Welcome to an open, free-form edition of Weekends Live at Morningside! In this episode of Enter the Unknown, host Hayden Thomas sits down with student pilots Randall Sanderson and Angus (Gus) Reid, along with Morningside assistant manager Judy Eloe. Together, they dive into the pure essence of freeflight, the mechanics of fluid dynamics, and what it truly feels like to chase the elusive flow state. The conversation covers the stark contrast between commercial aviation and the pure, unadulterated nature of freeflight. From Gus's early days flying a DHV 2 Freaks Flare glider in 97 Scotland to Judy's epic three and a half hour top-landing flight at the Point of the Mountain in Draper, Utah, this episode breaks down what happens to the human mind once you leave the ground. The crew also shares wild stories of survival, including a high-stakes free diving incident on the Great Barrier Reef and the breathtaking multi-ecosystem experience of paragliding from the 10,000 foot summit of Haleakala in Maui down to the ocean. Main Topics Covered The Poetry of Soaring: Unpacking the beauty behind the idea that if flight is a language, then soaring is its poetry. Gus's Journey Across Aviation: From pulling handles on sailplanes, ultralights, and Cessnas to his early paragliding days in Edinburgh and Glasgow. Flow State Across Disciplines: Parallels between the high-stakes presence required in urban cycling, extreme big wall rock climbing, mathematics, and aircraft execution. Judy's 3-Hour Marathon Flight: A deep dive into an unforgettable ridge soaring day in Utah, battling numb legs, warm winters, and the triumph of a first top-landing. Visualizing the Invisible: The art of reading fluid dynamics in the atmosphere, tracking micro-thermals, and hunting down cloud streets at high altitudes. The High Altitude Sandbox: Managing oxygen systems when flying above 14,000 feet in places like Colorado and the extreme bivouac flights in the Karakoram range. The Scuba to Sky Hazard: Explaining the severe physiological dangers and pressure changes associated with mixing deep scuba diving and high-altitude paragliding.Key Takeaways The Sunk Cost of the Cockpit: Why general aviation and big steel boxes can sometimes feel like driving a truck, while freeflight offers an unmatched sensory connection to nature. Microcosms in the Air: Understanding that springtime thermals can be sharp, steep laser beams narrower than the wing itself, demanding quick execution. A Transformed Worldview: How becoming a pilot permanently shifts your perception of the landscape, turning everyday mountains and circling birds into dynamic thermal triggers. Ending on a High Note: The golden rule of flight training, choosing to pack up after a perfect landing rather than letting ego push for one risky flight too many.Connect with Hayden Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/entertheunknown.hayden/ TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@entertheunknown1 X: https://x.com/ETUwithHaydenT YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/@EnterTheUnknownwithHT Spotify: Enter the Unknown with Hayden ThomasGet Stokes Picks!Premium flavored nicotine toothpicks: https://stokespicks.com/Use promo code: Entertheunknown for a 20% discount! If this conversation helped you visualize the invisible or inspired you to check your ego at the launch site, please follow, like, and share Enter The Unknown on your favorite platform!