
Pilot killed and tourists injured as hot air balloon crashes in central Turkey
A hot air balloon crashed in central Turkey on Sunday, leaving its pilot dead and 19 Indonesian tourists injured, a local official said.
In a statement, the governor's office said the balloon was affected by a sudden change of wind.
It was trying to make a hard landing near the village of Gozlukuyu in Aksaray province, when the pilot fell out of the balloon's basket and his feet got tangled in a rope, Aksaray Governor Mehmet Ali Kumbuzoglu said.
'Unfortunately, our pilot got stuck under the basket and died,' he said, adding that the injured tourists were taken to a hospital.
Hot air ballooning is a popular tourist activity over the rugged landscape of central Turkey, which is dotted with ancient churches hewn into cliff faces. The attractions include the 'fairy chimneys' of Cappadocia – the tall, cone-shaped rock formations created by natural erosion over thousands of years that are a UNESCO World Heritage Site.
Video from Ilhas News Agency showed one deflated balloon, its passenger basket lying on its side, as emergency services tended to injured people. An investigation is underway.
State-run Anadolu Agency said another hot air balloon taking off from the same location of Ilhara Valley also made a hard landing early Sunday morning, and that 12 Indian tourists were slightly injured and taken to hospital.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Independent
3 hours ago
- The Independent
Anti-tourism protesters confront hotel staff with flares and water pistols in Barcelona
Anti-tourism protesters clashed with hotel staff in Barcelona, appearing to fire flares and water pistols in a display of unrest on Sunday 15 June. The incident was part of a wave of coordinated demonstrations across major European tourist hotspots, aimed at challenging the growing impact of "touristification." Footage from the protest appears to capture a loud bang, followed by demonstrators spraying hotel staff with water pistols and kicking a flare into a hotel entrance as they marched down the street.


Telegraph
5 hours ago
- Telegraph
This museum has been named England's best
A cynic might suggest that, far from being a brief moment in the calendar, 'awards season' never ends. If it is not the film industry doling out statuettes, then it is time for sporting tributes, art accolades, or the shiny gongs that draw pop stars to black-tie events. So it should be no surprise that the travel world has been wearing its fanciest outfits in the last few days – via the Visit England Awards for Excellence. As the name suggests, this yearly ceremony beams a light onto this country's big achievers in the tourism sector. The winners' list offered hat-tips to everything from major sites like the Royal Crescent in Bath and the National Space Centre in Leicester to self-catering cottages in Cornwall, country pubs in Derbyshire and Devon – and the Ad Gefrin distillery in Northumberland. Yet tucked among these many plaudits was a triumph that some might argue was overdue. The winner in the 'Large Visitor Attraction of the Year' category was the Black Country Living Museum (BCLM); an institution that can hardly be described as 'new' – but which has long done splendid work as a treasure trove of British heritage. It arrived on the map in 1978, but its remit looks back even further, into the mists of the 19th century. Technically, the Black Country Living Museum covers a 300-year chunk of history, but its focus is mainly on the window of time between 1850 and 1950, when the Industrial Revolution had prompted a period of almost unprecedented productivity, sweat and toil in this corner of the West Midlands. There is no precise geographical definition of 'the Black Country', but its boundaries are generally deemed to encompass Dudley, Sandwell, Walsall and Wolverhampton (while stopping just short of Birmingham). Academic opinion varies on whether its moniker refers to the rich coal seam that was mined in the area, or the high levels of soot that haunted its air (and with it, its residents' faces) in the 19th century – but the connection to heavy industry is implicit. The museum in Dudley digs into the epoch almost as effectively as colliers' pickaxes once clawed at the prized materials buried in the ground. Unlike many of Britain's industrial landmarks, which have been refurbished to a 'higher' purpose – the one-time Bankside and Battersea Power Stations in London, reinvented as Tate Modern and a retail and restaurant complex, respectively; the former Baltic Flour Mill in Gateshead, now repurposed as a contemporary art gallery – the BCLM revels in the dirt underneath its fingernails. An impressive 26 acres in scope, it makes use of a site which incorporates many of the essential elements of Britain's industrial era – a railway goods yard, coal pits, lime kilns, a section of the Dudley Canal. Although many of the buildings have been transposed to the site, they have been brought in – and in many cases, spared from demolition – from the surrounding area. Thus there is an 1860s brass foundry from Walsall, an 1880s nail forge from Halesowen, and a 1920s rolling mill from Oldbury. All of them contribute to a pleasing clamour and clang. Visitors can watch links being fired at a chainmaker's smithy, or take a narrowboat ride into the (somewhat claustrophobic) confines of the Dudley Tunnel. And there are stores which remember a more innocent everyday commerce: a turn-of-the-century sweet shop, a Victorian pharmacy, a gentlemen's outfitters preserved as it would have looked in 1935. There are trams and trolleybuses too, and a collection of cars – from makers as lost to view as Sunbeam, Clyno, AJS and Star – that drove these streets in the 1910s and 1920s. If all this sounds like a dreary vision from a particularly rainy school trip, then, as a relatively biased witness – I grew up in the area – I can happily vouch for the BCLM as an entirely welcome alternative to a day in a 1980s classroom. It seems to have retained its charm in the 21st century too. When I took my primary-school-aged son to visit it a few summers ago, he spent most of a sunny afternoon learning to hoop-roll down one of the site's steeper cobbled lanes. Simple pleasures and all that. There is one element of newness to a museum whose whole ethos is its avowed refusal to keep up with the times – the recent £30million redevelopment that has stretched its reference points into the living memory of the 1960s, with all the music, burgeoning technology and rapidly changing fashions that such time-travel entails. This 'update' is one of the reasons for the BCLM's success at the Visit England Awards – although would-be day-trippers can be assured that the museum remains defiantly stuck in the past.


The Sun
5 hours ago
- The Sun
Pretty English town away from the tourists that is known for its pub music festival and huge lagoon
A PRETTY English town that only a handful of Brits know, is home to amazing pubs and a huge lagoon. According to research conducted by Airbnb, only 15 per cent of Brits recognised the name Horbury - a small picturesque town located in West Yorkshire. 3 3 Horbury is a great pick for gastro-tourists or those who love a 'pubcation' - but away from more well-known locations. The town is quickly becoming a hotspot for its vibrant pub scene and small-scale breweries, including the Luddite Brewing Co. at the Calder Vale Hotel, Boons, and The Bingley – a collaboration between two local breweries, Ossett Brewery & SALT. Boons even has its own festival from July 4-6, with live music, real ales, cider and hot food. Entry is free on the Friday, and over the weekend it costs £3 per wristband. Alternatively, The Bingley is the perfect spot for some wildlife watching as it sits between two waterways - the Calder river and the Horbury and Hebble Navigation. One visitors said: "We called in after a long canal towpath walk with our dog (yes the Bingley is very dog friendly). "The Bingley has great outdoor seating overlooking the canal but as the day was drizzly and cold we went inside. "The drinks selection is excellent with a wide choice of draught and real ales. "Being a Ossett Brewery pub the real ales are all from this brewery and SALT brewery." For pubs, there is a variety to choose from including The Cherry Tree which even has an outdoor Beavertown Bar, with exclusive drafts and special edition beers. After visiting The Cherry Tree, one visitor said: "Went for a few drinks in the cherry tree a couple of weeks ago." "They had live music and the atmosphere had a good vibe, the singer was excellent. "The staff are always very pleasant, it's definitely a happy pub." The town of Horbury itself boasts a wealth of history, blending both tradition and modern elements. One of the most charming things about the town is it's well-preserved architecture, which includes stone buildings, churches and quaint cottages. The community in Horbury is also amazing, with many local events and markets often taking place. Whilst there, you can explore the local shops, boutiques and businesses before heading off on a country walk around Horbury Lagoon. The lagoon stretches across five acres and can be fished in. Developed from an old gravel pit, the lagoon boasts carp that weigh up to 20lbs, pike, tench and bream. There are paths around the water, alongside the river Calder and dogs are allowed to enjoy a splash and run around. One person has visited hundreds of pubs in the UK and claims if you visit only one boozer in the whole of the capital, there is one you should not miss. Plus, a new map reveals every UK pub that's basking in sunshine right now. 3