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View Full Version : where in the usa can gliders be flown year round


ASM
May 3rd 20, 09:30 PM
Any idea where?

Bob Youngblood
May 3rd 20, 10:20 PM
On Sunday, May 3, 2020 at 4:30:56 PM UTC-4, ASM wrote:
> Any idea where?

Miami to Vero Beach

Bruce C
May 3rd 20, 10:21 PM
It's possible to fly year round in Florida though certain months good soaring days are elusive.

Jonathan St. Cloud
May 3rd 20, 11:03 PM
On Sunday, May 3, 2020 at 1:30:56 PM UTC-7, ASM wrote:
> Any idea where?

Southern California. Minden

Franklin Burbank
May 3rd 20, 11:42 PM
We fly year round in South Carolina at Bermuda High Soaring.

6PK
May 4th 20, 12:55 AM
Crystal Southern California

May 4th 20, 01:37 AM
Southern Nevada - Las Vegas.

Michael Opitz
May 4th 20, 01:44 AM
At 20:30 03 May 2020, ASM wrote:
>Any idea where?
>
Arizona too.

Cookie
May 4th 20, 03:05 AM
On Sunday, May 3, 2020 at 4:30:56 PM UTC-4, ASM wrote:
> Any idea where?

Blairstown NJ...some great wave flights in winter....dress warm

May 4th 20, 04:53 AM
Prescott area soaring, in Prescott Valley AZ. A few weeks off here and there for weather dec thru march :)

Clemens Ceipek
May 4th 20, 06:11 AM
On Sunday, May 3, 2020 at 2:30:56 PM UTC-6, ASM wrote:
> Any idea where?

Boulder, Colorado

Ramy[_2_]
May 4th 20, 07:35 AM
Central/Northern California:Hollister, Byron, Williams, Avenal.
300-500km are common every month in the “off season”. Check OLC.

Ramy

LOV2AV8
May 4th 20, 03:12 PM
Tucson Soaring Club

Burt Compton - Marfa Gliders, west Texas
May 4th 20, 03:55 PM
On Sunday, May 3, 2020 at 3:30:56 PM UTC-5, ASM wrote:
> Any idea where?

Soaring year-round at Marfa in southwest Texas and at many sites in the "sun belt" states plus several more sites east and west, generally north of the 40th parallel (Baseline Road in Boulder, CO.)

I laugh when I read that the "soaring season" begins in April and ends in October in the USA without considering our sun belt states from California to Florida where we are soaring through the winter months.
The best soaring in Florida is in the late winter - early spring - that's why the "Seniors" is then.

Practice soaring on the weak days. I fly sailplanes in Europe every other summer or fall and on marginal days I see pilots launch to team-fly cross-country tasks. No wonder those pilots score well in the World Championships..

When I was a kid flying a 1-26 and later our Open class Cirrus, my Dad would insist that I deploy spoilers to descend directly over our family gliderport in South Miami to 1,000' AGL and practice "saves" or land for another tow to continue the exercise. Climbing in booming thermals is relatively easy. Patiently bracketing zero-sink into 2 knots lift would eventually save me and the sailplane on many flights.

Eric Greenwell[_4_]
May 4th 20, 05:58 PM
Burt Compton - Marfa Gliders, west Texas wrote on 5/4/2020 7:55 AM:
> On Sunday, May 3, 2020 at 3:30:56 PM UTC-5, ASM wrote:
>> Any idea where?
>
> Soaring year-round at Marfa in southwest Texas and at many sites in the "sun belt" states plus several more sites east and west, generally north of the 40th parallel (Baseline Road in Boulder, CO.)
>
> I laugh when I read that the "soaring season" begins in April and ends in October in the USA without considering our sun belt states from California to Florida where we are soaring through the winter months.
> The best soaring in Florida is in the late winter - early spring - that's why the "Seniors" is then.
>
> Practice soaring on the weak days. I fly sailplanes in Europe every other summer or fall and on marginal days I see pilots launch to team-fly cross-country tasks. No wonder those pilots score well in the World Championships..
>
> When I was a kid flying a 1-26 and later our Open class Cirrus, my Dad would insist that I deploy spoilers to descend directly over our family gliderport in South Miami to 1,000' AGL and practice "saves" or land for another tow to continue the exercise. Climbing in booming thermals is relatively easy. Patiently bracketing zero-sink into 2 knots lift would eventually save me and the sailplane on many flights.

I don't need to purposely create practice saves, as I seem to encounter plenty of
real ones during my normal flying. Flying a motorglider makes "save" situations
likely than it was with a towed glider, but fortunately it also provides the
remedy for failed "save".

--
Eric Greenwell - Washington State, USA (change ".netto" to ".us" to email me)
- "A Guide to Self-Launching Sailplane Operation"
https://sites.google.com/site/motorgliders/publications/download-the-guide-1

Charles Longley
May 5th 20, 02:10 PM
Arlington, WA

May 7th 20, 06:00 AM
Warner Springs California is open year around. Nice mix of thermals, ridge, convergence, and wave flying depending on the season.

Nick Kennedy[_3_]
May 7th 20, 07:04 PM
Dillingham Field In Hawaii
I recently read somewhere that the state is tryin to close it thou.
I've never flown there, but I bet its nice and warm.
And lots of other things to do when your not aviating.

Google