FITZGERALD, Ga. — Crews in helicopters, airplanes and on foot resumed their search of woods Monday in south Georgia for a hot air balloon pilot who disappeared after his balloon was engulfed by a thunderstorm and sucked into the clouds.
About 50 to 75 people were searching an area roughly 12 to 15 square miles of terrain, Ben Hill County Sheriff Bobby McLemore told The Associated Press.
Edward Ristaino, 63, of Cornelius, N.C., was taking five skydivers into the air Friday night during a festival in Fitzgerald, Ga., when a storm struck, McLemore said.
Ristaino told the skydivers to jump from the balloon. None of them were injured.
The pilot was using a walkie-talkie to speak with his ground crew as he plummeted toward the ground, McLemore said.
“He told him he had gone into the clouds, that an updraft had taken him up to 17,000, 18,000 feet,” McLemore said.
The pilot also maintained communication as he plummeted toward the ground, the sheriff said.
“He had just made the statement that I’m at 2,000 feet and I see trees and that was his last transmission.”
Now, searchers are using radar imagery of the storm at the time and studying weather patterns to help them determine where he might have touched down.
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