Showing posts with label paraglide. Show all posts
Showing posts with label paraglide. Show all posts

Monday, April 13, 2009

Sunset watching

I've decided to stop encouraging people to check out what an evening of paragliding at the crow is all about.

For some reason people can't relate to, or don't understand that an evening flight is a mellow, peaceful, and relaxing activity. When I tell people that I'm going to go fly, their faces often scrunch up and they usually say something lame and cliche like, "you are really crazy, do you know that?"

I'm changing my tactic. From now on, I will ask "Do you want to go for a mellow hike in the foothills and watch the sunset together?" Who doesn't like a warm gentle breeze, and a great view of the Boise river heading west as the sun sinks into the Oregon horizon? Seems like anyone could enjoy that sort of evening.

Even so, I'm convinced that I'm the only one in the entire valley that really actually enjoyed watching the sun sink into the horizon and the sky turning blaze orange this evening.

Me, two red-tails, and four vultures anyway...



More after the jump...

Sunday, April 5, 2009

Still thinking about Traffic

This video hasn't helped any either. 100 meter start cylinders?!! More after the jump...

Thursday, April 2, 2009

Nervous for Nationals

I just watched this video from PG worlds and got really nervous about flying in gaggles that large at Nationals. More after the jump...

Wednesday, April 1, 2009

Peparing for US PG Nationals

I know that I'm not going to have much of a chance to fly this summer so I signed up to fly in the US paragliding nationals in Dunlap California the end of April. I've only flown in one other comp - the Chilean Nationals in Santiago Chile a few years back. I'm not too much into the comp scene, but I did log one of my best flights while there. At nationals I will share airspace with the best pilots in the nation. I think this will be a great learning opportunity. I am a little nervous about flying in big gaggles and heavy traffic, but I'm excited and I think it will be a great learning experience, not to mention fun. Look for photos from the event at the end of April or the begginning of May.

Racing paragliders is silly. Racing the slowest aircraft available? Does that make any sense at all?

Comp pilots fly with GPS units which are loaded with waypionts for each day of competition. Race organizers call different "tasks" each day. For example, the first day the organizers might call a task that has the pilots racing from way-point 1 to way-point 2 then to way-point 3 and finally to goal. The second day's task might be way-point 2 to way-point 5, back to way-point 2, way-point 1, back to the start way-point, then to goal. Each way-point is associated with "cylindar" of varying radiuses. The pilot's track log must record within the cylindar in order to "tag" the waypoint. The scoring systems are complicated (a combination of German engineering/anal retentivness, French emotions, Swiss clockmakers accuracy, and Ukrainian wild streaks perhaps?), but take into account the number of way-points tagged, flight time (speed), whether or not the pilot reaches goal, and if so how far behind the task winner the pilot arrived at goal.

In an effort to become more familiar with an expensive paperweight (I purchased used for 1/2 price on ebay) I recorded a track log on my gps today and used LoadMyTracks to download the track log from my GPSmap 76s to my macbook and convert the file to a google earth .kml file. I then opened the file in GE, and saved it as a compressed .kmz file. Click to see the track log I recorded on the drive up Bogus Basin Road. More after the jump...

Wednesday, February 11, 2009

T-1

Patrick's first of five flights needed for his T-1 rating. Swann Falls.

More after the jump...

Saturday, October 18, 2008

Saturday, September 27, 2008

New pilot in the valley

This plane was checking out the new pilot we have in the Boise PG community.



Clancy is a Junior at BSU, originally from Weiser. I plan to feed him Yost's sound school advice: "You can always re-take a class. You can never re-live a moment." And convince him that blowing off school for a PG trip to India is the best thing he could do with his life next fall. Here he is flying at his favorite Idaho ridge site, Swan Falls:









More after the jump...

Friday, June 20, 2008

No Soaring Today

I know I can learn something new every time that I lay out my wing. It would be nice to sit at launch with other more experienced pilots, to pick their brains, to watch conditions develop, and expand my understanding of what makes for prime soaring conditions.

For now, however, I will note what I observed, and guess as to what I think may have happened.

Information I went to launch with:

Dr. Jacks soaring forecast gave me high hopes, 600 ft/min lift prediction, and a high 9 - 10 buoyancy shear mark. Today's forecast looked better than yesterday, better lift, and the lift should have held together in nice, neat predictable columns.

www.wunderground.com showed light SE winds shifting to light SW around 3 in contrast to the NW winds I had yesterday. I assumed the SE/SW flow prediction would work well for my S facing launch.

As I drove to launch a red tail hawk circled up from a SE facing dry dirt knob.

The HAM radio WX reported light and variable winds, pressure 30.25 inches and falling, 74 degrees at 11 a.m. Prediction called for High Mountain afternoon showers SE winds at 10-15 mph by evening.

What I observed at launch:

I arrived at launch at 10:45 to mostly clear skies, a few altostratus clouds, wind cross out of the East coming up from the bottom of Geertson Creek.

Consistent signs of thermals did not appear until close to noon, an hour and fifteen later than yesterday. The first cumulus clouds (cu's) appeared above the black rocks west of town, and over the mountains North of the Main Salmon, downriver from N. Fork. Cu's continued to lift off, disintegrate and rebuild to the ridge West of town, North of North Fork and over the Lemhi's and towards Challis. A few horsetails streaked across the sky near challis, and further south a few of the altostratus clouds began to show lenticular development.

I waited until 1:15, an hour and fifteen later than I launched yesterday, launched in a weak cycle, boated in some tight funky lift and sunk out as a red-tail struggled up in the weak lift. I had all ready signed the day off as a sled ride and fitness hike due to the increasing lenticulars and the fact that only a few weak thermals tricked into launch.

Over the course of my hour hike back to my truck at launch I observed the following:

Cu's never popped over launch or any other ridge of the Idaho side of the Beaverheads, but continued to build over the Lemhi's and along the ridge line to the West of town, extending upriver towards Challis. As I reached my truck those wispy streaky edges that look like sandpaper scratches on glass had formed all around the edges of the Cumulus clouds. Within a few minutes of starting the truck and heading down hill the glass scratches had developed into virga and extened from the West side of town almost to the LZ. Conditions continued to develop and engulf the valley, eventually merging with the Cus popping of the East facing ridges in MT. It has yet to overdevelop into a full blown thunderstorm, but it is not flyable.

What I think happened:

I'm not sure, but my best guess is that the East facing Ridge to the west of town built up rather quickly with the combination of long direct morning sun and a SE flow. As conditions built over the ridge to the west of town I think that for some reason it sucked a lot of the energy out of the valley, preventing thermals from building on the SW facing slopes of the Beaverhead, and preventing me from getting up and out.

ideas to consider:

1. Look for a morning launch on the East facing slope behind town. The long, high, early morning summer sun heats this slope direct and hard for quite some time. Head to this launch with E or SE predictions.

2. Use Geertson as an afternoon/evening S/W/NW site. Summer sun is super high over head at this site and direct heating doesn't even start on the lower slopes until between noon and one.

3. Consider heading to launch later on days with altostratus clouds, assess for lenticulars and horse tails as time progresses and make a head to launch or stay at home decision once things have had a chance to decide how it will develop.

3. Buy a sun hat for sitting around at launch watching things develop.

Life is Grand! More after the jump...

Wednesday, December 26, 2007

Playa Cavancha


Here's an image I made a year ago today of surfers in the line up as I circled around to land at Playa Cavancha, Iquique Chile. More after the jump...

Monday, December 24, 2007

Christmas Eve at the Crow


Smooth strong lift at the Crow today. Kept my eyes on the winter cumis that were popping and ripping across the valley at about 5,000, landed just as it got punchy and strong. Life is Grand! More after the jump...