RELATED: Never Forget to Do This After Boarding, Flight Attendant Warns. ae0fcc31ae342fd3a1346ebb1f342fcb We’ve all felt the spike of anxiety that comes with the “fasten seatbelt” light suddenly turning on mid-flight. And while bumps in the sky are simply a part of travel, pilots say that encountering a sudden updraft is the one weather condition they dread the most. In fact, the atmospheric conditions can be as jarring for the crew as they are for passengers. “A plane flies into a massive updraft, which you can’t see on the radar at night, and it’s like hitting a giant speed bump at 500 miles an hour,” John Nance, aviation safety analyst and retired airline captain, told Reader’s Digest. “It throws everything up in the air and then down very violently. That’s not the same as turbulence, which bounces everyone around for a while.” According to experts, updrafts can develop even when it seems like there may be fair weather to the untrained eye. “[Updrafts appear] on unstable—often partly cloudy—days as pockets of warm air rise, sometimes forming shower and thunderstorm clouds,” Greg Forbes, PhD, severe weather expert for The Weather Channel, explained in a 2012 interview. “While pilots avoid flying through strong thunderstorms, sometimes the updrafts in the smaller clouds and showers can cause turbulent bumps.” In some cases, unexpectedly hitting the patch of rising air can very suddenly lift a plane to dangerously high altitudes. This can then cause pilots to take hard corrective measures to bring the aircraft back on course, which can result in very sudden drops or potentially send it briefly spinning out of control.
RELATED: For more up-to-date information, sign up for our daily newsletter. Even though unexpected changes in wind direction can create drastic and frightening effects onboard, pilots say that the everyday bumps and jostles experienced during most flights are manageable and can usually be detected with plenty of warning time. “Turbulence is an aggravating nuisance for everybody, including the crew, but it’s also, for lack of a better term, normal,” Patrick Smith, the editor of the website Ask the Pilot, says. “From a pilot’s perspective, it is ordinarily seen as a convenience issue, not a safety issue.” And if you notice your plane ascending or descending after hitting a few bumps, it’s not necessarily an act of panic. “The pilots aren’t worried about the wings falling off; they’re trying to keep their customers relaxed and everybody’s coffee where it belongs. Planes themselves are engineered to take a remarkable amount of punishment,” Smith explains. Fortunately, pilots are well trained to deal with even severe turbulence and can usually go out of their way to avoid any major bumps in the sky. “The great thing about aviation is that you’re traveling within a three-dimensional space,” Clark Morawetz, a commercial pilot, told Canadian outlet Global News. “You’re not confined to a road. When we’re traveling through the skies [and] we can see evidence of potential turbulence, we can avoid it by requesting a diversion from air traffic control.” Still, pilots can be caught off guard by sudden changes in weather or instruments missing the disturbance ahead of time. “That’s why it’s always a good idea to stay in your seat and wear your seatbelt, even if the seatbelt sign is off,” Morawetz recommends. And if you’re still feeling nervous about hitting updrafts or rough patches in the sky, you can rest assured that experiencing it rarely results in much more than a few spilled drinks. “Because airliners fly at a high altitude, there’s plenty of time to recover from most severe turbulence encounters,” Morawetz explains. “It might be a moment of discomfort for people, but the pilots do everything that they possibly can to avoid flying through turbulence. And, for us, safety and comfort are very high priorities that we take very seriously.” RELATED: If You Hear This on Your Plane, It Might Be an Emergency, Flight Attendant Warns.