Australian Traveller

HERE AND NOW

Georgia Croft

PILOT, GLOBAL BALLOONING AUSTRALIA, VIC

WHEN LOCKDOWNS GROUNDED Global Ballooning Australia’s Melbourne and Yarra Valley flights, Georgia Croft saw an opportunity to establish a brand-new location for the company. Today, one of only five hot-air balloon pilots in Australia, the 24-year-old flies high above the scenic landscape and rolling hills of Mansfield and Mt Buller in Victoria’s High Country.

The day starts early – up to two hours before sunrise. Ungodly hours that only hot-air balloonists and bakers keep, says Georgia. The flip side is that post-flight day napping is entirely acceptable within their community. No day is typical with hot-air ballooning. “Every single day brings its own conditions and a whole new experience,” says Georgia. “Even this morning – and I’ve been flying up here for three months – we got a wind direction that allowed us to fly over Lake Eildon and look at the valley from a completely different perspective. And last week we accidentally got bogged in a paddock and had to call the landowner to get in with his tractor to come and help us out. It’s a beautiful balance of being a professional and doing what we know and love, but also working things out as we go.”

Georgia’s love for hot-air ballooning is manifold. From the fact it is the world’s oldest form of aviation and something of a lost art, to witnessing the awe of passengers, who are often first-timers, as they take in such inspiring sights as the sun rising over a snow-capped Mt Buller.

And she loves being part of the industry itself: the places it takes her and connections forged around Australia and beyond. “There are all these tiny little communities within this culture that have such a beautiful knowledge of their land and their environment, and also their [wider] community because of how engaged you have to be in that network in order to successfully do a hot-air balloon flight.” Employing the seriously high level of skill and knowledge it takes to pilot a hot-air balloon, from meteorology to navigation, it offers a unique way to explore the country. “You’re assessing the wind and the topography and you’re looking at all these really niche factors that you would have no reason to pay attention to otherwise,” she says.

It makes for a unique perspective on Australia, and not only literally. The job requires engagement with local landowners to get permission to launch and land: often popping into their backyard and saying, ‘Hey, do you mind if we land here?’ “And then 20 minutes later you’re in this random dude’s house and he’s walking you through his property and serving you a cup of tea,” laughs Georgia. “I am constantly blown away by how giving people are of their time and their place, and their knowledge of the place. When you turn up and show an interest in that way, your possibilities are endless. And, through those interactions, you learn so much more about the land and the way that it works.”

And there’s a lot more Australia can reveal to us yet, Georgia reflects. “This period of hardship, which everyone has gone through individually, has made me sit back and really appreciate this country and how much we have to learn from it and grow within it as well. But

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Australian Traveller

Australian Traveller3 min read
A Shore Thing
AS SOMEONE WHO LIVED around the corner from Hurricane’s Grill & Bar Bondi Beach when it launched in the mid-1990s, I have a few questions. How did the chain that bowed so deeply to the appetite of carnivores go from being a restaurant known for its s
Australian Traveller1 min read
Taking The Plunge
Metung Hot Springs is notched into the earth on a natural undulating site overlooking the Gippsland Lakes. It’s one of a handful of hot springs that will be laced together along the Great Victorian Bathing Trail. This 900-kilometre-long bucket list f
Australian Traveller7 min read
Study In Contr Ast
FROM A DISTANCE, Ngarrabullgan (Mt Mulligan) looms large, like a giant crouching on the grassy plain. The monolith is starting to glow golden as I floor the accelerator of my all-terrain Kubota, impatient to arrive at its southern end, known as The B

Related Books & Audiobooks