The occurrences and happenings at Shalbourne Soaring Society. A gliding club near Andover, Newbury and Hungerford.

Sunday 27th march

After a misty start we managed to get flying around noon and clocked up over 20 flights today. We even had a visitor on the field in the shape of Martin Hoskins who turned up to inspect his Cirrus. Martin explained that he was now missing the flying and was looking at transitioning the Cirrus in the near future. After very little persuasion he took a couple of flights with me in JPC and showed that he has not forgotten how to fly a K13. He then was cleared to drive the winch and spent most of the remaining time lobbing gliders skywards!

Sat 26 March


A small turnout, but then it wasn't much of a day for soaring. Training flying went on well until early afternoon, when the forecast of possible isolated sharp showers proved correct. Guess where Shalbourne is! And with so little wind, that one little (but very heavy) shower lasted an hour.

Wednesday 23rd March

Another blue day but for those lucky enough to find that first thermal, and skillfull enough to work it, there were good flights to be had. 10 of the 27 launches had ove 30 minutes with Bill C exercising his K6 for over 2 hours. Thermals came to an abrupt halt at 3,000' coming up to the inversion but couple of folks headed for the haze caps to the south of the field to get up to 4,000'

Sat 19 March

What? No blog entry yet? It was the first proper soaring day of the year. There were private gliders rigged, and went soaring. Not every flight connected, but there was over 16hrs soaring by those who did, and a total of 44 launches and a visitor landing. We even had a cross-country - er, well, if you count 8km. Why has no-one has taken the P155 yet, not even for coming back to the airfield without the glider? Anyone get any photos?

W/E 12th & 13th March

Saturday: Hazy sun but those that turned out enjoyed extended flights, with dutyman Tim and John Turk claiming the longest at 22mins.

Sunday: As I left Basingstoke it was darker than black, the rain slowed M3 traffic to 50mph and it was quite simply bleak. But with a forecast clearance arriving from the west by the time we got to the airfield it had upgraded to the uninspiring category.

We set up, lined the toys up and Claire and I launched into 1100ft cloud, flew a circuit and landed. After that Claire quite spectacularly failed to get the top on the next three attempts, for some reason either i pulled the bung or the winch driver decided to cut the power. A few others flew some circuits but then the sky broke apart and fluffy cumulus appeared. With no-one on the 2 seat list I took the Vega but it was too soon, on my second go it stuck in rather pleasant medium thermals to 2500' above airfield height. Chris in bi and the K8 joined me, as did the pooch and soon the airfield was empty. Later on Chris lent me the LS7 and I joined the K8 in a thermal to get some FLARM fixes to test the unit newly installed in the K8.

Saturday 6th March

Despite a promising forecast Saturday dawned drab and overcast. But thanks to Chris and others setting up early we were ready to launch as soon as cloud base started to rise by mid morning with some good launches and weak winter thermals to be had.

A good day for training with Steve B getting his annual checks out of the way and new member Jim M making the most of the quiet day to get in 5 training flights with rapid progress.

Essential maintenance was also completed on the skybrid winch at the end of the day and an expedition to recover some rare spares for a vintage Oly restoration project was seen to return all smiles. So despite the slow start a very successful day all round.

Wednesday 2nd March

Northerly wind with just a hint of east and lots of it promised a classic ridge day. However, try as we might (27 attempts) we weren't able to find it and instead we seemed to find sink everywhere. It's an indication of how "good" the day was when there was excitiment over the first (and only) flight that achieved double digits - Peter Mason with all of 11 minutes. Highest launch I heard about was 2,000'. The ridge refusing to co-operate was disappointing but the banter was good and the donuts welcomed. Oh, and JPC was back on-line in its multi coloured finery.

Sunday 27th Feb

Just a few of us there to see what flying we could get in before (and around) the promised showers. Started flying at 10:00 and retired to the launch point caravan shortley after 11:30. During that time we discovered that Liz had developed an aversion to height and/or turning as Graham T was subjected to several bung pulls. Also discovered it doesn't take many to make the caravan feel crowed. When the first "shower" abated (after more tha an hour and a half) we decided to lob gliders back to the hangar with the 2 cables to hand. Only managed to lob one back (just) as the next "shower" appeared this time bearing hail. Toys were tucked away and we retired to the club house to dry off and listen to an excellent presentation by Liz on getting more out of cross-county flying. Lessons were drawn from analysis of Nigel's Silver distance to Parham and a task from a Worlds comp Liz took part in (by coincidence a day that she won).

Saturday 26th Feb

An interesting day with varying degrees of lift.

The wind started off as a moderate WNW which meant that only flights of about 8-10 mins were achievable as any lift was broken. Steve Gaze and myself took advantage of this to practise field landings as part of his bronze flight tests. Landing up hill into the freshly muck spread field to the east of the south end of the airfield was an experience!

For the last few flights of the day the wind went round more to the north and the ridge started to work, Paul P and Carol squeezed a respectful 17mins out of the K13 but then Chris B, flying the Vega, managed to get a whopping 41 minutes!

The evening was finished off with a presentation from Colin and myself about the pros and cons of GPS navigation and the use of XCSoar in navigating. During which one nameless person (Ok it was Chris!) fell asleep :-)


Phil