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

Sunday 19th

Long(ish) pause was not just down to the weather as we did get one noteworthy day on the 19th. All up and down until Carol and Phil flew the Janus to set "the bar" at 20 minutes. An hour later Pete and Rob notched "the bar" up another 4 minutes. Back to circuits until I took the Vega (can't bear to see a glider on the ground and a cable and nobody using it) and went away for over an hour (only brought it back as I was getting twinges from my wallet). It was difficult to make any headway into wind. The Janus launched shortley after me and seemed to using me as a thermal spotter until it broke free and pushed further into wind than me. They made a bid to get to Lynham but the clouds ran out so returned after an hur and a half. Towards the end of the day Keith collared me to take the back seat as he thought he might get a longer flight that way (there had only been one other soaring flight after the Janus had launched and quite a few circuits). Turns out he was right and we had a soaring flight as did Trevor in the Vega. Drove home along the A4 looking at a sky better than anything we'd seen all day.

A long(ish) pause?

Hmm, the last post was over ten days ago. Has nothing happened? Well, no actually, not here anyway. We've had a run of windy and wet days, hardly flyable let alone soarable. The only days with a glimmer of hope were on days we weren't open for flying. C'est la vie. Perhaps Pete can tell us how he got on at Gransden Lodge, where he was able to use a couple of days we weren't flying.

It hasn't been a lot better in Sweden, where Liz and Ayala have been competing in the women's World Championships, along with three other British lasses. They only had five contest days out of a possible ten, due to the weather - it seems all our bad weather finished up there. And of those five days, only one was a half-decent racing day. So congratulations to them - in the Club Class, Ayala finished second, only just behind the winner, and Liz was fifth in a field of 18. But Liz was well and truly robbed on the last day - she completed 123k of a 137k task, but no one else reached 100k (though several made 99k), so it was a no-contest day. Big swizz.

Splendid soaring Tue 14th

With the forecast for Wednesday being distinctly poor, and Tuesday excellent, we changed our midweek flying day accordingly. I'm writing this on Wednesday, looking at the low cloud and drizzle, so I can say with certainty it was a good call. Everyone soared for at least a half hour, although a couple launched into sink and had to try again - one was Richard, but he enjoyed 3hrs in his new Vega after a relight A couple of new members had a good taste of what soaring is about.. The Janus got to Radstock and back. All-in-all, a great day.

Saturday 11th June

Classic looking day but not many members around to start the day. Pete Smith took the first launch setting off on a mission to take advantage of the liberated Lyneham airspace, returning 4 hours later mission accomplished. Meanwhile back at the ranch (er, airfield) mixed fortunes with modest launches in the cross wind meant some got away whilst others returned. Some terrific climbs (10 up reported, 6 on the averager was the best I saw) and some height eating sink. Nigel and I took JMX to 5,400'.
Few more members appeared in the afternoon - in time to watch the rain approaching, narrowly missed us but killing the lift.

Wednesday 1st June

The reasonably promising sky filled in once the toys were out and we were ready to play.While the rest of us were pounding short circuits Bob B soared away for an hour. He returned to the airfield with the words of advice taken from a 60's pop song - "hang on to what you've got". The rest of us failed to find anything to hang on to. Mid-afternoon I decided to take a launch (in the LS3) in order to get to the other end of the field where my trailer was. It took over 2 hours to reach the other end. Lots of scratching for the first hour then things started to get easier. Trevor to longest flight honours with 2:36 in his Jantar with climbs up to 3,500'.

Open Day Photos

A few pictures from our great Open Day June 4th 2011





Launch Point Getting Busy

Weeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee................






One up and another one down

Here we come .....

Everyone being kept on their toes

The cable drogue gets wound in one last time after a hard day out launching.

Open day



Missed Open day? - don't worry, click here and book a trial lesson.

OPEN DAY A GREAT SUCCESS

Open Day was a great success. The weather was great - dry, mostly sunny, and warm despite a keen northeasterly wind - actually, the wind was ideal, giving us great launches. People wanting to find out more about gliding and experience it for themselves arrived steadily all day, never allowing us time to twiddle our thumbs yet never having to form a long queue. We hope to see them again soon.

Thanks to all the club members who played their various parts - instructors, winch drivers, retrieve drivers who are always needed, and those helping with people with parachutes and seat harnesses, and those who put out the posters and leaflets. A special mention for Claire who kept track of who was next to fly and making sure they did; also of course Stephen and Catriona who organised the whole event and advertising.