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Mifflin day 3.
It was another beautiful, and of course very interesting, day at the sports class nationals. We grid early, on the fear of strong crosswinds. They don't materialize, so we launch into ridge lift at 11:30. The sky is overcast, but is forecast to break up and maybe even go blue by the end of the day. Cloudbase is low, and some pilots have to relight. After a while it becomes clear that it isn't breaking up as fast as forecast, and that the southern area will break up more than the north. After consulting with task advisers Karl Striedieck and John Good, Charlie moves the task toward the southern area. The task is a very interesting mixed thermal and ridge task - McCollnesburg, Bedford, Clark's Ferry, Turnpike tunnels. Then MAT but only 4 more turnpoints with no repeats. The first leg is down the ridge. The second leg is straight into the wind. The third mixes downwind and some ridges. The fourth is crosswind with no direct ridges. And then it's up to you. With a decent ridge wind, thermals are broken up and hard to center down low. Also, there is wave above, provoking some havoc with thermals and providing some interesting regions of very strong sink. Some go from McCollesburg to Bedford in a cloudstreet with no turns. Some slog it out down low making many saves off the ridges. From Bedford to Clark's, straight downwind back to McConnelsburg and then crosswind on the ridges proved the best route. Pilots who went first on the Tussey ridge and then tried to thermal downwind reported weak conditions and some problems. The winners said they had no problem at Clark's ferry but the rest of us found it very tough, under much more cloud than the other parts of the course. Clarks' to tunnels poses an interesting problem since the high ground has absolutely nowhere to land. Sane pilots thermaled it, insane pilots ridge soared it, and some really smart pilots went all the way around on other ridges. Many interesting flights followed. The key on a task like this, of course, is to extend it in ridge as far as possible. But all the good ridge possibilities meant at least one final upwind transition at the end of the day. There were quite a few weak spots with both no thermals and no ridge lift, leading to a large number of landouts. All in all a very interesting day. And absolutely beautiful flying. Zooming along a ridge late in the day under a glorious sky and floating around in wave before the start are memories that will stay with me for quite a while. John Cochrane BB |
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