Sign up for the Today newsletter
Get everything you need to know to start your day, delivered right to your inbox every morning.
The pilot of a hot air balloon is earning high marks for safely landing next to a busy Vermont highway after the aircraft stalled mid-flight on Wednesday night, according to officials and a report.
The balloon, carrying a handful of passengers, touched down on the median of Interstate-91 as it was getting dark around 8 p.m., local authorities said, according to the Valley News.
The quick-thinking pilot, identified as Chris Ritland who runs Quechee Balloon Rides, had no other safe landing options besides the interstate, the Hartford, Vermont Fire Department reportedly said.
“(The pilot) did a good job of landing the balloon safely in the median and avoiding any issues,” the department said.
Before the hot air balloon reached the ground, motorists reported seeing it about 30 feet above the highway, the department said.
The company told the newspaper that Ritland and four passengers had a “beautiful balloon flight” that came to end “with a common landing but in an uncommon and unplanned location.”
When the winds began blowing in a different direction than what was expected at the start of the flight, Ritland couldn’t land in his anticipated spot, the company reportedly said.
“The pilot-in-command of the aircraft made a precautionary decision as sunset was nearing to land safely rather than taking unnecessary risk,” Quechee Balloon Rides said, noting workers contacted local officials about the new landing target.
The balloon remained inflated until first responders could close lanes northbound and southbound. No one was reported injured.
One passenger who spoke anonymously to the Valley News described how the scary scenario played out in the air.
“We were dropping pretty quickly and burning and burning (propane) fuel and weren’t going anywhere,” the passenger said. “The wind just wasn’t there.”
Ritland remained calm and “everything you were supposed to do, he did,” the passenger told the outlet.
“Chris did amazing in the moment,” the passenger said.
ST. ALBANS — The 10-to-12-year-old all-stars from Champlain are headed back to Bristol. Yet again.
Riding Ellis Montgomery’s complete-game performance in the circle and a momentum-shifting, three-run second inning, Champlain ousted Colchester for a 5-3 victory in the Vermont Little League softball state championship game at St. Albans Bay Town Park on Saturday, July 12.
Three-time defending state champion Champlain booked its spot at the New England Region Tournament in Bristol, Connecticut, and will play its first game on Monday, July 21 against the winner of Rhode Island and Maine.
“This one means a lot. Going down there is very special,” said Champlain manager Mike Conger, who will make his fourth trip overall to Bristol with a Vermont state champion.
Colchester, which came into the game undefeated through district and state tournament play, seized a 1-0 lead in the bottom of the first inning. Leadoff hitter Ella Carey walked, stole second and third, and then scooted home on a passed ball.
In the top of the second, Champlain scored three runs, all with two outs, and without recording a hit. Champlain took advantage of four walks and a hit by pitch to plate its runs and earn a 3-1 margin.
“We talked about being patient at the plate,” Conger said. “(Colchester ace Madison Besaw’s) a heck of a pitcher and she has some nice speed.”
Colchester got one back in the bottom of the third when Carey tripled with two outs and then scored on an error.
Ahead 4-2 to start the sixth, Champlain tacked on an insurance run when Bailee Conger’s hit allowed Kinsley Winegar to come home. Champlain could’ve opened a bigger advantage, but Carey came in on relief of Colchester’s second pitcher, Jordyn Burghdurf, and proceeded to induce a pop fly and strike out two batters with the bases loaded and no outs.
Colchester made a comeback bid in the final frame. Quinn Bouchard walked with one out and then later scored on Lucy McHugh’s sharp single to right. But Montgomery got a groundout and a pop-up to stave off the rally and seal Champlain’s championship three-peat.
“We had total faith in her,” Mike Conger said of Montgomery. “She’s put in so much work since the winter, so many of these girls have.”
Champlain opened the state tourney with a loss in extra innings to Connecticut Valley. Champlain then mercy-ruled Northeast and Connecticut Valley in a rematch to advance to the final vs Colchester.
“We go out there and battle and compete. Just a fine group to be around,” Conger said.
Behind Dottie Green’s lights-out pitching and a deep hitting lineup, the 8-to-10-year-old stars from Green Mountain roared to the Vermont Little League softball state title with a 9-0 win over Essex in the tournament final at Northfield on Friday, July 11.
Green Mountain, comprised of teams across Central Vermont, outscored opponents 51-0 over six tournament games (district and state), according to team manager Katie Green. Green Mountain ace Dottie Green totaled 81 strikeouts against 106 batters faced, while catcher Lily Brynga allowed only just one passed ball out of 466 pitches.
Green Mountain’s offense racked up 47 hits. Brynga scored nine runs and Arie DeFreest led the team in on-base percentage. Brynga and Green had homers during tournament play, and Mackenzie Bean, Mackenzie Messier, Serena VanderBush and Brynga also produced extra-base hits.
Contact Alex Abrami at aabrami@freepressmedia.com. Follow him on X, formerly known as Twitter:@aabrami5.
Weather
SUTTON, Vt. (AP) — Communities in rural parts of Vermont on Friday woke up once again to damaged homes and washed-out roads due to heavy rainfall and flash flooding, making it the third consecutive summer that severe floods have inundated parts of the state.
Up to 5 inches (13 centimeters) of rain fell in just a few hours on Thursday, prompting rapid flooding as local waterways began to swell, said Robert Haynes, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service’s Burlington office.
Nearly 20 homes were cut off in the small town of Sutton as a local brook quickly rose from its banks and surrounded buildings, Fire Chief Kyle Seymour said. His crews were called out to help rescue people from two homes, which required help from swift-water rescue teams called in from neighboring communities.
“This was an incredibly strong, quick-moving localized heavy water,” Seymour said. “It overwhelmed all of our road culverts, all of our streams, all of our rivers. But the actual weather event lasted three hours, with the bulk of the rain concentrated within one hour.”
Though the severity of the storms wasn’t as widespread compared to the past two years, local officials were still surveying the extent of the damage Friday morning and shaking their heads that they were dealing with flood recovery for three years in a row.
“When I started seeing the reporters saying it wasn’t going to be that bad, I didn’t believe it,” Seymour said, adding that at least one member of his crew has contemplated retiring after experiencing such repeated flood emergencies.
Michelle Tanner stood Friday on what used to be her driveway, dismayed that for the third time her property was washed out by flooding. She and her family have lived in Sutton for 25 years and want to continue doing so, but fear what another flood might do.
“We don’t know if the house will make it again,” Tanner said. “We’ll see what happens. We don’t want to start all over, though I guess we are.”
Tanner’s daughter, Tanika Allard, said taking in the flood damage once again made her tear up.
“This year by far did the worst amount of damage with the least amount of rain, which didn’t make a whole lot of sense,” she said.
According to the National Weather Service, Vermont’s experience with floods can be traced to both ongoing climate change and the state’s mountainous geography. Greater rainfall and increased moisture availability have made the state’s steep terrain more susceptible to flooding.
Elsewhere in Vermont, heavy winds blew off a significant portion of a high school’s roof in Addison County.
Meanwhile, flash flooding also occurred in Massachusetts on Thursday after rains dumped more than 7 inches (18 centimeters) of rain in some areas. Some businesses were flooded in the town of Weymouth, which saw the bulk of the rain and flooding while commuters faced delays as highways and streets south of Boston flooded.
Kruesi reported from Providence, Rhode Island.
Local News
Three children were found safe in the Vermont woods Friday morning after they failed to return from a hike the afternoon prior, according to officials.
Search crews found the 14-year-old boy, 12-year-old girl, and 11-year-old boy “safe and uninjured” shortly before 6 a.m. in wooded terrain about half a mile from their camp in Duxbury, Vermont State Police said in a news release. Crews escorted the children off Camel’s Hump mountain to be reunited with their families.
The children were taking part in an organized camp and set out on a 30-minute hike around 4 p.m. Thursday, police said. After they failed to return in about 90 minutes, camp personnel launched a search and called Vermont State Police at 6:20 p.m.
Search efforts included emergency personnel from several agencies.
Get everything you need to know to start your day, delivered right to your inbox every morning.
See How Trump’s Big Bill Could Affect Your Taxes, Health Care and Other Finances
Video: Trump Signs the ‘One Big Beautiful Bill’ Into Law
Video: Who Loses in the Republican Policy Bill?
16 Mayors on What It’s Like to Run a U.S. City Now Under Trump
Meet Soham Parekh, the engineer burning through tech by working at three to four startups simultaneously
Federal contractors improperly dumped wildfire-related asbestos waste at L.A. area landfills
Russia-Ukraine war: List of key events, day 1,227
Congressman's last day in office revealed after vote on Trump's 'Big, Beautiful Bill'