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I would like to spent a few weeks flying somewhere in Europe this summer. Alps or S. France probably. Can anyone tell me whether I can fly solo in France, Germany, Austria, Italy on my US license? I would also be interested in hearing about a generally good place to fly and rent gliders in that region.
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On Nov 14, 8:32*am, tienshanman tienshanman.
wrote: I would like to spent a few weeks flying somewhere in Europe this summer. Alps or S. France probably. Can anyone tell me whether I can fly solo in France, Germany, Austria, Italy on my US license? I would also be interested in hearing about a generally good place to fly and rent gliders in that region. -- tienshanman Contact Burt Compton in Marfa. He will know the latest. Yes, you can but you will need to get a license in Europe. And you will need a current US Medical. Southern France is great. GA |
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On Nov 15, 8:13*am, tienshanman tienshanman.
wrote: 'glider[_2_ Wrote: ;711965']On Nov 14, 8:32*am, tienshanman tienshanman. wrote:- I would like to spent a few weeks flying somewhere in Europe this summer. Alps or S. France probably. Can anyone tell me whether I can fly solo in France, Germany, Austria, Italy on my US license? I would also be interested in hearing about a generally good place to fly and rent gliders in that region. -- tienshanman- Contact Burt Compton *in Marfa. He will know the latest. Yes, you can but you will need to get a license in Europe. And you will need a current US Medical. Southern France is great. GA I have sent Burt 2 emails; he has yet to reply. Hey, I sent a private email reply to a guy named Karl asking the same question, so maybe that's not you. Sorry if your emails are not reaching me. I've been traveling alot lately and tomorrow I'm off to Florida for a week. Back to Marfa, Texas on NOV 23 for our thermal-up- to-the-wave season. I prefer to give advice off this group. All I know about is about Germany / Wasserkuppe / Bavarian Alps south of Munich. To summarize, you can fly gliders solo (but not motorgliders) in Germany but it is a "courtesy" for ICAO certificated pilots (the US is a "member state"), and this courtesy may be revoked any time. The final decision is always with the individual clubs. Very few commercial operators. So go fly dual in a nice Duo Discus or DG-1000 and have fun. They will let you fly yet they will talk on the radio, keep you out of the strange (at first) airspace, navigate (most villages look the same) and take you much farther than you would might soar solo , and closer to mountain tops than you might dare solo. Learn --- they have interesting concepts about soaring and especially reading both the terrain and sky. After all, they "invented it". Burt |
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Glider pilot licenses are not unified among Europena countries, which
means that each country handles this differently. Contact the FOCA of the country in which you plan to fly and ask. You will need a medical, except in Switzerland. One of the best soaring places are the southern Alps of France, but only if you are experienced in mountain flying. (Otherwise most clubs will gladly instruct you.) There are many glider places in the French Alps (Gap, Sisteron, Vinon, Barcelonette, St. Auban ...) Be sure to contact tmen early enough and ask how they handle glider renting. Be aware that most operations are clubs (except St. Auban). |
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France is easy. It does take a little preparation on your part to
make it painless. France is very glider pilot friendly. You need to obtain a French Licence Equivalance before you go and that will take about three months. It is all done by mail. You will requi 1) A copy of your pilot licence. 2) A copy of your medical certificate that will be less than one year old during your flying time in France. 3) Two identity photographs, passport size. 4) A copy of your passport identity pages that shows your date of birth. 5) A short letter stating your request for a Licence Equivalence and specifying the date of your stay and where you plan to fly (just list several places). 6) Mail this all to: DISTRICT AERONAUTIQUE DE PROVENCE Service des LIcences Aeroport No. 1 13727 MARIGNANE I believe they are now charging a small fee for this process. Fortunately english is the international language of aviation so people in the District Aeronautique office do speak english. You can call them at: (33) 442.31.14.81 John Smith's statement about mountain flying in the Alps is correct (IMHO). However, St. Auban is a quasi-government commercial glider operation that has an excellent instruction program that will get you oriented very quickly and off flying solo in very good modern gliders. http://www.cnvv.net/ I have flown at St. Auban four times and have flown in: LS-8, Discus 2, ASW-27, Nimbus, DG-1000, DG-300, Fox, Janus, Duo DIscus, LS-4. All the planes are maintained like new. The airport is located at the base of the alps so you can fly in to the mountains, stay in the foothills, or fly the flats. It is very similar to flying out of Minden or Williams. The staff at St. Auban is wonderful, they speak english, they have dormitory rooms to rent, a cafeteria, a swimming pool, recreational rooms, computer access and very good places to eat in the surrounding communities. Guy Acheson |
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