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On 1 Aug, 14:59, wrote:
On Aug 1, 9:13 am, danlj wrote: On Jul 31, 9:52 am, nimbusgb wrote: What is the soaring like in the US Midwest? Are there significant weather, airspace or other factors that limit the soaring in Minnessota, Illinois, Indiana and the central midwest? Dear Ian, There are fundamentally 3 different types of airmasses interacting to create weather in the midwest. The proportion of time each influences local soaring is different in the various areas, of course. (Caveat: this is written from memory -- others, living in different regions, may have different impressions of what's important or dominant.) 1: Continental Polar: The great soaring days in the midwest typically are in the continental polar airmass that cyclically washes down from the Canadian plains once or twice a week; if there's enough humidity to create cu (about 40% of the time, I'd say), the bases are usually at least 4k agl to 7k agl, rarely 9k -- the land is mostly about 1k msl. The winds in this airmass are usually 20-25 kt just after the front passes, and cus street up on the first day. Rarely there's sustained winds of 30-40 kt with long streets. Long downwind flights are possible if you have time and crew. Talk to Jim Hard. Soon after 1 September each year, a semipermanent low tends to set up over Hudson's Bay, causing cold fronts to sweep across the upper Mississippi Valley every 2 or three days for 3-6 weeks. When this happens, the air is unstable and the winds more than 20 kt behind each front. These days are pretty challenging. 2: Pacific: The blue days in the northern Mississippi Valley are often due to the Pacific airmass that has been adiabatically dried crossing the Rocky Mountains. This airmass may dominate the northern tier of states for 1-3 weeks when the polar jet crosses Canada without dipping south, which happens 3 or 4 times a year. The top of the usable lift is relatively high, but it's all blue; winds tend to be light. Our Indian Summer occurs if this happens in September-October, and some years brings weeks of warm, sunny conditions. 3 Gulf: The difficult days are dominated by the humid gulf airmass. This brings lower bases, 2k to 4k agl, haze, southerly winds, and challenging xc conditions. I live in Wisconsin; up here, the gulf airmass shows up cyclically ahead of the intruding continental polar airmass, so these days tend to have strong southerly winds and low cloudbase. Further south, the gulf airmass dominates more, and the winds are not so strong, and I think the bases are a little higher. Afternoon popcorn thunderstorms are common. 4: Occlusions. Sometimes the cyclicic rhythm of frontal movement slows down, and these airmasses simply slop around over each other, creating occluded fronts, which, especially in the late fall (mostly after soaring is long over), can create 2-3 weeks of continually overcast weather. Traditionally these don't happen between the middle of June and the middle of September. Your Midwest soaring career will be most satisfying if you have a job that allows you to skip off to the gliderport for 2-3 days after each cold front comes through, and stay at work otherwise. And a benefit of soaring around here is that nearly every bean field or hayfield is fairly flat and landable... DJ Check out OLC for Caesar Creek Soaring Club. We have had some very good soaring conditions this year including 8 days at Sports Class Nationals. Jim Price 77 Thanks for all the relpies. 66 I'll look you up next time I'm out Ian M |
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