Spring thermals

Spring is here! Bjørn Hammer and I went up to Sundvollen this afternoon for what looked like a sledder. I got off first, found sink for a while, and flew out towards the hotel in search of thermals. Got some very weak stuff over the road and started turning in broken weak lift. It gradually improved to 2 m/s as I passed the top of the ridge, and then slowed down again and stopped at around 700 meters. The day was blue and some high cloud filtering the sun warming. I went back over takeoff where a Paraglider took off and went down. I found some more lift there and Bjørn took off and scratched the ridge for 15 minutes below me. I continued flying, following the ridge towards Gurihaugen and found some good lift between strong sink.

For the first time ever I caught my shoelace in the main harness zipper, and had to fly with the harness open. My legs soon started to cramp up, I aborted my target of Åsa and glided back to land on the ice (Rather unelegantly with my foot stuck in the harness :-)) Met up with Fritz and Anne-Lena to have some pizza and coffe back in Oslo, pretty good for a Monday. Logbook entry

Spring soon?

Shitty weather and no flying lately. I spent last weekend at the Generalt meeting for the Hang and Paragliding organization, too bad as Sunday was a great day at Sundvollen. Yesterday was overcast, showers and SSE winds, which is quite useless. Today was forecasted windy, and it came through with too strong westerlies. Maybe tomorrow!

Gray Sunday

The forecast missed, it was gray and SW instead of sun and NNW at Sundvollen. Quite flyable though, we got nice take off conditions for the stundents. Lots of people taking flights down and going back up for another one. I flew down twice, did some testing of gliding in groundeffect along the ice. I did not glide as well as I thought I would, even if I came in quite fast in prone position. The rest of the students passed the theory exam today, so the course is finally finished.

Picture after Arild’s aborted start, have to keep the nose down and run when it’s nil wind. Picture by Frode Halse.

Fog and rain

No flying lately, the weather’s been shit. Forecast for the weekend is quite good, I’ll try to get in some flying, maybe on Mjøsa. Hedemarken have their annual winch tow meet this weekend, I might go there if I can borrow a winch tow release somwhere.

Winter flying

I drove up to Vågå for the yearly general meeting in my club, Saturday was nice with sun from a blue sky. Sunday was grey and not very tempting to go flying. Rolf, Olav, and I got a flight from Visdal on Saturday, Stig and Herleif did set up but they were too slow to get ready and waited through the lauchable conditions. With such cold weather and lots of snow in the mountains the catabatic flow sets in as soon as the ground get a little less heating from the sun, you have to be ready when it’s on.

Øyvind takeoffOlav takeoff

Where the hell is the Worlds?

Look like the next worlds will be in Hay, Australia. It won by one vote in the Plenary. (Would have been 3 more if both Zupy and me had made it to Romania) Cool for us, cheaper than Florida and nice to get away in the winter to somwhere warm. I just wish the organizers can arrange a grassy field to tow from. I’ve been in Hay 3 times, it’s world class flying when it’s good, but we will lose some days to strong winds. The town is quite small, 150 pilots will fill up.
I’ve got the images from Oz up on the server, but have some work to do on the album script before it’s visible. Should be OK tomorrow.

Also check out Bernies reports from Oz at http://www.telusplanet.net/~bjwinkel

Galileo on the way

Just got a call from TollPost speditor, my Brauniger Galileo have returned from service in Germany. Should have it on Monday. I’ll write a review when I have it back and can play with it some more to get all the details right.

Glider on the way

I got an email from Moyes that my glider was sent last Tuesday. Should be here next week. I’m keeping my fingers crossed for no damages. Last year it was fine, but two years ago the box had forklift holes and a broken speedbar.

Gordon Rigg took his glider short packed in the luggage from Oz back to UK. When he got it at Heathrow it had a 45 degree bend in it. Both crossbars, leadingedges, keel and A-frame broken. Only thing whole was the speedbar. He took the sail in the suitcase so that was OK. BA charged him AU$1000 for the extra wheight. Hope they pay up for the damages.

Blog, pictures, videos, and articles from my flying adventures aound the world. Content in English.