My first real tailwind landing was on accident, and scared the bejezus out of me. I had about 100 hrs and was beginning to feel pretty competent in the club's 172. I was landing at a narrow 2200' paved strip adjacent to a fairground. inbound, I had a great wind indication on the ridge-line a little ways north and a couple of hundred feet above the airport (first mistake). I set up for what I thought would be a landing into the wind, and all was well, up the the point that I rounded out and pulled the last little bit of power off. Something didn't feel quite right, but I'd succesfully rounded out in ground effect right about as close to the numbers as I'd dared. So, I was sure I had plenty of room to get her on the ground and stopped (2nd mistake). After a couple of crow-hops, it suddenly dawned on me that my ground speed seemed to be a little fast. No problem though, I still had more than half the distance of the runway to get it all under control. More crow hops and with the throttle already closed, I was quickly running out of room and ideas. I did finally push the throttle open and nurse the thing into the air. But, it just did not seem to want to climb. I watched horrified as I slowly passed the upwind end of the runway, barely clearing the fence, over traffic and very slowly climbing out over the fairgrounds. At about 200' agl, I passed over a horse and rider frozen in the middle of one the show rings, staring up at me. I didn't have time to look and see if the horse spooked. But, I'm sure that rider was calling me some pretty not-nice names. I finally managed to safely accelerate and climb to a safer altitude. But, I'll never forget the sight out that wind screen as I barely cleared the fence and the cars on the other side.
The lesson was #1 Don't trust wind indications on ridge lines well above field altitude. And, #2 when it doesn't feel right don't wait to see if it gets better, go around.