T friday, february 6, 1981 daily nebraskan page 7 ff f " Air 6 a!ta8t tat "KB?3-''! v; . . . . v' ,- ; , .Ml. ., J 7 i tar' The sight of deer bolting from thickets, bounding over snow-blanketed fields and leaping over fences renders a person momentarily speechless. But seen from 1500 feet in the air while floating in a hot air balloon, the sight takes on added indecruilty. Farmhouses look like carefully constructed miniatures, fields appear as patchwork quilts carpeted in white, MM im . ii 1 tea u KJv . TSMk " ' jr. . .... . Story by Raid Uarron Photos by Jon Ilatvig and the total quiet is broken only when someone decides to talk or a cow below decides to moo a warning about the beast passing overhead. Most balloonists let their hot air equipment hibernate for the winter, but not Wayne Hailing and Loren Nansel. The 23-year-olds say winter is as good a time for ballooning as summer, if not better. The air is thinner and provides a better buoyancy for the balloon. "Our toes get cold sometimes," Hailing said, "but that's about it." The temperature while in the balloon is actually 10 to 15 degrees warmer than on the ground, Hailing said, because of being above the air's inversion level. Hailing and Nansel bought their multi-colored balloon, the Eclipse, 1 Vi years ago. The pair charters their balloon for any occasion, giving student discount rates and holiday rates. A Valen tine's Day special is being planned. All charter flights, which last an hour or more, in clude instruction on balloon operation before and during flight, and a traditional champagne ceremony upon land ing. After each flight, the crew gives champagne to the land owner in whose field the balloon landed. The tradition started in 18th century France when farmers became angry about balloons damaging their crops during land ing, and the king decreed that balloonists give them champagne as appeasement. Hailing, a balloon pilot certified by the Federal Avia tion Administration, said a chase car is provided to re trieve passengers after landing and that radio communi cation between the balloon and the car is kept up to en sure safety. Ballooning is impossible to shake once it gets in your system, said Hailing and Nansel. "We never get tired of it," they said in unison.