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The Falcon X-C Contest log - Continued from 11/07/06
Thursday, 9 November 2006
Start of the new Falcon X-C log - last posts from old log

And here we go ---- These are newest, first. Future postings will be oldest, first. Click on "View Comments" to read.

Wednesday, 8 November 2006
Previous entries from Log/Guest book

Some X-C considerations
    
Page 1 of 16      
Friday 07/07/2006 0:38:37am
Name:     Ben Davidson
E-Mail:     falconxc@tekflight.com
City/Country:    
Comments:     SJ, now that was a tale to put a smile on face.



Friday 07/07/2006 0:32:44am
Name:     sunny jim
E-Mail:     singlesurface@yahoo.com
City/Country:     usa
Comments:     day five, chelan xc classic,tom sinks out at the chelan airport while I hold on to drifting thermals for a twenty miler..........floating low over small lzs and thanking God I'm on a single surface glider..........this brings Tom Johns and I within ONE mile of each other on the final day six!
Day six, Conrad Kurp(third place), Tom Johns, and I all thermal out together.
I lose track of my buddies and get low over Wells Dam looking for an ace card.
I look out over the columbia river and see three redtails going up like rockets and decide to join them........1200 feet per minute....to 9,500.....drifts me N.E. towards the Colville REServation.....I can hear the war drums.......getting low over the bridgeport Dam..barely going to make it to the rimrock on the far side of the dam .... must have triggered a thermal when I unzipped to land cuz I took a ripper from one hundred off the deck to ten grand!...straight on to indian country! ...can't make it over the next ridge so I turn back to land a short ways from the east end of Omak lake....great lz.. but as I'm breaking down I'm thinking...I'm in a hole with no phone reception and no radio contact"... I started worrying and asked the question, "how am I going to get out of here?....silence...and then.... "I got you here, I'll get you back"..... good enough for me.....keep breaking down....start walking....the lake looks refreshing enough...and whats this?...? Indians riding bareback shoulder deep through the water..everything looks slow motion.....practicing for the upcoming Omak Stampede suicide race where they race down a forty five degree embankment into the okanogan river and into the stampede grounds......"it's won or lost in the water", Zane Best tells me, sitting astride his stallion bareback complete with black braids down his back....I feel like I've walked onto the "dances with wolves" set and I'm Kevin Costner.....except I can't see anyone who can play, "stands with a fist".....too bad.
My new indian friends feed me fried chicken and cold beer and give me a ride out to civilization........and it
turns out that this 48 miler wins the meet for me.........SJ out



Thursday 07/06/2006 1:22:25pm
Name:     sunny Jim
E-Mail:     singlesurface@yahoo.com
City/Country:     usa
Comments:     thanks Ben, I looked up my day one score and I the triangle on day one with the multiplier works out to 61 miles, not 66........Day two was a great day for single surface as well but not for me......I had a hard time getting accross to the clouds out by Mansfield and Tom Johns, who was in second place, jumped to first place by getting under those clouds and racking up a 47 mile single surface flight to almira, WA.!!

So now I'm in second place and tom Johns is fifteen miles ahead of me and the weather turns bad for day three and day four......very stable...no lift...at least not enough lift to get us accross to the flats....yet I notice that Tom Johns is steadily increasing his lead over me!!! Now, on day four, he is actually twenty four miles ahead of me!!! What Tom is doing is getting as high as he can and then he is just turning downwind and plummetting into the farthest landable LZ along the river! Brilliant strategy. If the bad weather continues he's got me for sure! the Chelan xc classic has just turned into a GLIDE-OFF!!!!



Wednesday 07/05/2006 5:31:43pm
Name:     Ben Davidson
E-Mail:     falconxc@tekflight.com
City/Country:    
Comments:     Nice going Sunny Jim. Wish that we were there. Funny, saw in the Oz Report that those lowly single surface gliders did generally better than double surface KP gliders. Charge onward!



Wednesday 07/05/2006 1:44:20pm
Name:     sunny Jim
E-Mail:     singlesurface@yahoo.com
City/Country:     usa
Comments:     first day of the classic......with eight single surface competitors!..this group is growing! thats up from five last year and usually only three or four in past years......Day one was an easy clombout over the Butte and a great day for a single surface triangle so I whipped out a withrow/ mansfield/ and back to the butte.....I think its a 44 mile triangle with a 1.5 multiplier but now I['m going to have to go double check on that.........I can't remember!...but I think its' going to be 66 miles..........I flew Kamrons new single surface ship that doesn't have a name yet and I really liked it a lot...I did somthing new this time.....I flew with full stereo headphones under my helmut and I loved it!!! You just aint lived until youve thermalled up listening to "Lady in Red"........!!!!!!!!!!.......sj out


Friday 06/23/2006 10:21:49am
Name:     Ben Davidson
E-Mail:     falconxc@tekflight.com
City/Country:    
Comments:     06/16/06
Well, some might ask why I went but I have a personal rule that if I'm over Ellenville at 5000' and climbing, I go. For the last year and change, we have been wedded to the mountain with new pilots needing coaching so I've been condemned to landing in the good ol' l.z.. Finally a chance to play over the back. Great day. Real potential for real miles. My radio giving me trouble so I just tell Alegra that I'll land along Rt. 52 and leave her w/ our pilots. That route gives me a max. of 12.8 miles but hey, better than landing with the rest of the leashed world. Climb into murk at 7k and flying just in "T" shirt w/ no gloves it is getting chilly. Thermals everywhere. Cruise downwind with the worst sink being 300 fpm and lots of stuff to work except that I can't go far. And so, I shortly come down from 5k to land at Mad Sammie's farm along 52 just where I'd enter Stewart's airspace if I don't head N and make pickup an adventure - assuming that I don't make it over the river for some "talkaboutit" miles.
Good to have rejoined you XC pilots.



Monday 05/22/2006 3:06:59pm
Name:     Tony de Groot
E-Mail:     aomthomas@cox.net
City/Country:     Ojai, Calif.
Comments:     15 Miles, 2 hours, Max ht. 11000 ft

Decided to go to a site with more xc potential. I didn't get a lot of distance but it sure was exciting. When I think back about today the most intense, vivid image is that of thermaling next to a wall of rain, glancing with each turn at the growing darkness above me and thinking, two more turns, not more, don't let it catch you, this is so dangerous, get up and get the hell away from the growing monster that is threatening to zap you out of the air like some insignificant bug. The day started mellow enough. We were late, but the development was much less than the day before. Tony DeLeo was on launch and his Atos was already set up. With me was Greg Brown, Lee Kahn and Terry Taggert and our driver Jeff. I set up fast and just as DeLeo was going over the back I launched and struggled up from below the knob out front. Not a fun place to be in a Falcon as I'm not sure if I could make the LZ on a glide but I climbed up but the lift died at 8300 and I searched around for something else. I short time, very short time later I was below the knob again praying for anything and telling myself that I was going over the back with whatever I got this time. Got one that was drifting back to 8500 and took it. Yeah, it was low but I had a 30-35 mph ground speed headed toward a better L.Z. and usually can find something on the other side but didn't. No trash and some minor lift but nothing solid and headed for dry canyon where I was somewhere down in the 5000 - 5700 range not much above the L.Z. Caught a little one and hung on. Lee came out and went to land at Dry Canyon near me as his zipper in his harness broke. Greg got up to 9200 at launch and came over and past me diving further toward Mount Pinos where clouds were forming nicely while I groveled in light lift around 6000 ft. There was a growing cell that had been coming our way from the Cuyama side of the valley and it started raining and dropping thunder bolts. Nobody heard much thunder but I think it was because of their air speed and wind noise in their ears. Flying slow in the Falcon I heard the low pitched rumbling every time and it made me, uggghh, concerned. As the cell got closer Lee mentioned a small gust front of 8 to 12 mph but I was getting more established in the mid 9000 range and was drifting over the bad lands with the road below me. I saw Terry Taggart glide in just above me and keep going. I started to follow as the cell dumped rain and was growling and growing. The Pinos area was developing into all kinds of dark unfriendliness and Frasier was developing and I was in my putt putt Falcon over the bad lands trying just to get to a landable area that was Lockwood valley. Greg was skied in front over 13,000 and then saw something that scared him bad. A bolt of lightening around Frasier that sent him looking for a safe place to land in Lockwood, quick. Struggling for Lockwood it started raining on me. Hey, are we having fun yet!! Terry was going fast and was heading out to the far edge of Lockwood as I wiped rain off my goggles and kept driving for a better LZ and sun. Got ahead of the rain and hail and got to some nicer lift ahead of the wall of water and while climbing up along it's shower curtain edge, kept glancing up at the growing beast behind and around me. Each part of my turn close to the wall of rain got a few drops on my goggles. It was beautiful, amazing, foolish and dangerous. More lightening around Pinos. Had a beautiful hawk join me further away from the beast in the sun line and we climbed to over 11000 feet but the giant overdevelopment was again starting to chase me down. I drove and drove for the south end of Frasier toward smaller clouds, and sun, but instead of niceties I started getting slapped around. Maybe at 9300 I had enough to go on glide but I wasn't sure about the retrieve potential. In the distance a giant anvel head was overdeveloping in the desert and I had had enough. Turned around and parked in a strong headwind heading back to land in Lockwood as lightening bolts descended over on the other side of the valley. Landed nicely on a dirt road about a quarter mile from the road where Lee and Greg came over to help me get out. Terry got up to 11000 at Frasier where I wanted to go but by the time I was there it was overdeveloping and I wanted to stay away from any more thunder heads. We got lots of beer, sandwiches, and ice cream at the Mountain liquor store to quell our nerves and picked Terry up after a nice 65.5 mile flight landing at the I 14. He wanted to go over the windmills at Tehachapi but it was going nuclear over there and he didn't want to get the venturi winds if they came down that way and glided all the way to the fourteen. Lots of excitement but I'm happy to be home and just watching some T.V. with my girlfriend.

 


Posted by Falcon X-C at 12:00 AM EST
Updated: Thursday, 9 November 2006 1:00 AM EST

Thursday, 9 November 2006 - 12:01 AM EST

Name: "Ben Davidson"

Old Log back further

Friday 05/05/2006 0:54:28am
Name:     Tony
E-Mail:     aomthomas@cox.net
City/Country:     Santa Barbara, CA
Comments:     Jim, thanks for the suggestion. I don't think it is a valid triangle though. I think I left a side open. I'll work on getting a better distance so it won't matter. Hope you get some killer flights in yourself. Looking forward to hearing all about them. See ya, Tony



Tuesday 04/18/2006 9:13:40pm
Name:     sunny Jim
E-Mail:     singlesurface@yahoo.com
City/Country:     usa
Comments:     Hey Tony! Don't forget to give yourself the multiplier for a triangle. a valid triangle ,(by chelan xc classic rules)gets a 1.5 multiplier, and an out and return gets a 1.33 multiplier .....sounds like you just did a 30 miler dude......nice!



Sunday 04/09/2006 1:15:17am
Name:     Tony de Groot
E-Mail:     aomthomas@cox.net
City/Country:     Santa Barbara, CA
Comments:     20 Miles, 4 hours, 4100 MSL
My reward for launching too early was struggling for quite some time and then watching everyone who launched a little later sky me out. Finally got up to a 2800 MSL and cloudbase in very smooth lift and enjoyed flying through clouds with my girlfriend Anne-Odile for an hour and a half. Since she was on her lunch break she landed and just then cloudbase rose to 4100 feet which was enough that I could attempt to get around. I decided to try to do a lap. In our area that is five miles to the west followed by ten miles to the east and then a return of five miles back to the main landing area. I had never done it before in a single surface but I was up for the challenge. A little dicey making it back but a choice thermal down low helped bring me home.

Thursday 04/06/2006 10:39:15am
Name:     Ben Davidson
E-Mail:     falconxc@tekflight.com
City/Country:     
Comments:     Sorry for the inconvience but I just had to change this log to "moderated" as it was under attack from spammers - 3 in 30 minutes. I'll generally update it daily. No spam up there. Fly!



Monday 04/03/2006 5:22:34pm
Name:     sunny Jim
E-Mail:     singlesurface@yahoo.com
City/Country:     usa
Comments:     Okay, I've got some catching up to do with Tony and Pete coming out of the winter starting gate so strong!

Early AM on the backside of Dog Mtn there is a new east facing site...800 ft. agl......light east wind and a glorious morning sun....I take off at about 11:00 am and after a period of perilous struggling below launch I finally start climbing and remind myself to relax! Breath!....the climb picks up speed and soon I am the eagle at five grand and on top of the world surveying a kingdom that I, in my arrogance,parceled and sold into slavery, along with myself,...but not today....today I am a free man and lord over all I behold!
Friends, Tina and Larry Jorgenson were scheduled to arrive at the Morton airport, 10 miles away to tow up pilots at noon and I yielded to the temptation to spiral down and show off what a single surface glider can do before they even got the Tug fired up!!!!! should have flown farther......
...next time...SJ



Monday 04/03/2006 5:02:17pm
Name:     sunny Jim
E-Mail:     singlesurface@yahoo.com
City/Country:     usa
Comments:     Awesome Pete!



Monday 04/03/2006 1:19:25pm
Name:     Pete Lehmann
E-Mail:     lplehmann@msn.com
City/Country:     Pittsburgh, PA
Comments:     MARCH 25 TEMPLETON, PA 50.5 miles; 3:23; 6400msl
Sometimes things just work out. The day’s forecast had been miserable, from dawn till dusk, but when I woke up it was sunny and the satellite pictures confirmed a broad area of clear skies over west-central PA. Knowing that the air was very unstable, and fearing the inevitable overdevelopment, I loaded up the Falcon and headed to the hill by 9:30. But even at that hour the clouds displayed hints of overdevelopment, and by the time I got to the hill it was fully overcast. Still, there were light cycles on the river and it was lightly blowing into launch, so I set up in a raging hurry. Before launching I had to wait for a bit of cycle in the hopes of getting at least a short soaring flight before the inevitable trip to the lz. Once in the air lift was light, but the unstable air provided little bubbles every time I got low, and I slowly began to accumulate airtime.
After an hour on the ridge I finally found a departure thermal that only went to 3,500msl (2,300agl), but I took it just to get off the damn ridge. The sky was still completely overcast, and my decision was half-hearted. Instead of pushing downwind, I flew crosswind to the Exxon station to land and enjoy an easy hitchhike back to the hill. But upon arriving there I hit a thermal that compelled me to make up my mind and get serious about going xc. So I glided down Rural Valley Road, still dubious as to my chances of really getting anywhere.
After a bit more dribbling and scratching, it became apparent that the overcast was ever so slowly breaking up into distinct cumulus clouds. I was still not very high but east of Numine there was a large fire within Falcon gliding range, so I headed towards it. Approaching it, I flew through quite a bit of white ash before finally finally hitting the fire’s lift. The lift didn’t get me very high, but I was now high enough to reach some of the increasingly good looking clouds forming ahead of me near Plumville. Thereafter the clouds were all working in varying degrees, although I never could get near cloudbase, or higher than 4,800msl. These relatively low altitudes, combined with the Falcon’s limited glide, made me fly very cautiously, zigging and zagging to get to the nearest working cloud.
Things went well until nearing Barnesboro at the 38 mile mark where I got down to about 600ft agl, unzipped and preparing to land in a cemetery, when I hit by far the day’s best thermal. It had bits of 600+fpm lift and eventually got me to base for the first time at 6,400msl. I was then smokin’ along below base with hoarfrost forming on my gloves and speed sleeves, with the Falcon producing a breathtaking, but brief, 48mph ground speed. However, that moment of glory was to be the last as I then picked the wrong line of clouds to follow, and soon found myself in a bluish area that still had some snow virga from a dissipating cumie. I was done for, and landed east of Prince Gallitizin Park’s lake, 50.5 miles from Templeton after 3:23 in the air.



Thursday 03/02/2006 1:33:29pm
Name:     Tony
E-Mail:     aomthomas@cox.net
City/Country:     Santa Barbara, CA
Comments:     Had 3 ten mile flights and a fourteen miler in the last month. Nice flying, clouds and got joined with three Condors toward the end of the fourteen miler while looking out at the glistening Pacific Ocean, it was just beautiful.

Monday 01/02/2006 6:55:34pm
Name:     Tony
E-Mail:     aomthomas@cox.net
City/Country:     Santa Barbara, CA
Comments:     The Big Spring competition this year is August 6 - 12 with free flying on the four and fifth in Big Spring,Texas. This year they are having a single surface competition in addition to the sport class. I'm going to go for the first time and should have a group of around five of us going from Santa Barbara. It would be cool if there were at least ten to twenty people flying single surface out there. The more the merrier. I hope a few more people can attend.



Wednesday 12/07/2005 3:13:46pm
Name:     Tony de Groot
E-Mail:     aomthomas@cox.net
City/Country:     Santa Barbara, CA
Comments:     Looking at the rest of the country getting hit with snow I guess I should be happy. Our winter flying season is still not on yet but 11.1 miles in light lift. Decided to head out as the end of our range goes into complete no-mans land for several miles and I needed to get there earlier and higher for a decent go at it. Max height 3500 feet in 2.5 hours.



Monday 09/19/2005 8:22:37pm
Name:     Tony de Groot
E-Mail:     aomthomas@cox.net
City/Country:     Santa Barbara, CA
Comments:     I've decided to just fly my Falcon this year. Our season in Santa Barbara, CA is Fall, Winter, Spring and the last two flights have been five mile out and five mile returns. Those are pretty challenging flights over here in a single surface as max heigth is around 3500 feet and the LZz are at 1000 feet. We have large gaps between peaks and our coastal soaring produces lee side, small thermals.



Tuesday 07/19/2005 2:24:03am
Name:     Tony de Groot
E-Mail:     aomthomas@cox.net
City/Country:     Plowshare, Santa Maria, CA
Comments:     Not getting those huge flights but still lovin it in my Falcon. 4 hours and 17 miles. Scraping myself off the deck and leaving Talons and Lightspeeds on the ground as I drifted away in small thermals. Congratulations to all the Chelan flyers for their awesome flight s and to Bo Hagewood. I just read he did a 190 miler in Zapata.



Tuesday 07/12/2005 12:42:30am
Name:     Sunny Jim
E-Mail:     fenisonjames@hotmail.com
City/Country:     Chelan, WA.
Comments:     Chelan Classic, day four and day six...

Day four, the day Tommy did the superhuman flight posted below, well, I was high that day and on my way to doing an out and back to mansfield but since every thermal I caught was drifting me a couple miles to the north and off course, I finally decided an out and back was impossible and none of my competitors were going to successfully complete an out and back either, let alone a fricken TRIANGLE! Oh my god, i thought, when I heard what Tommy had done that day, what an animal! And well desrving of his nickname, "the ironman". Simply mind boggling....anyway, the day Tommy did the triangle I flew north to Mallott which was only thirty six miles so, needless to say, he cleaned my clock.

Day Six, the last day of the classic, Tommys in the lead by 80 some miles, I'm in second, and tom Johns is a close third with some very good flying. Its a windy day and the thermals are all blown apart, nearly every body, including myself and tommy Pierce, sink out.....but not Tom Johns, who was last spotted floating lazy, elongated circles to the far North to kick me out of second place if I don't get me butt back up the hill and figure out a way to get out on course...
Conrad drove for me and when we got back up on top there were nearly thirty pilots milling about either in the air or on the ground, pinned to the hill by high wind....stuck is a good word for it..........think think think......
I got an idea! How about a crosswind take off from upper lakeside launch which is higher up and far behind the launch everyone else was using, and then how about I just turn tail and plummet into the backside of the Butte and hope for a leeside Thermal?
Just like trolling for a big steelhead! I got lucky eight hundred feet off the deck and a light drifter carried me nearly twenty miles, accross the river and onto the flats and right up to cloudbase underneath a spectacular convergence heading due North!!! Hallelujah! Take off time was nearly five oclock and I touched down at eight thirty, seventy six miles away to recapture second and come within six, count them, 1,2,3,4,5,6!! miles of catching my good friend Tom, "the Ironman", Pierce!
My only low point was, of course, the scariest place to be low (isn't it always?) I got low just before I had to commit to flying over the colville indian reservation where there really are very few roads or houses for nearly a twenty mile stretch. I was having a hard time committing to a thermal going up at only 150 feet per minute so I did what any seasoned pilot would do.....I closed my eyes and went to my happy place until I was back at eight grand......Yeah, I really did close my eye's, locked in on the vario, and just refused to allow any negative thoughts into my mind........I wouldn't advise this if Your going to cross anything dangerous. The reservation isn't dangerous...theres lots of places to land, your just going to be walking out for a day or two, thats all.....
I landed just short of Oroville, WA. on a green private airstrip and the owner and his beautiful wife walked out with a cold beer and a dinner invitation......This flying life just gets better and better.....!!!

3 November 2006 10:57 EST | Posted by ushga

The Falcon X-C Contest
Spam attacks make the "Guest Book" for single surface flight logging  a major pain so all new postings can be put here.  To post flights,  click on the post comment link below.  Winter is coming so postings may be really scarce for the next months. 

Sunday, 1 July 2007 - 10:37 AM EDT

Name: "Larry Huffman"

Falcon X-C Contest

                                            
Landing Form

 

Date:June 30, 2007

           
Contest Region ( E, World):

Pilot:Larry Huffman

Launch location:Templeton, PA

Launch witness(s):Pat Brooks

Approx. launch time:4:38 pm

Approx. landing time:6:42 pm

Landing location:79*06.1920W, 40*26.0210N

Landing witness(s)


Name:):Brenda Huffman (can send IGC file)

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