Category Archives: Hanggliding

Forbes, day 4, sick day for me.

When we came home from flying yesterday I felt awake and thought that the jetlag was gone, I was happy about it. But I soon found out that I could not sleep at all during the night. I felt sick and not very rested in the morning.

We got a 192 km task to the NE, forecast for cloudbase at 4000 meters, and 20 km winds.

Arriving at the airport we set up in the heat, 42 degrees today, and got ready to tow. I was number 7 in my line, and was again in for a good start time if I got up. When I got up to the start line, I had one pilot in front of me, and suddenly the wind switches around, and we get strong tailwind. It was a huge dustdevil picking up in front of us, and the two pilots that were coming in to land was caught by it. One pilot slams in hard, and is picked up by the ambulance. We’re told he’s OK, just have to be checked at the hospital.

The accident stops the towing for almost 45 minutes. Waiting in the harness in the sun takes it toll, I wanted to get up in the cool air, but by the time towing started again I was so sick that I decided to not push it. I packed up my glider and got a ride back to the hotel to take a cold shower and a get few hours sleep.

Olav and Nic made it to goal, I guess it was a fantastic day as long as you got up in the air.

Forbes, day 3

This server was down because of a long powerfailure that drained all the UPS batteries. This always seem to happens when I’m far away, so sorry for the downtime.

Yesterday was another good day, with very high cloudbase and strong lift, but it was also very windy. We got a 169km task with two crosswind legs. I had perfect timing to take the first startgate, but the tugpilot dropped me off downwind of the airport with a gaggle of 5 other pilots sinking out. Thank you very much. We all glided back to the airport for a second tow, and that took a while. So I was forced to do the last startgate again. Nic and me flew together for a while, but he landed out after only 30 km, and I was soon alone. The cloudbase rose to 3500 meters when I got to the first turnpoint, and going alone it’s way too slow. I always search for better lift, but with the windy conditions it was broken and difficult, and a gaggle would be much faster. I briefly had Olav and two other gliders under me, but they stayed behind when I glided to the next cloud and I did not see them anymore.

I glided with 110-115 km/h groundspeed, and tried to stay in the more organized lift over 2000 meters. The final glide was under massive cloudsuck, and I arrived around 1000meters above goal… Olav came in at 3000 meters, which must be a new record.

I got 31 place, Olav 39.

Today looks like another good day.

My condolances to Steve Elliot’s family and friends. We had dinner together when we came to Forbes, he was such a friendly and funny guy, liked by everyone. It’s a big loss for all of us.

More on day 2

Results can be found at;
http://www.moyes.com.au/Forbes2009/Results/Results.aspx

The carnage on the first day seemed to never end, Olav’s glider was fine after replacing one upright, but he was then attacked by an eagle while flying the task. The eagle tore holes in the top surface of his sail with its claws. Steve Moyes had a bad landing, and hurt his finger, so he could not fly anymore, that was lucky for me as I could get parts from Steve’s glider to repair mine.

I wanted to get off the ground as soon as possible yesterday, but there were still some small things to do on the glider, so I had to wait a bit for the tow again. I was having a headache, and felt nausea from being dehydrated working on the glider in the morning. I drunk at least 3 liters before takeoff, so it would help during the flight, but I still felt sick and had to take it easy during the flight.

On course I teamed up with Lucas Bader and Phil Schroeder for a while, but I lost Lucas from sight when we went on glide again. I later heard he went a little left behind me, and got a new 5 m/s thermal and could start the final glide from there, while I had to take one more thermal.

I did get a OK time, despite taking it easy. We get penalized for taking the last start gate.

Briefing is in 3 minutes now, looks like a good day again today.

Forbes, day 2

Short report today, I’m dead tired from a long day.

Worked from 07:30 to 11:00 fixing the glider, got quite dehydrated in the sun. We got a 103km task, quite windy in the morning. Got off OK once the wind died down a bit, and got up. Took the last start gate, and flew to goal. Nice but turbulent day, clouds, crosswind task, cloudbase at 2800m.

More tomorrow

Forbes day 1, a dustdevil ate my glider

Today looked like a good day, we got a 187km task via one TP. The forecast was for some clouds and base at around 2200 meters.

We all set up at the airstrip, and got ready to go. The towing did not go very fast, and my line seemed to be the slowest one. Olav Lien was 2 gliders in front of me. As we slowly moved forward towards the takeoff line a dustdevil started forming just in front of us. Within a second it was huge and picked up a Nic that was lying down on the dolly ready to go. He was lucky and had the dolly runners to help him and hold him down, but when the dustdevil came to us there was no one to help.

We were all clipped in and ready to go, and got slammed around pretty good. The American pilot in front of me was lifted a meter up, and dumped down on his back 6-7 meters away from where he stood. Olav was flipped over on his back, and broke one upright on the glider. I managed to hold the glider down on the nose for a while, but eventually was flipped over on the back. The Australian pilot behind me also got flipped over, and his leading edge hit my glider and broke my outboard leadingedge, sprog, and one batten. The broken sprog also made a nice hole in the undersurface, in addition to the scars in the leadingedge from flipping over. My instrument mount was also cracked, but I might be able to fix that with some epoxy.

A total of 6 gliders were damaged. I do not know if we get the parts yet. In addition to the carnage caused by the dustdevil, one Russian pilot tumbled on his Combat while thermalling up over the airfiled, and came down under rescue chute. Another pilot flipped over on the dolly under takeoff and had to be airlifted out to hospital. He’s was not badly injured as far as I know.

I gave one of my uprights to Olav so he could fly, and he took off again later, but I do not know if he attempted the task yet. He was at least 1:30 behind the last start time.

So not a good start on this competition for me, I could not fly the task, and need lots of repairs to my glider. There was nothing we could do to avoid the dustdevil, but it’s a bit silly to have to stay in the line hooked in for a long time in these conditions. We should be able to tie down the gliders, and just go straight into the takeoff line to minimize the risk of dustdevils.

Forbes, practice day

The internet connection at the hotel here is really unstable, and I will not be able to write much on this blog, or answer to many emails unless the connectio improves. It took more than 10 tries to get this text uploaded.

We had a good day with practice flights yesterday, I got a nice 1 hour flight on my Litespeed, the glider goes straight, and feels good so far. I have not been thermalling since July, so I’m a bit rusty for sure.

Today is the first competition day, weather looks good.

Arrived in Forbes

I flew Oslo – London in the morning, and had to wait 7 hours at Heathrow for my flight to Sydney. Not too bad, I found a good book and a quiet pub, so time went by quickly at the airport. I could not sleep on the flight from London to Sydney at all, so that flight felt like it took forever.

Olav have been in Sydney a few days, so he picked me up at the airport and we drove straight from Sydney to Forbes. It’s a 4 hour drive, and we arrived hoping to have a short flight on the new gliders, but it was way too windy to fly. So I tried to sleep a few hours, before having dinner. We met Nic from Switzerland and teamed up with him as he was alone but had a driver and a big car. So we’re all set for the comp.

The weather here is sunny and warm, it was 34 degrees yesterday, but it might be windy the next few days. Looks like there will be around 80 pilots in the comp, many are already here, and the rest will arrive today.

Going to bed at 22, I quickly fell asleep, but woke up again at 03 hungry for dinner, and could not sleep more. Jetlag sucks…

We will go out to the airfield again today, and I really hope we can get a few flights in today to get a little bit used to towing and thermals again before the comp starts.

Equipment list for Oz 2009

I always tend to forget some important stuff when it’s been a while since the last competiton. During the season all my gear is packed in the harness all the time, or charging in very close proximity. I have not been competing since July, so now much of my comp gear have been packed away and I need to make sure I found everything again.

Since I’m only allowed 23kg and one bag on the plane, I can’t bring much extras. I’ve assembled everything I need on the living room floor, and started picking out the things to leave at home.

Visual of the list below.
Visual of the list below.

I made a list for myself, and here’s the result with “must have” gear;

  1. My Skyline ZDFR harness is the main thing (Big black bag on the right), it also contains aerotow releases + small glider spares like batten tips and pip-pins not in the picture. All the stuff on the floor goes into the harness bag, minus laptop, ipod, camera, GSM phone, and vario that go in the carryon.No – I am not bringing the Skyline beanbag in the top of the picture! ;-)

    From top left;

  2. The “Travel pillow” was a gift from my wife. It’s super nice – Weighs less than 200 grams but very fluffy, great for the close to 60 hours on the plane to Oz and back, and all the hours in the car for retreive. We spend a lot more time traveling around, than actually flying hanggliders.
  3. Moyes caps, essential in the sun. I guess Vicki will have a new for me when I get there, this have been with me a few years now.
  4. Ancle protectors from Australia. Essential to keep dry grass, thistles, spiders, snakes, and other sharp and painful objects out of the shoes when walking through the setup and goal fields. I learned this the hard way in Manilla 9 years ago.
  5. Mosquito net from Australia. Essential to keep the millions of agressive flies out of the face, you need this in Oz.
  6. Helmet from Italy.
  7. Summer flying gloves. My regular Skyline gloves are way to warm for Oz, I got these at Wal-Mart in Big Spring, Texas during the last Worlds. Very good leather that takes the abuse from the VG rope.
  8. Sandals from Mexico. Cheap, comfy and packs nicely into the harness.
  9. Flying shoes from Brazil. Very light and thight shoes, fits in my very slim harness boot. It amazes me, the boots and boot equipment that are available today, If you just go to retail stores locally, you really are missing out on the present online movement, let me suggest www.workbootsnerds.com for boots.
  10. Skyline Sella flying jacket.

    Second row from left;

  11. Camelback, essential, I will dehydrate without it.
  12. Hood to keep the sweat from running into my eyes and drip onto the inside of the visor while waiting for the tow, and when struggling low. (Not that I want to do that…)
  13. Two pairs of sunglassses. I seem to break one pair in every comp.
  14. Sunblock for the lips. Essential for my very pale nordic skin.
  15. Mini variometer, for backup in case the Compeo quits unexpectedly.
  16. Superglue. Fix everything from broken battens to cuts in the skin.
  17. Radio, headset, and charger.
  18. Backup GPS and charger for NiMH AA’s.
  19. Powerball. Great for training and avoiding RSI in wrists from too much flying in short time. I’ve not done a thermal in 4 months, and will be hurting after a week in Forbes.
  20. LED flashlight.
  21. Multitool.
  22. Wire antenna for radio.
  23. Spare quick-links for the bridle and weaklinks.
  24. Passport with the Australian tourist visa and FAI licences inside :-)
  25. Nokia E71 GSM phone with charger and blu-tooth headset. I will blog from this while on the road.
  26. Nokia CDMA phone from Telstra, charger. This works where there is no GSM (At least two years ago, maybe the coverage is better now. Last time we had very poor GSM just 20km out of Forbes)
  27. Compeo+ instrument, mains and car charger, carbon fibre tube to make a pitot speedsensor.

    Third row from left;
  28. 6 pairs of boxers, 6 T-shirts, 2 shorts, 1 Loki softshell pants. All microfibre to save weight and keep cool in the heat. I have to sacrifice clothes for weight.I’ll buy socks as I need them in Forbes, and we always get some nice shirts in the competition. Both Forbes and Mt. Beauty has a laundry. I’ll travel in jeans, and since I’m leaving a cold place I’ll wear something with long sleeves and fleece.
  29. Maps of Vicoria, and NSW. Notebook to keep tabs of costs in the team.
  30. Permanent marker to mark the VG rope. I asked for a new rope on the glider, Moyes never markes it, and I always forget to bring the marker to the airfield the first week after getting a new glider. Not this year!
  31. Small bandaid to keep in harness.
  32. EU to Oz powerplugs.
  33. The speakers for my Ipod was a christmas gift from my wife, nice on days with no flying. Runs on AA’s, also has a mains adapter.
  34. Ipod with the good headset from Shure + a Sony noise-cancelling headset for the 2 long flights.
  35. Camera and charger. 4 + 2 Gigs of memory cards should be enough for a day or two.
  36. TomTom GPS with Oz maps for the car. We’ll have local drivers, but sometimes they get lost too :-)

    Bottom row, from left;

  37. USB sticks, RSA VPN keys, etc. Essential for a IT dude like me.
  38. Laptop charger, Lenovo T61 laptop, and APC external Li-Ion battery. The extra battery keeps the laptop running for about 8 hours on the plane, enough for a Civilisation-IV game, or 3 DVD’s in case the inflight stuff is boring. The APC battery also have a USB port that give power, so I can run the Ipod continously for 2 weeks off that battery.

In addition I have small bag with toothbrush, toothpaste, soaps, etc.

So what did I forget this year? Setting up this list helped me remember quite a few items like the flying jacket, mosquito net and the CDMA phone that I do not use at comps at home or in Europe.

Can’t find my speedsleeves anywhere, hope I can find them before I leave. I can manage without the speedsleeves but it would be nice to be able to choose between the jacket and just T-shirt and speedsleeves.

I just noticed that there’s 10 different chargers on the floor! Can we have universal chargers soon please?

Christmas day flying

With weak northerly winds, and high pressure systems we can get some super nice conditions at out local site close to Oslo, but more often than not it’s foggy below the inversion just under takeoff. There was a clear inversion yesterday too, but not much fog.

Midwinter sun at midday
Midwinter sun

I had kept Sindre’s Litesport that he bought from a German pilot, Sindre has been in Bergen studying law, and he’s not had time for flying. We assembled it from shortpack in the garage at work before heading out in the morning.

At Sundvollen the fjord was frozen, with about 5cm of steel ice – so the biggest nicest LZ is open. Good for Sindre on his first flight on a new glider. My Litespeed RS is at Moyes so I flew the Falcon. (I’ve sold my Malibu 188 to pay for the trip to Oz, and will get the smaller Malibu later in the spring)

It was almost no wind at takeoff, and periods with weak tailwind as usual at this time of year. We set up and got ready to run off in a still period. Sindre did a very impressive run, and got off nicely with the Litesport. I had to run with the Falcon too, but with that kind of glider it is a lot easier to do a good takeoff in weak tailwind.

Landing on the smooth and extremely slippery  ice is great, just slide in at high speeds.

What  better way to spend the day?