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March 15th 20, 02:33 AM
Practice Day
First, I would like to say sorry for the delay of the practice day results. As any of my fellow contest managers can attest to, the first day of the contest is hectic. However, if you saw the smiles of the pilots returning from their flights, it was worth it. Trailers had been coming in for a couple of weeks now. We had to open trailer parking up early because of the large number of early arrivals. Ken Goshorn got all the grass mowed in time for everyone. Karen did an outstanding setting out flowers, new grass, making the entrance much better than it has been in a while. Chris Carter did a great job in registration and preparing to take over CM duties while I get to go fly. We were also happy that 1E joined us again. Don Wasness is the only pilot that have attended all 30 Senior Soaring Championships, and he won the first one.
The practice day started a little slow but soon 49 ships were in the air. The start gate was open on a 2:45 min TAT that sent the pilots to Winter Haven, Streamsong (a great golf course in Central Florida), Wines, Gore, CFI Plant and Finish. John Seaborn, fresh off his win at the 18 Meter Nationals, continued his impressive flying by turning in a respectable 71.20 mph raw/61.59 handicap speed over 198mi. Second was Fernando Silva in his ship that hasn’t had all the plastic wrap taken off from the factory. Jake Alspaugh finished in third. All in all, a great day with more fine weather on the horizon.

Day 1
As everyone knows, corona virus has been in the news for some time. Disney and Universal are closed in the Orlando area, Sun n Fun has been postponed, and all professional sports have had their seasons suspended. As an organizer of a public event with about 140 pilot, crews, and volunteers, we wanted to provide the safest environment possible. We decided to cancel all meetings and provide the information via electronic means using email and WhatsApp. The first day could have gone better when both our email system and internet suffered some casualties. There was a frantic couple of hours to get everything out, but with the help of John Good and Rick Sheppe, we were 95% successful. However, the day did not disappoint. Cu started popping soon after the sniffer was launched. The fleet was launched and set out on a TAT that went to Avon Park, Bonnie Plant, Love Field (first time I'd gone there), and Finish. The run to Avon Park was fantastic. Good Cu, nice long runs under well formed clouds, and some markers on course. Going to Bonnie Plant was a nice street that took you to the maximum distance point in the turn area. Lift was very strong, averaging around the 5 knot range. Phil Gaisford won the day with a raw speed of 70.18 mph over 198 miles. Karl Striedieck again showed us his mastery of the skies, finishing second in an aircraft and nav system he just started flying with. Fernando SIlva, our 2017 Seniors winner, again flew great task and finished third. However, this time he submitted his log to the Scoreer vice his cell phone. Ask him about the story from the 2018 Seniors! We just finished the Welcome dinner in the DG hangar where all of our meetings and dinners are held. We were very lucky to have Ann Lafford and her husband Rick to join us for the Seniors. Before coming over to do the report, it was nice to see people dancing again. Thank you, Madam Chairwomen, for attending our event. Well, the weather is cooperating but our visiting tow planes are having a couple problems. Thanks to Russell Brown, our trusty A&P mechanic, that is working hard to fix these ships. Also, to Martin who has worked all day to find a mag for the Husky. It's late and time to charge some batteries. Let me know via text at 407-325-6500 if you want me to address other issues during the contest. Until tomorrow, good night.

Ron Gleason
March 15th 20, 02:57 PM
On Saturday, 14 March 2020 20:33:06 UTC-6, wrote:
> Practice Day
> First, I would like to say sorry for the delay of the practice day results. As any of my fellow contest managers can attest to, the first day of the contest is hectic. However, if you saw the smiles of the pilots returning from their flights, it was worth it. Trailers had been coming in for a couple of weeks now. We had to open trailer parking up early because of the large number of early arrivals. Ken Goshorn got all the grass mowed in time for everyone. Karen did an outstanding setting out flowers, new grass, making the entrance much better than it has been in a while. Chris Carter did a great job in registration and preparing to take over CM duties while I get to go fly. We were also happy that 1E joined us again. Don Wasness is the only pilot that have attended all 30 Senior Soaring Championships, and he won the first one.
> The practice day started a little slow but soon 49 ships were in the air. The start gate was open on a 2:45 min TAT that sent the pilots to Winter Haven, Streamsong (a great golf course in Central Florida), Wines, Gore, CFI Plant and Finish. John Seaborn, fresh off his win at the 18 Meter Nationals, continued his impressive flying by turning in a respectable 71.20 mph raw/61.59 handicap speed over 198mi. Second was Fernando Silva in his ship that hasn’t had all the plastic wrap taken off from the factory. Jake Alspaugh finished in third. All in all, a great day with more fine weather on the horizon.
>
> Day 1
> As everyone knows, corona virus has been in the news for some time. Disney and Universal are closed in the Orlando area, Sun n Fun has been postponed, and all professional sports have had their seasons suspended. As an organizer of a public event with about 140 pilot, crews, and volunteers, we wanted to provide the safest environment possible. We decided to cancel all meetings and provide the information via electronic means using email and WhatsApp. The first day could have gone better when both our email system and internet suffered some casualties. There was a frantic couple of hours to get everything out, but with the help of John Good and Rick Sheppe, we were 95% successful. However, the day did not disappoint. Cu started popping soon after the sniffer was launched. The fleet was launched and set out on a TAT that went to Avon Park, Bonnie Plant, Love Field (first time I'd gone there), and Finish. The run to Avon Park was fantastic. Good Cu, nice long runs under well formed clouds, and some markers on course. Going to Bonnie Plant was a nice street that took you to the maximum distance point in the turn area. Lift was very strong, averaging around the 5 knot range. Phil Gaisford won the day with a raw speed of 70.18 mph over 198 miles. Karl Striedieck again showed us his mastery of the skies, finishing second in an aircraft and nav system he just started flying with. Fernando SIlva, our 2017 Seniors winner, again flew great task and finished third. However, this time he submitted his log to the Scoreer vice his cell phone. Ask him about the story from the 2018 Seniors! We just finished the Welcome dinner in the DG hangar where all of our meetings and dinners are held. We were very lucky to have Ann Lafford and her husband Rick to join us for the Seniors. Before coming over to do the report, it was nice to see people dancing again. Thank you, Madam Chairwomen, for attending our event. Well, the weather is cooperating but our visiting tow planes are having a couple problems. Thanks to Russell Brown, our trusty A&P mechanic, that is working hard to fix these ships. Also, to Martin who has worked all day to find a mag for the Husky. It's late and time to charge some batteries. Let me know via text at 407-325-6500 if you want me to address other issues during the contest. Until tomorrow, good night.

Can you post the WhatsApp group name so we can follow on with what is sent to the competitors? Thanks in advance

Ron Gleason
March 15th 20, 03:51 PM
On Sunday, 15 March 2020 08:57:55 UTC-6, Ron Gleason wrote:
> On Saturday, 14 March 2020 20:33:06 UTC-6, wrote:
> > Practice Day
> > First, I would like to say sorry for the delay of the practice day results. As any of my fellow contest managers can attest to, the first day of the contest is hectic. However, if you saw the smiles of the pilots returning from their flights, it was worth it. Trailers had been coming in for a couple of weeks now. We had to open trailer parking up early because of the large number of early arrivals. Ken Goshorn got all the grass mowed in time for everyone. Karen did an outstanding setting out flowers, new grass, making the entrance much better than it has been in a while. Chris Carter did a great job in registration and preparing to take over CM duties while I get to go fly. We were also happy that 1E joined us again. Don Wasness is the only pilot that have attended all 30 Senior Soaring Championships, and he won the first one.
> > The practice day started a little slow but soon 49 ships were in the air. The start gate was open on a 2:45 min TAT that sent the pilots to Winter Haven, Streamsong (a great golf course in Central Florida), Wines, Gore, CFI Plant and Finish. John Seaborn, fresh off his win at the 18 Meter Nationals, continued his impressive flying by turning in a respectable 71.20 mph raw/61.59 handicap speed over 198mi. Second was Fernando Silva in his ship that hasn’t had all the plastic wrap taken off from the factory. Jake Alspaugh finished in third. All in all, a great day with more fine weather on the horizon.
> >
> > Day 1
> > As everyone knows, corona virus has been in the news for some time. Disney and Universal are closed in the Orlando area, Sun n Fun has been postponed, and all professional sports have had their seasons suspended. As an organizer of a public event with about 140 pilot, crews, and volunteers, we wanted to provide the safest environment possible. We decided to cancel all meetings and provide the information via electronic means using email and WhatsApp. The first day could have gone better when both our email system and internet suffered some casualties. There was a frantic couple of hours to get everything out, but with the help of John Good and Rick Sheppe, we were 95% successful. However, the day did not disappoint. Cu started popping soon after the sniffer was launched. The fleet was launched and set out on a TAT that went to Avon Park, Bonnie Plant, Love Field (first time I'd gone there), and Finish. The run to Avon Park was fantastic. Good Cu, nice long runs under well formed clouds, and some markers on course. Going to Bonnie Plant was a nice street that took you to the maximum distance point in the turn area. Lift was very strong, averaging around the 5 knot range. Phil Gaisford won the day with a raw speed of 70.18 mph over 198 miles. Karl Striedieck again showed us his mastery of the skies, finishing second in an aircraft and nav system he just started flying with. Fernando SIlva, our 2017 Seniors winner, again flew great task and finished third. However, this time he submitted his log to the Scoreer vice his cell phone. Ask him about the story from the 2018 Seniors! We just finished the Welcome dinner in the DG hangar where all of our meetings and dinners are held. We were very lucky to have Ann Lafford and her husband Rick to join us for the Seniors. Before coming over to do the report, it was nice to see people dancing again. Thank you, Madam Chairwomen, for attending our event. Well, the weather is cooperating but our visiting tow planes are having a couple problems. Thanks to Russell Brown, our trusty A&P mechanic, that is working hard to fix these ships. Also, to Martin who has worked all day to find a mag for the Husky. It's late and time to charge some batteries. Let me know via text at 407-325-6500 if you want me to address other issues during the contest. Until tomorrow, good night.
>
> Can you post the WhatsApp group name so we can follow on with what is sent to the competitors? Thanks in advance

Just saw the FB on how to accomplish this. Thanks

March 16th 20, 02:03 AM
Day 2

After a great night at Seminole-Lake with live music from Sol Varrion and a very nice dinner from Texas Roadhouse, it was time to go flying again. The day did not disappoint. Sunny skies and a nice breeze greeted the pilots.. Bo Michalowski was out early as the official Seminole=Lake photographer taking pictures of the early sunrise. We are still in corona virus lock down, meaning limited large gatherings and no pilot’s meetings. We did put out coffee and donuts this morning, and they all got taken! It is a different world being at a contest where there is limited personal contact. One of the reasons we find this so enjoyable is that we get to be with friends doing something we love. We are lucky that Seminole-Lake is in a rural area so that the possibility of catching the virus is a little lower. A good number of locals called to see if we actually were having the contest and were happy that their kids come out and watch again.
Seminole-Lake Gliderport is very happy to host one of the best attended contests in the US. We value the support of our neighbors that invest their time to make this event and this location perfect for the contest. There is a couple we owe a lot to, that lives nearby. Billy and Karen put so much time into performing gelcoat repairs, gear door replacements, grid painting and maintaining the property in a manner that is truly outstanding. Ken is our lawn cutting specialist and has received a number of comments on how great the property looks. It’s always better to rig your glider in short grass.
Today, the pilots started launching a little early due to the good weather. Climbs were 3-4 knots to about 4,300 ft at the start. The 2:45hr TAT took us for a tour of southern Florida. First, we went to Myakka Head to the southeast, then Frostproof, Gore, CFI Plant (by Tampa Class B airspace), Grass Roots and Finish. Phil Gaisford set the pace today by winning another day! His raw speed was 65.20mph over 183.44 miles. Second was claimed by fellow Brit, Bob Fletcher with Tom Holloran in third. Overall, the standings are Phil Gaisford in first, Tom Holloran in second and Rich Owen and Ken Sorenson tied in third. The discussion in the office today is when we are going to call a rest day. As you know, this contest is for those of us 55 years old or older. We need our rest. My vote is Wednesday since St Patrick’s Day is Tuesday! Stay tuned.
All of us at Seminole-Lake hope that you and your family are safe and well tonight. We hope to keep you entertained via our posts. If you want additional information about the contest, just let us know.

Chris Behm
March 16th 20, 06:27 AM
Thanks for the report!

March 17th 20, 01:44 PM
Has the rest day been announced yet?

Jim Hogue
March 17th 20, 10:38 PM
On Tuesday, 17 March 2020 09:44:42 UTC-4, wrote:
> Has the rest day been announced yet?

Today (Tuesday March 17) was the rest day.

Jim Hogue
March 17th 20, 10:40 PM
On Tuesday, 17 March 2020 09:44:42 UTC-4, wrote:
> Has the rest day been announced yet?

Today (Tuesday March 17) was the rest day.

March 17th 20, 10:47 PM
Thanks Jim

Dave Nadler
March 18th 20, 02:00 AM
On Sunday, March 15, 2020 at 10:03:06 PM UTC-4, wrote:
> Today, the pilots started launching a little early due to the good weather.
> Climbs were 3-4 knots to about 4,300 ft at the start. The 2:45hr TAT took
> us for a tour of southern Florida. First, we went to Myakka Head to the
> southeast, then Frostproof, Gore, CFI Plant (by Tampa Class B airspace),
> Grass Roots and Finish. Phil Gaisford set the pace today by winning
> another day! His raw speed was 65.20mph over 183.44 miles. Second was
> claimed by fellow Brit, Bob Fletcher with Tom Holloran in third.

Actually, YO was third, with a raw speed of 70.00 ;-)
Started first and flew alone all day!
https://www.ssa.org/ContestResults.asp?contestId=2463&ContestDetailId=20907&ContestName=2020+Senior+Soaring+Championship&ContestDate=3/15/2020
Trifecta for team New England ;-)
Unfortunately my POS Antares had a complete hydraulic failure yesterday
and I've withdrawn.

It was great to see everybody and a real privilege to get back in the air,
especially with these fantastic conditions.
Thanks to Rich, Chris, John, Rick, Sean, and the entire crew for
a fabulous event.

See ya, Dave

March 18th 20, 11:25 PM
Too bad Dave, glad to see/hear about you back in the saddle! Hope to see you out west this year :)

CH

March 19th 20, 01:24 AM
Off to the Cloud Street Races!

Day 3
After a very nice St Patrick’s Day, with the exception of the Florida Governor closing all bars at 5:00pm, it was a very successful rest day. The ladies even had a book club meeting that was a first for the Seniors! Everyone had a nice time and I think we should make this a regular event. We had another beautiful day in Florida with a low of 64 in the morning and a high of 88 degrees in the afternoon. This is our dry season, so the soaring has been great. John Good decided to send us on a tour of Northern Florida today. We set out from Start B, north to Grass Roots, west to Chinsegut (we can’t pronounce it either), northeast to Norton, south to Gore and then to Green Swamp and the Finish. That worked out to a TAT (Turn Area Task) of 178 miles nominal distance with a minimum time of 2:45. Our superb groundcrew led by Dewey Clawson and Don Grillo did another fine job getting everyone airborne in an expeditious, safe manner. We had a towplane that had to abort a takeoff early in the run. Martin Holtz (tow pilot) and Bob Fletcher (90) did a great job of deconflicting their path on the runway. In short order we had Bob in the air and the Husky had the day off. The Pawnees’ picked up the slack and we were soon on task. Cloud bases were around 4,500ft around the gliderport rising to almost 6,000ft later in the day. Lift averaged 4.5kts on average with some topping out at 8kts. Biggest blast of the flight was a clound street that went almost 70 miles from Norton to Gore. How you handled this leg was the difference between the leaders and the rest of the field. As you approached the southern section of the task area, the clouds were disappearing in some of the area around Winter Haven. However, there was a small line of clouds you could work towards the lake. The trip to Green Swamp was very short and most pilots did not go very far into that circle. Final glides were pretty tame due to some nice cu on the way home. Karl Striedieck and Sarah Arnold took the day running away from the field in an Arcus. Their 216 miles was covered at a blazing 77 miles an hour. Phil Gaisford finished second with a raw speed of 68.32 mph in a Discus 2b with Rich Owen finishing third in a trusty LS-8 at 68.09 mph. The score sheet is really tight right now with the top 10 pilots separated by about 200 points. Overall, Phil Gaisford is in first with Karl and Sarah in second with Rich Owen in third. Ken Sorenson, Tom Holloran, Fernando Silva, Jake Alspaugh, Nico Bennet/Ryszard Krolikowski, Bob Fletcher, with John Seaborn rounding out the top 10. It is anyone’s race but Phil has a pretty good lead.
With two days left in the contest, we are still being very careful with social distancing, no pilots meeting, lots of hand washing and dinners being served with volunteers in gloves. It was a little awkward to do away with the pilots meeting but now everyone is getting used to it. Information is delivered electronically but a paper task sheet is available with Rick Sheppe outfitted in blue dish gloves. I need to get Bo to get a picture for the magazine article. We talked to the banquet vendor and they decided to cancel our event. That was great because we really wanted to do it in the hangar and limit outside handling of food service. So, we are doing a Mexican dinner with margaritas for the awards banquet! Just an early Cinco de Mayo party.
Well, the ships are put away, hangar is cleaned up and everyone is digesting the Prime Rib dinner with leftover cake from the US Team night. That’s all for tonight, stay turned to Day 4 tomorrow!

March 20th 20, 02:00 AM
Day 4
As the sun came up over the evergreens, everyone seemed to up early today. The dogs were walking their masters and the runners were out in force. Bo, our contest photographer, was making plans to take the official contest picture. The Seniors Rules Committee, headed by Ron Clarke, had a meeting to discus possible changes to the contest format. As 10:15 am approached, we did not know how many of the pilots and crews would attend the photo op. We had made attendance optional, but to our surprise, many of the folks came out. Of course, we had a good amount of space between each individual, so mush so that Bo needed a wide-angle lens for her camera. Everyone came with their Hawaiian shirts which is a tradition at the Seniors. You can tell who the rookies are, they’re the ones not wearing a colorful shirt.
The grid was shifted to the north end of the runway which usually causes problems. It is a little tighter, three gliders in each row, you need a wing stand, the tow planes land in the overrun and taxi between the sailplanes on the grid. This year we were lucky since Dewey ran Operations and Catherine was there with extra flags. We had a good number of visitors from town today so I guess we were the only show in town. The launch finished in an hour and soon the start gate was open. Today John sent us on a tour of the central spine of Florida. The 3 hour Turn Area Task took us from Start A, Green Swamp, Streamsong, CFI Plant, Osborn, Inverness, Leesburg, and Finish. With those last two turnpoints we must have made the CD mad last night.. They are some of the wettest and least hospitable places in the task area. The only worse place is Umatilla, where many venture and few return! The weather had cloud bases starting at 3,000 feet at launch to right at 4,400 feet when the gate opened. Lift varied between 3 knots to right at 6.5 knots in the task area. Rich Owen finished in first place with a 64.19 mph raw speed over a course of 194 miles. Phil Gaisford finished in second by a narrow margin, flying 196 miles at 64.07. Fernando Silva finished in third. Rich had a pretty good following today in the start circle and was asked if all his darting around the start was trying to shake some of these ships free. Simple answer, no, he was just trying to find a climb when the day cycled right at the start.
The score sheet is still very close. Tomorrow, it could be anybody’s race. We are all looking forward to the banquet with Mexican food from Groveland’s Coyote Rojo. Mihaela is making margaritas and it is sure to be a great time. For those of you who have never been to a Seniors, you should put it on your bucket list. Just talk to anyone who has attended. Just look at Don Wasness who has been at all 30 Senior Soaring Championships and even won the first one. Talk to you all tomorrow.

Soartech
March 22nd 20, 04:39 PM
Hey Rich,
We're all waiting patiently for the final installment of this story.

Rich Owen[_2_]
March 24th 20, 12:01 AM
Sorry Everyone,

I will be posting the final day of the Seniors tonight. We lost a very wonderful line crew leader Thursday night in a tragic car accident. I’ll explain all then. Catherine was loved by everyone in soaring. It has been hard for all the pilots at SLG. But tonight, I’ll tell the story.

Sincerely,
Rich

Rich Owen[_2_]
March 31st 20, 03:18 AM
Day 5
When then day started, we found out that a member of our ground crew was tragically injured in a car accident while driving home from the gliderport. Catherine Eaglin has worked on the Seniors for 7 years. She worked the line and became the Operations Chief for the Seniors and 18 Meter Nationals which was held at Seminole-Lake in 2018. Catherine also worked the Region 5 South contest in Cordele GA. Last year she traveled to Canada to assist the ground crew at the Pan American Championship. Catherine was loved by everyone in the soaring community and we all celebrated with her when she graduated college and got hired as a dispatcher with an airline at Sanford airport. It has been over a week since the accident but we still cannot come to grips with her loss. The ground crew and tow pilots wanted to honor her legacy by continuing working for the last day of the Seniors. They all did a great job; Catherine would be proud.
On the last day, the top 5 pilots were separated by fewer than 200 points. The weather was forecasted to be excellent and it certainly was. The task had a nominal distance of 200 miles commencing from Start A, to Wines (10mi), Streamsong (18mi), Burntwood (5mi), Inverness (24mi), Osborn (4mi), and Finish (2mi). The day started good and was expected to stay good until after 5:30pm. This was no banquet task! The top 21 pilots all completed flights over 300K. The leg to Wines was really good with climbs in the 4-5kt range to 5,000 ft. Highway 27 is always the route south along the east side of the state. The leg to Streamsong was a little weaker but still had good cu. The best of the day was the trip north. Bruntwood was just a steering point to help pilots avoid the Tampa Class B airspace. Everyone knows the area around Inverness is very wet and usually a dead zone for sailplanes.. Today the cu was very honest and there was a line all the way deep into the Inverness zone. If you shaded to the west of Inverness, it was a nice ride out and back. From there it was an easy trip home. However, if you chose to go more to the center of the state, you were met with blue skies with very little lift.
Due to the Coronavirus, we had cancelled our off-site banquet in favor of another hangar dinner. Mexican food was on the menu with cold beer and margaritas to celebrate the conclusion of a fine contest. We normally kept the scores under lock and key until the awards ceremony, but they were released early. Rich Owen finished in third for the day with John Seaborn in second and Phil Gaisford in first. The difference between these three was less than .5 mph over a 200 mile task. The contest results were announced after the day winners. Team Lima, composed of Karl Striedieck, Sarah Arnold, Larry (the owner of Lima), and Lee Lauderbach (owner of Stallion 51), finished in third overall. In second place, Rich Owen, who could only gain one point on Phil during the entire contest. Phil Gaisford flew a near perfect contest, only losing 37 points during the 5 contest days.
The Seniors is in the record books for another year and Seminole-Lake Gliderport is returning to normal. After the contest, the local pilots and a few die hards from up north, have been flying every day. We would be remiss if we didn’t acknowledge the support of our staff and volunteers. Our ground crew complement spanned from teenagers to young adults, Americans and Japanese flight students. Some have been with us for a long time. Others transitioned from line crew to tow pilots. Without them, we would not get off the ground. Enrique Mertins laid out the RV parking plan and took care of all our visitors during their stay. Ted Haller and Anne Mongiovi did a great job in the Retrieve Office. Anne’s husband Gene Franklin is always a person we can plug into any slot that opens up. Anne and Gene have been with us for years and are a valuable resource. Dewey Clawson and Don Grillo ran Operations and kept the launch/recoveries efficient yet safe. Bill Foster, a fellow Delta retiree, was our Safety Officer and kept everyone on their toes. Ray Smith handled the Chief Tow Pilot duties with skill and kept Izumi, Franklin, Zack and Martin in line and flying straight! Fernando Silva provided us outstanding weather briefings, while Rick Sheppe kept us all honest with our scores. Our Contest Director, John Good, provided us with interesting tasks that challenged the pilots and made each day fun. We also had two wonderful ladies that made most of the magic happen. Mihaela kept the office running, dinners handled, and bills paid while Chris ran registration during a time of social distancing. She also ran the entire contest after flying began even though she needed a golf cart to get around due to foot surgery. These two ladies deserve our undying gratitude for the hard work they put in during this contest.
We hope the pilots, crews and volunteers all enjoyed their stay at Seminole-Lake and we expect to see you next year on March 12th, 2021 for the 31st edition of the Senior Soaring Championship.

Sincerely,
Rich Owen
Vice President
Seminole Flying and Soaring

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