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The female pilots taking tourists on Cappadocia’s world-famous balloon adventures

Simon Calder’s Travel

Most travellers notice the dark silhouettes of the hot air balloons first. Meandering up the rocky valley before dawn, the gigantic shapes begin to grow in number as teams inflate the balloons under the illumination of truck lights. And then, like lightbulbs, they start to flicker one by one as their pilots fire up the propane-fulled burners.

Among this daily spectacle, Meltem Ozdem, one of the few female pilots in a male-dominated field, prepares for another flight.

This is Cappadocia, a stunning region in central Turkey renowned for its daily hot-air balloon flights. Each morning, around 156 balloons lift from the arid, sandy landscapes, attracting tourists eager to float across the sky.

Hot air balloons soar over Love Valley
Hot air balloons soar over Love Valley (Jack Lawes)

While waking up at 4am was challenging, my early-morning tiredness was quickly replaced with excitement as we saw the balloons emerge on that cool morning. I was one of 28 passengers who clambered over the sides of the basket, awaiting our departure into the cloudless Turkish sky.

Then Meltem took charge, instantly putting the crowd of nervous passengers at ease. In a region where up to 450 male pilots dominate the skies, fewer than 20 women operate commercial balloons as pilots. At just 33 years old, Meltem’s role among the small group of female hot air balloon pilots in Cappadocia felt inspiring.

Sporting a brightly coloured headscarf, as our one-hour cruise across the valley began, Meltem was in her element.

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Within minutes, we reached a cruising altitude of 2,000ft above sea level, offering panoramic views of the dormant Mount Erciyes, the town of Göreme, and Love Valley. Amid the backdrop of neighbouring balloons and the sporadic gush of the propane burners, there was a great sense of stillness and calm as we glided through the sky.

Like many other pilots, Meltem’s story in hot air ballooning began with studies in the Cappadocia University Balloon Piloting Department. Having graduated almost 10 years ago, she was only in her early twenties when she first took to the sky as a pilot, sharing her love for Cappadocia with hundreds of passengers ever since.

Tamara Davison looks out at the gathering of Cappadocia’s world-famous hot air balloons early in the morning
Tamara Davison looks out at the gathering of Cappadocia’s world-famous hot air balloons early in the morning (Jack Lawes)

Crediting central Turkey as one of the best places to learn her craft, Meltem told me the main…

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