Friday, February 26, 2010

ITS ALL OVER-Updated

Hello sports fans.

Apologies for not blogging earlier, arrived home at 1am and slept the sleep of the blessed until 11am. My adrenaline suplies completely depleted. Spent the day with family and catching up with the 88 business emails waiting my urgent attention.

Damn, but dont you hate it when work gets in the way of gliding!!!

Yesterday was the "longest day". Not only in the tasks over 350km but the number of landouts in remote spots. 9 aero retrieves with the last glider landing back at end of civil twilight-30 minutes which we all know is the latest we can fly. yea right!

Longest road retrieve was probably Taumaranui. about 4 hour round trip. Yea I know-short by Omarama standards :-) .....they arrived back at 1am.

The results are all up on the scoring website along with a goodly asortment of photos . Jill told me at one time she had taken over 500 photos that day. That was just after the launch and no arrival shots included!!

The prizegiving went well with final arrival being Trev Terry having come from some remote spot just north of National Park.

Non winner type awards were
Hansells Trophy-Tony Van Dyke most meritorious Flight - Day 2 winner zero points.

The Continel Airlines Trophy-Winner of longest racing task - Brett Hunter. On the night I awarded it to incorrectly-the challenge of scoring late and me being a prat:-)
The Mike Rix Memorial Trophy-Youngest Highest Place Pilot - Dane Dickinson
The Richardson Trophy-Highest Speed during the champioships - Dane Dickinson

Veterans Trophy - Lindsey Stephens
The Swiss Trophy-2nd in Numerically Strongest Class-Lindsey Stephens

The Masterton Trohpy-Highest Placed Club Glider - NIgel McPhee/Dave Hirst

The Norge Cup-awarded to Mark Robertson

A number of trophies for the Sports/PW5 were not awarded and wait for next years competition.

The drawer for Early Bird Radio was won by David Jensen. #1
The drawer for a radio from all pilots and officials at the dinner(yep that included me) was won by Pat Driessen #12 who promptly put it up for auction, proceeds to the SAR fund. The competition raised over $800 for the local Search & rescue team.
A great effort.

The Prat in the hat had to fly down to Taupo Sunday to retrieve his Laptop carry bag and a pair of Sandals. Many thanks to Adrian Cable and his speedy RV4.
Noted a couple of chargers and items of clothing also left behind...

Other than my report to the Sailplane Racing Committee and an article for the Soaring Magazine I am done for another year.

Thanks to the many unsung heroes who made the organisation run smoothly and added to the fun factor.

Keep it up

Roy

Thursday, February 25, 2010

FRIDAY - Day the Last

The weather looks great, the sun is out.
A cool morning with a light southerly has got everyone KEEN!!!!

Gridding by 12:00 for a possible earliest launch 12:30

Airspace will be shared with Paraponters using a chunk of "our" GA482.

Task A Open & Standard
Is a racing task to 142 Kaingaroa
238 Waimahor
181 National Park
117 Mokai
109 Control point & home

350+ kms

Club Racing 213km
124 Reporoa
205 Barryville
139 Kuratau
117 Mokai
Control & Home

Keep it up

Roy

Wednesday, February 24, 2010

THURSDAY

Rain stopped play
pluie nous a arrêté de voler
regen hield ons vliegen
雨停了我们飞行
Regen hielt uns unter
הגשם עצר אותנו לעוף
smesso di piovere, ci battenti
la lluvia nos detuvo de vuelo
No fling for us fellas inda air wakas.

Tomorrow looks like it will be a brilliant day.
Stay tuned sports fans!!!!!

Keep it up

Roy

Tuesday, February 23, 2010

WEDNESDAY-THEY ARE OFF!!

Even sitting in his glider on the grid our main weatherman was saying he thought there was only 10% or less for the task to be flyable.

The weather gods decided to proove him wrong and the sky looks GREAT!

They are on an AAT task max 250kms in 2 hours
225 Mangaoke
166 Arohena Hall
119 Normans Corner
All 10km circles

Club Class have
228 Sandel Road
145 Kinleith
115 Waikato River Road

96-179km in 2 hours.

One landout as at 16:47 local - HU on a strip(#221) 23 minutes drive away(according to Google maps-which is being used in the retrieve pack)

Keep it up

Roy

DAY WEDNESDAY!

Good morning Sports fans.

We are hoping that todays forecast is as wrong as previous days outlooks. Roland is looking downcast. But your Director remains positive!

Jill McCaw took some excellent photos yesterday with a lovely sequence of photos of a wheels up landing. Maybe a good article for the magazine- How to get the wheel down after a wheels up without causing back injury!

The title could be "From Wheels up to Wheels down"

The pilots meeting will be held this morning before we gather again at 12:30 for a rebrief on the changing weather situation.

Keep it up

Roy

Monday, February 22, 2010

DAY Tuesday 7pm

4 Landouts NT,XG,KR,PV,UY

The rest have finished. A bunch of happy pilots who generally agreed "it was a tough day"

Jill McCaw has arrived with a camera with a huge telephoto lens. I guess nothing will miss her zoom ability. Especially the wheels up landing of the first ASW27 home.

Scoring is underway with Standard class witha double devalued day but still over 850 points.

Check in an hour or so at soaring Spot but Looks like Dane might be first up at the prize table in the morning.

I'm off to another fantastic Taupo club BBQ-dang but the steaks are huge and delicious.

Keep it up

Roy

Day three-standard class

They have all launched.
To check how they are going go to http://map.xinqu.net/spot/index.html
7 Gliders are using SPOT.

Tasks Standard & Open 155km

A smallish task with sky only starting to "light up" at 3pm.
The task setters guess was based on a 60kph average.

Billy Walker Task (Racing)

151 Ranginui A/s
129 Tihoi Village
125 Atiamuri Bridge
109 Orakei Korako (Control point
Home'

Club Class
Same task but a 2 hour AAT with 10km circles
Minimum 107km maximum 209km.

Not flash but better than not flying.

Keep it up

Roy

TUESDAY AM(DAY 4)

Well day 4 for most... actually Day 3 for Standard/15 metre class.

Briefing is over tasks have been printed based on predictions. However looking out the window the weather god hasnt read the predictions. Sun on the ground but cloud not clearing as fast as the computer says.

More news later as I understand we will be having an alternate task.

Gliders will be on the grid at 12:30 and they will fly. BUT we dont yet know where they will be going.

Keep it up

Roy

Sunday, February 21, 2010

Monday Nite

Everyone is accounted for- a lot of happy pilots having had a great day out!

The saddest story is probably the glider getting an aero retrieve that released on the ground and kited into a fence. Pilot is fine and practicing a lot of swear words. Glider needs a few band aids.

Next saddest story is the Duo Discus crew who received a 1000 points for their effort only to loose 25 points for a turnpoint error, they missed by 163 metres. Enough to be pushed back in to second place. Any small mistake at this level of competition can be brutally punished.

Tenacity of the day store is Taupo based pilot in a DG100 who landed out twice!!

Stupidest pilot story is the Nortlander who totally ignored the landing protocol and landed on the wrong runway with 4 gliders in the circuit to land(on the correct runway). Will have to check his mental condition to answer the question "What was he thinking!!!

Check the scoring website for todays scores.

They should be out very shortly.

Fingers crossed for another stunning day tomorrow.

Keep it up

Roy.

PS. We have full speed internet back-seems Telecom didnt like all the glider pilots doing downloads and using lots of data. After an hour on the phone and a measly $10 we are back at full speed. Means I can do some paid work tonite :-)

DAY MONDAY(3)

Amazingly all the pilots are in good spirits even if they did land out yesterday.

Today has been declared Billy Walker day.
1. Even with SPOT & TXT message the Retrieve co-ordinator didnt pickup the landout in the first response retrives.
2. Today is a Speed task(Billy doesnt like AAT)

Weather looks good in the west. 5-7 knot thermals forecast.

Open 274 kms
172 Wharepapa south
164 Kakahi strip
134 Whakamaru Dam
109 Oraki Korako(control)

Standard 259 kms
172 Wharepapa Sth
139 Kuratau
134 Whakamaru Dam
109 Oraki Korakao(control)

Club 151.1 kms
145 Kinleith
153 Pureora Strip
109 Oraki Korakao(control)

Expected launch time 13:00
Forecast says maximum temperatures after 6pm

Looking out the window-sky looking good.

Keep it up

Roy

Saturday, February 20, 2010

DAY SUNDAY(2) is over

All pilots safe & well
All gliders safe & well
One trailer unhappy with broken axle and will have to have some serious attention

In the Standard/15 metre combined class TD & KZ showed some superior skills and finished the task. However they were gazzumped for any points when the remaining 20 pilots decided to have meetings in paddocks about 30km on course. The rules say it is a no competition day unless 25% of the fleet do more than 80kms. All our sympathy go to Tony & Stu who, while winning prizes dont get any points.

The same fate fell on the club class.

I guess heading off into a big blue hole over the forrest and hoping for blue thermals was not a winning strategy!!

What can I say other than the grid launch team were once again brilliant.

Pat Driessen shows that he is the consumate competitor.
Not only did he drive a towplane and launch off the back of the grid, but then came back to the field and voluntereed for a road retrieve. Thanks Pat....you are the man!!!!!

Noline and Yvonne(Evey) rallied around and filled the radio operations spot as Sue had to leave us....to go skiiing in Austria.............!!!

I should mention that we had one pilot reporting it great at 9,000ft...mm we suspect that it was a certain ASH25 pilot on his way home after doing a small "display" for the locals and then demonstarting an auto(car) launch with a red ute hurtiling down the runway with glider/motor going hooked on behind. Thansk for your visit Terry-much appreciated by all.

Talking about visitors, this morning we had Bob Henderson and wife Eileen visit. Bob is President of the International Gliding movement and proud to be a KIWI. While here Bob presented Terry with his NZ Record certificate for his recent(then) world record flight. Terry advised that his record was broken with 24 hours by Klaus Ulman and therefore his world record would not appear in the world record archives.

Have put up a survey for your opinion on AAT tasks.

Tomorrow is another day

Keep it up

Roy
Sunday 8:30pm (and yes I am off to shower & bed-knackered)

DAY SUNDAY

After a cool(make that cold) night the sun is shinning and some white fluufies are in the sky.

Forecasters are saying there is an inversion over the North Island which will probably limit thermal height to 4,500-5,000 ft.

Task today
AAT 2.5 hours

Open & Standard 158-322kms
Galatea 15km circle
TeAwa Camp 15km circle
Magakino Dam
Waikato River Rd(Control point
Finish

Club 90-260kms
Kaingaroa 15km
TeAwa Camp 15km
Tirihanga 15km
Whites Rd Control point
Finish

Guessing to start around 1-130pm like yesterday.

Keep it up

Roy

Friday, February 19, 2010

Saturday BBQ end of a good day

Everyone is accounted for after a number of pilots visited the rural sector and were amazed at the friendliness of the locals.

Two pilots helped us check our SAR procedures by being more than 2 hours "out of touch". Thanks to SAR for arranging a radio relay from a passing commercial flight.

Terry Delore flew in in the ASH with Vaughan Ruddick as co pilot. Terry says I need to be more descriptive in this blog and I can quote him in saying the 2 knot thermals were great!!!

Check the scores after 9:30 pm on soaringspot. Seems that it will be a 1000 point day and Team South Island might be puffing out their chests and picking up some goodies tomorrow at briefing. Seven and a half percent of the fleet completed the task!! But a lot of happy pilots...... because they would rather fly than fish!!

Another good looking day for tomorrow..

Keep it up ( I am off to bed-I am knackered!!!)

Roy

DAY 1 - Begins

All gliders launched in 47 minutes - including 2 rope changes.
Weather looks better than forecast with some white fluffies.

One in a paddock before start most others seem on their way.

Keep it up

Roy

DAY SATURDAY

I have given up saying DAY one as I think it might spook the weather gods..

We are expecting mainly a "blue" day today with some convergence marking cloud in the hills.

Terry Delore & Vaughan Ruddick have arrived in Terry's ASH so I am sure it will be a great Day for them as well. They fly back to Wellington tomorrow after the Club BBQ tonight.

3 Tasks have been set, airspace is open, gridding by 12:30 for a planned launch at 1300.
The morning cloud is climbing as the day heats up with predicted temperatures in the task area of 24-26.

Standard/15 mtr is an AAT task 160km-433km 3.5 hours
Kaingaraoa, Poronui Hutt
Goudies
Whakamaru
Orakei Karako (control point) and home

Open/18mtr AAT 272km-489km 3.5 hours
Kawerau
Boyd
Gourdies
Whakamaru
Control point & home

Club AAT 152km-344km 3.5 hours
Kainagaroa
Poronui Hutt
Ohaaki
Mokai
Control Point & Home

Keep it up!

Roy 11:56 Taupo Time

Thursday, February 18, 2010

ALMOST DAY ONE

Unfortunately the weather gods didnt read the forecast and decided to send something else.

After hanging on for grim death, the day was called at 2pm.
Your humble scribe headed off for a "nanny nap" until 4:15pm and arrived back in the office to take a landout call from an ASW27 Pilot. So the contest director now knows how to drive the Retrieve Map system!!!

We are looking forward to Day 1 being Saturday.

Keep it up

Roy

Something is flying

First launch today went to one of the tents!!!

A good stiff easterly is blowing over the field.
Gliders are gridded on runway 22 while we wait for the wind to come around more to the south as forecast.

Tasks are AATs to the east South East with 20km circles around Kawerau and Waipunga Falls with a control point Tiverton Downs and home.

Task time is 2.5 Hours so our latest launch time will be around 2:45pm.

If we have to change ends for the launch(currently a tailwind component) then task decision will be made by around 1:15pm at which time we have to be comfortable that the task is still "GO".

At least with this wind 10-20knts. WOuld expect too much activity from Paraponters training for their nationals which start on the weekend and are based at the Paeroa Range South of Rotorua.

Keep it up

Roy

Wednesday, February 17, 2010

BLUE SKY ALERT!!!

Yes, gentle readers. A chink of blue sky has been spotted. There is some sun on the ground!

The current game here has been how to spell the kiwism for broken/rubbish/really bad. So far we have had
Monday - coozed
Tuesday - koozed
Wednesday - kewsed
Todays spelling was going to be Qsd.

However a fast moving break in the weather from the west has raised our spirits.
With a rebrief at 12:15.

Day Prizes went to a Swiss PW5 pilot for beating his age at golf. Apparently his first game in 37 years.
Another prize went to the gutsiest performance - lady crew member impressed everyone with her ability to crash her mountain bike(along with male supporters) a number of times, but after catching her breath jumped back on the stead and carried on until the next cycle mixup. Seems that the task turned into how many bikes and rides can you have in one place at one time.

Keep it up

Roy

Tuesday, February 16, 2010

Its Wednesday here in Glider land

Another day of "fun" for some yesterday.

How many fishing licences does it take to catch one trout!
Seems that 5 licences at $16 and a few hundred litres of diesel for the boat.

The most expensive Trout in town was Barbequed by the intrepid Sore bum from yesterday.
The 5 hardy soles took out first prize, with Bill Mace winning the World Championship of Piako golf taking second prize.
Non contest pilot Russell took out third prize for bike riding until exhaustion took over. His companions wondered why he keep t falling off! To buggared to stay upright.

Had a breif visit from a Wingeel who checked out the water sking capacity of the strip with a couple of low passes.

If anyone in Omarama is reading this blog can they find Phil Pland and get him to answer his emails. We have a couple of SPOT problems we would like to get fixed before the next-make that the first-flying day.

Now I am off to have a neck massage-this weather is a pain in the neck!

Keep it up

Roy

Monday, February 15, 2010

The way of the future

Stretch your mind even more after watching this video clip
Imagine the uses for a glider pilot!!

http://blog.ted.com/2009/11/the_buzz_pranav.php

Todays Task

After much consultation-about 15 seconds!!!!

The task was set at 10:45. Go have fun and relax.

Options included
1.Lake fishing off Toms boat(6 pilots & or crew)
2.Golf-Courtesy of Brent Guy a hell of a deal at Wairaki. Pay for a round of golf OR have a meal there and you get to use all the facilities, spa,billiards, squash etc etc FOR FREE.
3. V8 Motor Racing at the circuit next door(somebody is racing I can hear them)
4. Biking- seems some are going to ride out to check the alternate launch strip (turnpoint 191-Matushkas)
5.Tramping-up Mt Tahoura
6. Hot pools-the free ones.
7. Movies
8. The library( a real adrenaline junkie there)
9. Puzzle World
10. Bungy jumping
11. Bush walking Poreora State forest
12. Huka Falls
13. Jetskis
14. Orakei Korako Geothermal Park
15. take a 45 min drive to Rotorua and do the Luge and other stuff

I am sure the resourceful pilots will have found other attractions as well!!!

Unfortunately tommorows outlook doesnt look to flash either..
Ooops todays Prize winners were.
Lyndsey Stephens first-best bike ride story
David Todd second-best dedication story(went around in tecnam microlight checking out strips)
Dane Dickinson-youngest pilot(Geoff Gaddes declined the prize as he got one yesterday)

Keep it up

Roy

Countdown to Day one.

Whew it was lucky we didnt fly yesterday, allowed another Aucklander to arrive with Glider.
Unfortunately today looks like it will be a duplicate of yesterday.

Yarning, bike riding, fixing technology, more yarning, bike riding, coffee, cakes, more yarning, hot pools, fishing, bungy jumping, more yarning

More later

Keep it up

Roy

Sunday, February 14, 2010

Almost Day one!

No, not really as the weather forecast was well in favour of drought stricken farmers rather than go getum, gunho competition glider pilots.

After an abbreviated briefing-no prizes, no tasks Stev Care ran a well received workshop on how best to teach Paddock landings. Being that we had a room full of expert(lots of landouts) pilots. The most interesting comment for your humble scribe was. The better I am as a competition pilots the less landouts I do and so when I do a landout it is a "bit of a worry".

Some of the more interesting observations were:
Making decisions ie make decisions and stick with them in the landout phase.
Currency, nothing beats being current at paddock landings even if the are simulated at your home field.
Experince doing approaches, picking paddocks etc. Recommended that 10-15 approaches in a motor glider are invaluable for begining cross country training.
Needless to say many opinions were expressed!!! What do you expect from a room full of competition pilots.

Ben Flewett has now departed after a very memorable, but short visit. Says he will be back next year with a container load of gliders fromthe UK(and of course half a dozen British lads) Rumour has it that one will be a Ventus with a jet engine. Wonder how the locals will react to that. Probably quieter than some crazy prop driven stuff!!!

The weather has been the determining factor I understand in inhibiting Terry Delore flying his ASH across the ditch up to Competition Central.

Local farmer arrived yesterday to say his strip was available and he looked forward to "our chaps" dropping in, anything he could do to help? At least two others offered to keep stock off their strips for the next 2 weeks. Refreshingly quite a different attitude to some of our South Island neighbours.

This afternoon an intrepid band of pilots went biking, most on regular mountain type bikes, not our Lyndsey....dragged out a dejected old dunger from the back of the hangar...no we have a pilot with a wrecked rectum...Well a rather sore "sit upon".

Another-"you heard it here first" rumour. Apparently someone has purchased an airfield near Wellsford with both sealed and grass runways and intends starting a glider training operation.
Keep tuned.

Let Tuesday and Day one arrive in style. Fingers crossed.

Keep it up

Roy

Let the games begin!!

I know we cant compete with the winter olympics for a TV spectaculat.

However for a practice day the weather was sunny and warm(some might say hot).
Some new late entries, well lets say Paul did his usual turn up at 5pm ready to enter. You will now note we have 2 PW5s entered in the club class along with a Kestrel flying hors concourse.

A Tauranga Blogger dropped in to a paddock before we had finished launching the fleet and was followed by an ASW20 into Rangataiki main strip and then Billy into a paddock about 4kms down the road. Had to remind him that the finish circle was 3kms...:-))

Unfortunately the ASH25 had a landing mishap and received a bit of damage both pilots got a bit of a shake(but are fine) and some fencing had a bit of a lay down.


Rob Lyon is doing a stirling job as Scorere and resident techo. Results should be up on Scoring Spot. Will advise the URL tomorrow.

Also hope to be able to get back in to the blogging swing of things with a morning(task advice) blog and an evening blog(events of the day).

Had a great BBQ this evening, huge steaks-Taupo Club are really doing a fantastic job

Keep it up

Roy

Thursday, February 11, 2010

Heads up for Jets

To those travelling to Taupo this weekend.
If you go past Tokora-swing by the airfield as they are having competitions with Jet Powered model aircraft....should be a hoot.
If you are figuring soaring near Tokoroa dont figure you can easily plummet into Tokoroa airfield. You might get a loud noise in your ear!!! or a fast small piece of fibreglass.....

Forecast for the comp is looking good!!

Keep it up.

Roy

Monday, February 8, 2010

Start Packing!

Just a wee note to those who are coming to Taupo to fly. Cellphone coverage is a bit like Omarama. Good in places. In some ares Telecom gives much better coverage than Vodafone.

So if you have a Telecom phone as well as a Vodafone one-bring both.
Rangateiki Airstrip is one place that needs Telecom!

Of course if you have a SPOT messenger we will know where you will have landed. Of course this assumes you leave the SPOT on after landing!!! Then we can see that you are not moving and presume landed.

I visited Taupo last weekend and Trev and the Team have been burning the midnite oil and have a fantastic setup for the competition. 5 Pawnees to help launch. A big kitchen for campers. Lots of shinny computer thingies.(and WIFI) and of course a whole bunch of taps for those who want to let their gliders have a long drink before flying.

Just a note on classes. I have had a couple of pilots ask about changing classes from that on the entry form. No worries, as long as you let me know by Sunday evening!!! The officla briefing will be 7pm with a couple of "surprises" planned!!!!

I am planning on arriving on Saturday.

A note to those arriving this weekend. Trailer parking is angle parking each side of the main road entrance. Each park should be numbered (so you dont get lost when going back to your trailer!!) The park area is large enough to take your car as well-so park well back to allow aircraft to taxi up and down between trailers and hangars- Thanks

Trev has organised a prizgiving dinner at a flash restaurant room, on Friday 26th at $40 a head-sounds like a hell of a deal to me!!! So be prepared to tick the booking sheet early next week.

Seems the weather has started to change with some of that nice SW stuff on the horizon...

See ya on the weekend!!

Keep it up

Roy