneuver. What makes breaking the re- cord so special is that so many variables have to fall into place. On DeLashmutt’s July 27 flight, they all fell into place for him to smash the record by 32 miles. “I have to work with nature,” he said. “I have to forecast the right day, then once the day comes, I have to work with the day. I have to fly the weather. I have to fly the environment. “I have to fly the landscape. I have to fly the sky that day.” The game that cross-country paragliders are playing while in the air, DeLashmutt said, is a game of chess that can some- times be deadly. During last week’s flight, he reached 16,500 feet of altitude in a “bed sheet with nylon strings.” Through- out the flight, there is no time to eat, go to the bathroom, or take a break while thousands of feet in the air. There are multiple layers to having a successful flight. The first layer is handling the glider — making it turn left and right, up and down. Then there is the challenge of flying the correct route to land at the right loca- tion. One miscalculation can land a paraglider in the middle of nowhere. “My brain is doing these complex probabilities,” DeLashmutt said. “Based on where the thermal is going to be, based on the direction of the sun, the direction of the wind, shape of terrain, size and shape of the cloud.” While all those calculations are happening throughout the flight, the final challenge is to make a concerted effort to enjoy the views from above, he said. “I’m trying my best to take in what I am doing,” DeLashmutt said. “And just try and come back to being present and ob- servant and grateful that I have the opportunity and skills and equipment and experience to al- low for this kind of thing.” ROCKET SHIP RIDE Born in Bend and raised in Redmond, DeLashmutt was bitten by the adventure bug at a young age when he was ski- ing off cliffs and trees with his two brothers. The former pro- fessional freestyle skier did his first backflip at Mount Bachelor when he was12. Then he got into highlining — slacklining between cliffs hundreds of feet above the ground — to scratch the adventure itch. But paragliding is a new ad- venture for DeLashmutt, who discovered it in 2015 while shooting a stunt with Bend filmmaker Wes Coughlin. The stunt included two paragliders — DeLashmutt was a passenger in a tandem paraglider — and a base jumper. The base jumper launched off a rope swing be- Ben Horton/Submitted photo Paraglider Ari DeLashmutt prepares to take off from Pine Mountain in Central Oregon July 27, on his way to breaking an Oregon state record for distance traveled. tween the two paragliders, then fell 1,000 feet before deploying his parachute. It was the first time DeLashmutt had been in a para- glider, and he was hooked. A few short months later, after filming the stunt, DeLashmutt was on the Oregon Coast learn- ing to paraglide. Since starting, he teaches the art of paragliding and has flown in 15 countries on five continents. “It has been a rocket ship ride in paragliding ever since it instantly took over my life,” DeLashmutt said. “It has excited me in really profound ways.” █ Reporter: 541-383-0307, brathbone@bendbulletin.com ANGLING REOPENS Good steelhead returns on Lower Deschutes Spokesman staff report Improved conditions in Ore- gon fisheries this year will allow salmon, steelhead, trout, and bass fishing to open Aug. 15 on the lower Deschutes River, according to a release from Or- egon Department of Fish and Wildlife. Fishing will open under nor- mal permanent regulations on the Deschutes from Moody Rapids upstream to Pelton Dam, thanks to improved sum- mer steelhead returns. Following last year’s critically low returns in steelhead — fish that would have spawned in spring 2022 — ODFW an- nounced a new Deschutes River steelhead fishery plan to take conservation action during low returns. The plan closes the lower De- schutes River fishery until pas- sage thresholds at Bonneville Dam are met to assure ODFW managers that the sport fishery will not have population im- pacts. In May, the department an- nounced that the usual sum- mertime steelhead fishing sea- son on the Deschutes would be closed from June 1 to Aug. 15 due to the new plan. Early returns of A-run steelhead — steelhead that spend less time in the ocean — are sufficient to warrant re-opening on the De- schutes to angling on Aug. 15, according to an ODFW release. The department needed to surpass 9,900 unmarked steel- head over Bonneville Dam during the month of July to open the fishery on Aug. 15 to get above conservation con- cern levels, according to Jason Seals, district fish biologist with ODFW. Seals added that the depart- ment is expecting modest re- turns based on run projections to the Deschutes “but within abundance levels that the fish- ery won’t have population im- pact.” Get great service & great rates. Joe A Lochner Ins Acy Inc Joe A Lochner, Agent www.joelochner.com Redmond, OR 97756 Bus: 541-548-6023