HANG GLIDING + PARAGLIDING + SPEEDFLYING WINTER 2023 Volume 53 #1 695 CENTS
6 50 Years of Supporting the Free Flight Community by Steve Pearson, USHPA President
From Idea to Origin 14
The path to creating skygear hub by Shane Perreco
2022 Highland Challenge 18
A race-to-goal mini-comp recap by Charles Allen Columbia 2022 24
Personal lessons and advancements in Valle del Cuaca by Angela Bickar, Ognjen Grujic, Benjamin Smith, & Joe Popper 2022 Global Rescue XRedRocks 34 by Gavin McClurg
42 2022
Tater Hill Open
Part 1: Paying better attention to changing conditions by Bubba Goodman Part 2: Cloud suck really sucks by Tony Davis 52 Flying in Wind part 2: Handling Headwinds by Dennis Pagen 56 Flight Testing Lilienthal's Experimental by Markus Raffel 66 Hawker & Vario by Harry Martin
HANG GLIDING AND PARAGLIDING ARE INHERENTLY DANGEROUS ACTIVITIES
USHPA recommends pilots complete a pilot training program under the direct supervision of a USHPA-certified instructor, using equipment suitable for your level of experience. Many of the articles and photographs in the magazine depict advanced maneuvers being performed by experienced, or expert, pilots. These maneuvers should not be attempted without the prerequisite instruction and experience.
POSTMASTER USHPA Pilot ISSN 2689-6052 (USPS 17970) is published bimonthly by the United States Hang Gliding and Paragliding Association, Inc., 1685 W. Uintah St., Colorado Springs, CO, 80904 Phone: (719) 632-8300 Fax: (719) 632-6417 Periodicals Postage Paid in Colorado Springs and additional mailing offices. Send change of address to: USHPA, PO Box 1330, Colorado Springs, CO, 80901-1330. Canadian Return Address: DP Global Mail, 4960-2 Walker Road, Windsor, ON N9A 6J3.
SUBMISSIONS
from our members and readers are welcome.
All articles, artwork, photographs as well as ideas for articles, artwork and photographs are submitted pursuant to and are subject to the USHPA Contributor's Agreement, a copy of which can be obtained from the USHPA by emailing the editor at editor@ushpa.org or online at www.ushpa.org. We are always looking for great articles, photography and news. Your contributions are appreciated.
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©2023 US HANG GLIDING & PARAGLIDING ASSOC., INC. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise without prior written permission of USHPA.
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For
info@ushpa.org WINTER 2023 Ratings > 60 Calendar > 65 Classifieds > 65
change of address or other USHPA business +1 (719) 632-8300
USHPA PILOT 5 Reliable Paragliding Equipment advance.swiss Start a New Era HIGH-B PARAGLIDER EFFICIENT PERFORMANCE FROM 3.75 KG* The new IOTA DLS is a high performance XC specialist. Perfectly balanced pitch behaviour and effective C-handle control provide maximum flight comfort. Manufactured with our DLS technology, it offers you both robustness and durability at the usual high level. *Size 21 with optional light risers Distributor: superflyinc.com, info@superflyinc.com, 801-255-9595
Photo: Adi Geisegger
FALL BOARD MEETING
Sept 23-24 | Richfield, UT
USHPA is excited to host the Annual Board of Directors meeting in Richfield, UT before the Red Rocks Fly-in. Please visit the website for updates. ushpa.org/boardmeeting
CELEBRATION > Steve Pearson, USHPA President
50 Years of USHPA Supporting the Free Flight Community
: In December 1973, members of the Southern California Hang Glider Association voted to change the association’s name to the United States Hang Gliding Association, Inc.
Do you have questions about USHPA policies, programs, or other areas?
EMAIL US AT: info@ushpa.org Let us know what questions or topics you’d like to hear about!
Interested in a more active role supporting our national organization? USHPA needs you! Have a skill or interest and some time available?
VOLUNTEER! ushpa.org/volunteer
Hang gliding was a new and unique sport at the time. Stories about the sport were featured in many national publications, including National Geographic, Time, Newsweek, The New York Times, The Smithsonian, Popular Mechanics, and Mechanics Illustrated. In 1973, membership was already at 4,578 pilots, and competitions typically included hundreds of spectators and occasionally TV coverage. Chris Wills, age 21, had recently won the first National Hang Gliding Championships sponsored by Annie Green Springs Wine and was featured in Sports Illustrated. Membership more than doubled in the following seven months, totaling 10,410 pilots in July 1974— more than USHPA’s current membership.
I followed all of this in real time. I built my first glider at age 16 in late 1972, derived from plans in another publication, Low & Slow, but had to wait until my next visit to Southern California in 1974 to complete my flight training. Three years
later, on June 24, 1977, two days after my 21st birthday, my friend and hang gliding icon Bob Wills was tragically killed while filming a Jeep commercial. In the following months, Rob Kells, Mike and Linda Meier, and I took over the management of Bob’s company, Wills Wing. The business closed in 2021 after producing 29,368 gliders (not including our paragliders).
Fifteen major U.S. hang gliding manufacturers had one or more full-page ads in the June 1977 issue of this publication (then still titled Ground Skimmer), including eight from Southern California. Most had closed before ten more years elapsed; however, each had a rich history and made significant contributions to our sport and community. People like Pete Brock, designer of the Shelby Daytona Cobra Coupe (1965), left at the peak of his career to start Ultralight Products (UP). Pete recruited teenage designer Roy Haggard who, among many other achievements, later designed the UP Comet. Piloting a UP Comet II, Larry Tudor become the first pilot to break the 200-mile mark when he flew 221.5 miles on July 13, 1983, just 10 years after UP’s first standard Rogallo. Larry broke the next bar-
The United States Hang Gliding and Paragliding Association Inc. (USHPA) is an air sports organization affiliated with the National Aeronautic Association (NAA), which is the official representative of the Fédération Aeronautique Internationale (FAI), of the world governing body for sport aviation. The NAA, which represents the United States at FAI meetings, has delegated to the USHPA supervision of FAI-related hang gliding and paragliding activities such as record attempts and competition sanctions. The United States Hang Gliding and Paragliding Association, a division of the National Aeronautic Association, is a representative of the Fédération Aeronautique Internationale in the United States.
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rier just seven years later with a 303-mile distance and declared goal on July 3, 1990, on a Wills Wing HP AT 158 (now hanging in a museum in Elkhart, Kansas). Larry often talked with me about the 500-mile barrier, but Dustin Martin’s 2012 record of 475 miles will be tough to beat.
However, hang gliding began long before 1973 and the formation of USHGA. It’s controversial even to identify an origin with so many contributors from Dickenson (1963), Miller (1963), Palmer (1961), Rogallo (1948 and later), Bates (1908), Chanute (1896), Lilienthal (1891) and other dreamers of flight like Leonardo Da Vinci from history. Even my uncle built and flew a Bates-type “hang glider” as a teenager in 1927. Despite these numerous milestones, many recognize May 23, 1971, as the beginning of our era, on the day of the Otto Lilienthal Hang Glider Meet commemorating Otto Lilienthal’s 123rd birthday. As Frank Colver recounted, on the morning of the meet, “More hang gliders and hang gliding enthusiasts than anyone had even guessed existed showed up.”
That event catalyzed the Southern California Hang Glider Association (SCHGA) meetings, which regularly included people like Paul McCready (TIME magazine’s
engineer of the century and inventor of S2F theory) and Irv Culver (legendary Lockheed aerodynamicist). Ground Skimmer (later to become Hang Gliding Magazine, then Hang Gliding and Paragliding, and now USHPA Pilot) included articles from distinguished NASA scientists like R.T. Jones and Hewitt Phillips. These contributions were fundamental and essential for advancing our understanding of airworthiness, which was a preeminent concern with fatal accidents growing at an alarming rate.
Within two years, SCHGA developed the foundational administrative architecture that continues to serve USHPA today, including the regional representation with directors and committees to develop safety and training, a pilot rating system, competition structure, accident reviews, site management, and other critical issues. These meetings also spun off another group focused on airworthiness, which later became the Hang Glider Manufacturers Association (HGMA), the seed for other international airworthiness programs and even the consensus airworthiness standards more recently adopted by the FAA for light sport aircraft.
If I were to identify an individual who singularly contributed the most to the development of hang gliders worldwide, it would be Tom Price. He invented and developed the hang gliding test vehicle and shared it with everyone. His contributions to advancing structural integrity and un-
Angie Kennedy hang gliding Ute Pass in Colorado. A pilot paragliding Merriam Crater in Arizona. Pascal Joubert pilot speedflying the Big Horns in Montana.
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Martin Palmaz > Publisher executivedirector@ushpa.org Liz Dengler > Editor editor@ushpa.org Kristen Arendt > Copy Editor Greg Gillam > Art Director WRITERS Dennis Pagen Lisa Verzella Carl Weiseth
Ben White Audray Luck
Warren
PHOTOGRAPHERS
cover photos by Tom Galvin Brad Balser Seth
derstanding longitudinal stability through the test vehicle and analysis with Hewitt Phillips and Gary Valle made aerodynamic advances possible in the years following 1977. You cannot increase hand gliding or paragliding performance without the constraint of airworthiness, which consists of controllability, structural integrity, and stability. Forty-five years later, the test vehicle remains the best mechanism we have for evaluating longitudinal stability and structural integrity.
The exponential growth of hang gliding soon led to motorized applications, beginning with auxiliary power systems like the Soarmaster and more dedicated systems adapted to the Quicksilver, Fledgling, and Easy Riser rigid wings. With the widespread commercialization of these systems, it became increasingly apparent that federal regulation was unavoidable.
FAR part 103, which governs the operation of hang gliders and ultralights, was enacted and became effective in October 1982. Much could be said about this rule-making, but it is widely acknowledged that the expansive freedom of operations it preserved for hang gliding relied heavily on the extraordinary record of responsible self-governance demonstrated by USHGA and HGMA in the preceding years. This was a windfall of epic proportions at the very margin of the authority of the FAA to enact without congressional authorization, which USHPA has been essential in preserving for the last 40 years.
Although the roots of paragliding are contemporaneous with modern Rogallo-derivative hang gliding in the 1960s, the beginning of the sport didn’t develop until the late ‘80s in Europe. In the U.S., Fred Stockwell established the American
Author and current USHPA President Steve Pearson test flying the prototype XC7 in 1978.
We are the beneficiaries and custodians of an extraordinary confluence of events and people who enabled the freedoms and privileges that the free flight community enjoys today.
Paraglider Association (APA) in Salt Lake City in 1988 and was soon producing a full-feature color magazine and developing administrative programs that mirrored USHGA.
Rob, Mike, and I began flying paragliders between 1989 and 1990. We recognized the commonality between hang gliding and paragliding—the pilots, the flying sites, the soaring activity, other skills, and flight training requirements. It just didn’t make any sense to have two representative associations. Rob and I made several trips to SLC and eventually persuaded Fred to relinquish APA and support a merger with USHGA. Although there were tokens of resistance, USHGA leadership ratified the inclusion of paragliding at the November 1990 board meeting, and paraglider pilots soon realized all the benefits of USHGA programs for ratings, safety, training, competition, and, of course, site access. Fred became the chairman of the USHGA paragliding committee, but it took until 2006 before the membership voted for the name change to USHPA.
One thousand words aren’t enough to identify all the individuals who have made significant and enduring contributions to our community, much less detail who they were and what they did. We are the beneficiaries and custodians of an extraordinary confluence of events and people who enabled the freedoms and privileges that the free flight community enjoys today.
After all these years, I still fail to understand why the free flight experience isn’t
widely popular. Even as the barriers to accessibility and safety have improved, we still haven’t regained the public interest and engagement level of the ‘70s. Nevertheless, I remain optimistic because every pilot, regardless of experience, shares that same wonder as I do on every flight—what else compares to standing with a light breeze on your face and, with a few steps, climbing skyward? Even those with only a tandem or introductory lesson often consider it to be one of the most memorable experiences of their life and forever identify as hang gliders pilots.
Today, pilots are seemingly assaulted by imminent threats to our lifestyle, such as increasing costs, burdensome rules, and liability exposure—but these challenges are not new. Similar to previous challenges, we sometimes became distracted and overwhelmed with disagreements on how to handle these issues. However, this diversity of experience ultimately contributes to the best possible solutions and outcomes. We are better and stronger together despite ever-present disputes on policy and procedure.
There are endless opportunities to contribute to the aspirations that we all share—for improved safety, site security, community growth, and well-being. As in 1973, the best way to secure our future is to volunteer—whether as a mentor or observer, at an event, with a chapter, on an USHPA committee, or as a director. Imagine what you want for the next 50 years, and let’s work together to achieve it.
Steve Pearson President president@ushpa.org
Matt Taber Vice President vicepresident@ushpa.org
Jamie Shelden Secretary secretary@ushpa.org
Bill Hughes Treasurer treasurer@ushpa.org
Martin Palmaz Executive Director executivedirector@ushpa.org
Galen Anderson Operations Manager office@ushpa.org
Chris Webster Information Services Manager tech@ushpa.org
Anna Mack Membership Manager membership@ushpa.org
BOARD MEMBERS
(Terms End in 2023)
Julia Knowles (region 1)
Nelissa Milfeld (region 3)
Pamela Kinnaird (region 2)
Steve Pearson (region 3)
Designated Director 1 (TBD)
Designated Director 2 (TBD)
BOARD MEMBERS
(Terms End in 2024)
Charles Allen (region 5) Nick Greece (region 2) Stephan Mentler (region 4) Tiki Mashy (region 4)
What's your region? See page 63.
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EPIC 2 MOTOR
The popular Epic 2 EN-B model is now DGAC certified for motor flight. The BGD EPIC 2 MOTOR is “fun on steroids”. It’s a hybrid wing, which means you can fly it with a motor or without—the only difference is the riser set. The MOTOR version is delivered with paramotor risers which feature an efficient trimmer system with a wide speed range for cruising comfortably under power. The EPIC 2 MOTOR comes in three colors and includes motor risers. Contact your dealer for more information. More information: www.BGD-USA.com, Dale Covington +1 801-699-1462.
NIVIUK HAWK POD
Designed specifically to be the ideal choice when making the transition from an open leg to a pod harness, without a large rear fairing. The Hawk is stable, comfortable, and light (medium 3.8 kg). Finally, a harness which addresses different body types (long/short legs or torso) giving you the option to mix sizes between the harness section and the pod section to get the perfect fit. Every harness size has three pod options. Visit www.eagleparagliding.com for more information.
ADVANCE FASTPACK
The popular Advance FASTPACKs have been updated with new designs, colors and sizes. They are now offered in two sizes 160 L and 200 L and they start at 1.3 kg. They are available through Super Fly, Inc., www.superflyinc.com, +1 801-255-9595, or your local dealer.
FLUID WINGS LOKI 2
Fluid Wings introduces the Loki 2, a new entry level/recreational speedwing. Designed to make all avenues of speedflying accessible to any speedwing pilot, ranging in ability from the training hill to the most technical mountain terrain. Speedriding, speedflying, and speed-soaring are all in the Loki 2’s repertoire. It is constructed of hybrid materials to optimize weight and performance, including soft brake toggles for a comfortable grip and rear-riser steering for those steep descents. The Loki 2 risers have dual hookin points for pilots to choose the riser length of their choice. The wing’s overall balance from its ease of inflation, ease of kiting, precise control in flight, and strong flare make for a super fun and confidence inspiring experience. You can learn more about the Loki 2 at www.Fluidwings.com, and order via info@fluidwings.com and +1 888-24FLUID.
FLYMASTER BUMPER CASE
Now available for the new Flymaster GPS M and new Flymaster VARIO M is the bumper case to protect your instrument. Easy to mount whilst still giving access to the buttons. Exclusively available from Flymaster USA for $35. More info at www.flymasterusa.com or email directly Jugdeep@flymasterusa.com.
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NEW BGD HYPERFUNCTION JACKETS
BGD has released a new version of their popular HyperFunction puffy all-weather jacket. The new design features reinforced seams, weather-protective zips, zippered pockets, pit-zips, and a hood. Constructed with animal-free, ultra-light, synthetic down feather fill and nylon outer shell. The jackets come in two new colors: Scarlet Chili Red and Deep Sea Ice Blue. Available now from your local BGD dealer: www.BGD-USA. com, Dale Covington +1 801-699-1462.
NIVIUK ARROW POD HARNESS
A high-performance pod harness designed for XC adventures, and starting competition flying, weighing just 3.95 kg (size M). Details include powerpack pocket, suitable for cables of different electronic devices and a 4 L ballast storage pocket. The Arrow addresses different body types (long/short legs or torso) giving you the option to mix sizes between the harness section and the pod section to get the perfect fit. Every harness size has three pod options. Visit www.eagleparagliding.com for more information.
ADVANCE EPSILON DLS
awaited tenth version of the EPSILON is the DLS. It’s a true mid-B glider for a broad range of pilots. It is a durable light glider in DLS (durable lightweight structure) spirit from 3.5 kg. The successful EPSILON series conveys not only fun and enjoyment, but above all, safety. The ideal paraglider for recreational pilots available in Royal, Spectra, Fire and Gold. Available in a variety of sizes through Super Fly, Inc., www.superflyinc.com, +1 801-255-9595, or your local dealer.
ECHO 2
The ECHO 2 is made entirely from high quality and industry proven Porcher cloth, with sturdier cloth in the center panels where it is needed for additional strength and to ensure longevity. The ECHO 2 has the same webbing risers as on the EPIC 2, much easier to handle than Dyneema rope-style risers. They incorporate the same B/C steering system as on the EPIC 2, and similar to the BASE 2, allowing you to safely explore the entire bar travel. The ECHO 2 is designed to be accessible to lower-airtime pilots, and fun for all. Pilot feedback was key in helping design a wing that launches perfectly. No holding back or over-flying. It’s easy and relaxing, allowing pilots to maximize performance and fun. The ECHO 2 is a bit faster than the original and more dynamic. Long brake travel makes for a late stall point, yet has precise and direct handling like all BGD wings. Contact your nearest BGD-USA dealer for a free demo, or direct from BGD-USA: www. BGD-USA.com, +1 801-699-1462.
BGD ULTRA-LIGHT ANDA
BGD has a new, ultra-light hike-and-fly wing on its way, the BGD ANDA. Currently in certification, this new hike-and-fly fun-machine is targeted as an entry-level hike-and-fly, funfor-all EN-A wing, weighing in at 2.7 kg in the 21 m size. It has 37 cells with no mini-ribs and is expected to support a broad weight range with sizes 21, 23, 25, 27 and 29, and will be certified in extended weight ranges. The ANDA is constructed with sheathed lines and softlinks. A and B risers are made from Kevlar webbing, while the C risers are Dynema. Contact your local BGD dealer to get on the advance order list: www.BGD-USA. com, Dale Covington +1 801-699-1462
WOODY VALLEY CREST HARNESS
The Crest is a 1.98 kg (size M) reversible harness with a completely detachable rucksack. Great for hike-and-fly pilots as well as pilots wanting a light harness with no compromise on comfort. No front mount reserve needed since it’s under the seat reserve compartment, with separate leg support without seat board. The leg straps loop in the main carabiners to reduce weight. Visit www. eagleparagliding.com for more information.
PHI MAESTRO 2
With 76 cells, additional mini ribs, a new profile, wing tensioning, and other new technologies, the Maestro 2 delivers. This is Phi’s greatest leap in performance ever achieved from one model generation to the next. The stability of speed is confidence inspiring, and roll stability removes any unnecessary inefficiencies on glides. The Phi Promise has you covered for any damage in the first year of use through The Eagle Paragliding Repair Shop. Visit www.eagleparagliding. com for more information.
PHI R07 RISERS
These risers come standard on the Maestro 2. The R07 risers offer much better ergonomic function for pilots wanting to use the C-handle flying technique. These specialized risers are produced with different overall total lengths, and speed system length based on your Phi glider model and size. Phi continues its revolution to maximize performance, feel, and handling wherever it’s possible. Visit www. eagleparagliding.com for more information.
CHARLY POLARHEAT LIGHT
Warm, soft, and pliable battery heated gloves eliminate the threat of line tangles with long gauntlets, internal drawstrings, and flat integrated stoppers. Two battery pockets per glove give up to 10 hours of heating time. Made with a 3-layer windblocker softshell exterior, goat nappa leather on the palm, Polartec® Microfleece lining, and Primaloft® outer insulation to keep hands warm and dry. The Polarheat Light gloves are excellent for paragliding and ski touring. Available in sizes S, M, L, XL, and XXL through Super Fly, Inc., www.superflyinc.com, +1 801255-9595, or your local dealer.
GIN GRAPHITE JACKET
The Graphite jacket features the latest comfortemp® Thermal Insulation by Freudenberg, which offers an eco-friendly and easy care alternative to down. The jacket is designed for comfort in the air while avoiding overheating on the ground. It is 413 g (M size), and very compact. It comes in sizes XS, S, M, L, XL. In addition to the outer shell and insulating filling, it has a zippered inner chest pocket, outer chest pocket, two hand pockets, and elongated back and extra arm length. It’s available through Super Fly, Inc., www.superflyinc.com, +1 801-255-9595, or your local dealer.
ADVANCE AXCESS 5
The fifth generation of the extremely popular all-round harness AXESS is here. It has a plastic seatboard in hollow-chamber construction. Proven features such as the harness geometry, the protector system, and the size distribution remain unchanged. Many details have been refined and optimized. Available through Super Fly, Inc., www. superflyinc.com, +1 801-255-9595, or your local dealer.
XC TRACER MAXX 2 WITH FLARM
Unlike conventional variometers with delayed sink and lift tones, the XC Tracer Maxx II’s sensors follow a complicated mathematical procedure to eliminate this delay. Finding and centering thermals with a Maxx II is much easier than with a conventional variometer. The Maxx II has a real FANET including FLARM built in, which means Maxx II can also receive data from other FANET. Adding other Maxx 2 pilots to your screen field is a simple few clicks on the red button. The vario inputs can also be controlled with a remote, which is sold separately. Visit www.eagleparagliding.com for more information.
XC TRACER MINI 5 WITH FLARM
Don’t be surprised if you never have to charge your XC Tracer Mini V during a whole season! The vario has a built-in lithium-polymer battery which, fully charged, lasts for about 30 hours of continuous use. But as the battery is recharged during flight by the built-in solar cells, the autonomy is almost unlimited. The new Mini V also continuously transmits your position via FANET and FLARM. Visit www.eagleparagliding.com for more information.
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From Idea to Origin
The path to creating SkyGear Hub
by Shane Parreco
: Most of us would agree that learning to fly a paraglider is one of the most exciting and rewarding things humans can do with a bit of their time on this planet. Feeling the wind on your face while leaving the ground for the first time is thrilling and usually hooks us for life. I’ll never forget my first flights. I knew right away that I was always meant to do this kind of flying.
In 2009, my training started in an unusual way. I connected with a colorful, older paramotor instructor, and after a long and exciting phone call outlining the details, I officially started my flying career. At first, my instructor seemed like an unusual cross between Gandalf and Viper from the original Top Gun: equal parts impressive and eccentric. I quickly realized that he was further off the beaten path than I anticipated. Regardless, his introduction to the sky affected me profoundly, and I was hooked.
Soon after, I made my first pilgrimage to the Point of the Mountain, Utah and fell in love with everything paragliding—from the vibe at the hill before an epic sunrise to the sound and feel of a crispy new glider to
the smile that happens when you realize you’re the first one in the sky. It all felt like a dream that I hoped would never stop.
It was at the Point, almost 15 years ago, when the idea first struck me: How cool would it be if there was a way to research and compare gliders from every manufacturer and see them in a unified infographic layout? In my head, the visual looked similar to how most companies showcase their glider portfolio but built so that it would include every paraglider in the world.
Most of my new friends back then laughed at my wideeyed enthusiasm for such a crazy idea, but it stuck with me, and I eventually started to take steps to make it a reality. The way SkyGear Hub came to be is far less dreamy and took way more time, energy, effort, and talented people than I might ever have imagined, but the journey has easily been one of the most rewarding experiences in my life.
Before the spring of 2018, the closest I came to building a website was asking my one coder friend, Mike Wathen, if he would consider making something for fun. He usually obliged and used all kinds of words like ‘Drupal’ or ‘Javascript’, which meant nothing to me. So, to say I was a novice in web development was a bit of an understatement.
The event that set all of this into motion in 2018 was when I became a paragliding instructor. During my
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| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | TRAINING
training, I discussed the idea of building an online education resource for paraglider students with some of that same wideeyed enthusiasm from my early days of flying. But this time, it didn’t feel quite so impossible. As soon as we finished training, I began working on a website to host a student training syllabus and make educational material accessible for anyone learning to fly. The syllabus was written by Doug Stroop, Denise Reed, Marty DiVietti, and Chris Grantham, and after a couple of encouraging phone calls, it was clear the time to make this idea hap-
pen was now. Not long after the first basic version of the site launched in the fall of 2018, the requests for improvements from students and instructors started pouring in. Can we make it more interactive? Can we make the quizzes functional and record the answers? Can we put more pictures in the section about clouds and weather? What about video? Can our students log their flights? What about a P2 checklist? And that was just the beginning. It was clear that constant improvement and building additional functionality was the name of the game, and the time to start was yesterday. The workload was significant, and I needed consid-
USHPA PILOT 15
erable help to support an online training platform that worked well and had room to grow in the future. It started with just one part-time freelance developer, then two, then a dedicated engineer, and finally, a designer to help build the infographic gear research website. And so it went for several months until I got an email from a paraglider pilot in Oregon offering to help. That first call with Steve Roti would end up being one of the most important calls for the future of both websites and the small team we were building.
If you don’t already know him, Steve is one of the kindest humans you might ever meet. His experience in technology and database management is grand wizard
status. You might never know it because his passion for flying, nordic skiing, hiking, biking, and travel keeps him outdoors most of the time. However, when it comes to data modeling and database management, Steve is on a level most people don’t even know exists. I can say without a doubt that the SkyGear Hub and Glider Training websites would not have been possible without his guidance, insight, support, and many hours of coding, troubleshooting, and brainstorming.
With Steve’s expertise lighting the path for our small bootstrapped team, we set clear goals for getting both sites ready to introduce to the world. Early versions of the Glider Training platform have been around since my feeble attempts in 2018, but the SkyGearHub.com and improved GliderTraining.org websites officially launched in early summer of 2022. The response from the community has been amazing, and we see more students and schools joining the platform every month. Ultimately, my goal has always been to make something that would positively impact the whole free flight community. SkyGear Hub has become a platform where you can research almost every glider, harness, and reserve. It is a place to visually understand how you fit your gear and learn about other brands an all-in-one place to access links to equipment reviews and gear manufacturers, and a way to find the Glider Training site that provides access to educational materials and allows people to sign up for online courses with some of the world’s top pilots and instructors. Above all, it serves our mission is to encourage people to approach the world of flying with curiosity and a desire to learn more.
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Steve Roti.
USHPA PILOT 17
2022 Highland Challenge
A race-to-goal mini-comp recap
by Charles Allen
: The Highland Challenge (HC) is an unsanctioned race-to-goal (R2G) hang gliding competition aimed at gathering friends to fly competitive but fun tasks in a safe environment where pilots can learn from each other. The first HC was held in 2012 at Highland Aerosports in Ridgely, Maryland, comprised four weekends from late spring to early fall, and was scored like any other R2G competition.
When Highland Aerosports closed in 2016, the sport and the event lost an important focal point. However, the HC continued, and I changed the format from an aerotow competition to a mountain competition with basecamp at my weekend house in Liverpool, Pennsylvania. In 2021, we resurrected the aerotow format and decided to have it span eight consecutive scored flying days plus one practice day.
Keeping the event unsanctioned had some advantages. Specifically, we could focus on making it fun and fair without dealing with time-consuming processes and procedures. For example, all pilots should have the opportunity for a good start regardless of launch order. Though not enforced, we encourage the first pilot to be towed to a thermal regardless of tow height or time on tow. The following pilots are then towed to the first pilot and encouraged to pin off when in the soarable lift. The last pilots are towed to the main gaggle with no required pin-off altitude and as close to the edge of the start circle as possible. This methodology ensures a better chance of getting all pilots flying together on course in less time. In 2022, I opted to continue with the aerotow format for another friendly event.
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| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | COMPETITION
Highland Challenge 2022
The 2022 HC started on June 3 and was spectacular; it was the best week of flying I’ve ever had on the Delmarva Peninsula. We towed from a private grass airstrip in Chestertown, Maryland, about 16 miles NNW of Ridgely—the former home of Highland Aerosports and the East Coast Championship (ECC). The field is situated on farmland and has a hanger with power and water, so it can accommodate both tents and campers. The Delmarva Peninsula has similar weather conditions to Florida but on a smaller scale; the Chesapeake Bay is on the west of the Peninsula, and the Atlantic Ocean is on the east, creating a convergence zone with cummies often filling the middle.
Climbs are typically close together and soft, peaking at 400-600 fpm on a good day. The region is flat cropland with no livestock, and few properties have fences or locked gates, so there are abundant spacious LZs, and retrieves are seamless. The first week of June 2022 had ideal weather, and the crops were low, so even the corn fields were landable. This year we only had six pilots participate despite having room for 12—though a few local pilots stopped by to ground crew and wind dummy. We had two Dragonflys on site, but we only had enough pilots competing to justify hiring one full-time tug pilot. However, Ric Niehaus, one of the competitors, was gracious enough to tow a few pilots before flying the task himself. Additionally, some local pilots stopped by and did a few tows in the spare tug.
Task 1
It was a perfect day for this region. Unfortunately, an active temporary flight restriction (TFR) limited our course options since President Biden was at his Rehoboth beach house. We had to under call the task and decided on a 76km dogleg task to the southeast. The first leg was 26km to the east, followed by a 50km leg south alongside the TFR, leaving us an 8km buffer. Goal was Magfar, another grass strip often used in the
late ECC.
I launched first, followed by Knut Ryerson and John Simon, and we climbed to almost 7,000 ft. We were starting high with good-looking clouds on the course line, so I led out with John slightly behind and Knut below as the rest of the field was just getting airborne. We were finding good thermals and getting high for the region.
Around this time, Jim Messina and Pete Lehman were at cloudbase in the start circle about to go on course. However, Ric Niehaus decked 2km from the tow field landing at Ben’s estate. Ben, a former HG pilot who owns the tow field, was kind enough to let us host the event at his place. The extra tug was quickly dispatched to Ric’s location for a relight, and a volunteer ferried him a cart saving him from attempting a foot launch aerotow. This clearly would be against the rules in a sanctioned comp, but without those restrictions, Ric got back in the air and even made goal. Back on course, Knut was having instrument issues, but John and I tagged the first turnpoint then flew the whole 50km second leg to goal together. However, John left slightly before me at the top of the last thermal. Though I could have easily shadowed him from above on the final glide, guaranteeing me a day win, I made a strategic mistake. I opted to fly a straight line to goal, which was left of his line. Unfortunately, my line had more sink, and I had to slow down while his buoyant line allowed him to pull on more speed and beat me to goal by about two and a half minutes.
Five of the six competitors landed at goal, including John, who won the day followed by me in a close second. Despite missing the turnpoint due to instrument troubles, Knut did land at goal. Moreover, conditions were so good that I believe everyone set their site altitude records of over 8,000 ft. After a day like this, we figured the rest of the tasks must be downhill.
Task 2
With a weak forecast for Task 2, we set a short 37km dogleg to the north, which proved tricky despite its
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The participants of the 2022 Highland Challenge.
length.
Pete Lehmann towed first, followed by Jim, Knut, John, me, and Ric. Jim and John climbed to cloudbase and started towards the first turnpoint, followed by Pete, who eventually got low and opted to fly back to the tow field instead of completing the task.
I was in the start circle and saw Ric in a nice climb under a decent-looking cloud downwind to the north, albeit off course line, but I opted to glide to it. I arrived low to a dissipating cloud and broken zero to 50fpm lift. With no other options, I changed gears and worked the light lift until it finally turned on. Soon after, I saw 20+ soaring birds nearby and joined them—after 25 minutes, I was able to climb to 5,500 ft.
Though it was a bit late in the day to be starting a task, I pushed forward. I glided down the course line to a cloud and connected with the thermal just 1,000 ft away from the first turnpoint. However, since I was down to 2,200 ft., I decided to take the climb and drift downwind instead of pushing 1,000 ft. upwind and hoping I would find a climb after tagging the turnpoint.
Around this time, Ric had decked it about three-quarters of the way to the turnpoint, Knut opted to land at the tow field, and Pete, after a low save from 850ft., flew back to the tow field as well. With the challenging conditions, pilots were dropping like flies.
At almost 5 p.m., I tagged the first turnpoint and started towards goal. The day was getting very soft. As far as I could see, there was only one cloud left which luckily
was right on course line to goal. As I glided, I watched as it slowly fell apart; I arrived at 2,000 ft., but luckily there was still lift. As I slowly climbed in the light lift, I monitored my required L/D to goal as I drifted downwind. (This is my favorite part of the day when you know you’re about to have goal in reach.) Once I had goal made with an under a 10:1 required glide ratio I went on final glide.
Upon arrival at goal, I heard Jim and John (still airborne) chatting on the radio, and they directed me to land in a huge field about 2km past the goal cylinder. It was a stretch to reach as I had to fly over high-voltage power lines but I was lured by the prospect of a waiting driver, wind direction briefing, and cold beer. Upon arrival, I searched the edge of the field, but there was no Jim, no John, no driver, and no beer. Jim and John had hooked a thermal at goal and decided to attempt to fly back to the tow field. They flew about 36km and landed just a few kilometers short.
While not as good as the first day, everyone had fun, with John again winning, followed by Jim, and me in third.
Task 3
The weather for Task 3 called for a blue day with strong winds. However, in our desire to have an easy retrieve, we opted for an upwind triangle instead of a downwind dogleg which would have been the smarter choice for the conditions.
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Jim, Knut, and I were out on the course first and flew together for one thermal past the first turnpoint at Taylor. The wind was a major obstacle—we were drifting 8km downwind with every thermal and barely making ground. John had a zipper issue, went back to land, and opted not to have a second flight. Pete packed it in around Taylor and flew back to the tow field.
As for Jim, Knut, and I, we were together until a few kilometers past Taylor, where Knut missed a thermal and glided as far as he could before landing. I managed to stay with Jim until 13km from RT314, the second turnpoint. He found a reasonable climb, but I wasn’t able to connect. It was late in the day, the lift was weak, and the winds were strong. While I was drifting downwind away from RT314 and circling in zero sink, I decided that completing the course wasn’t attainable and I would have more fun flying back to the tow field.
As I returned, the bay breeze was in full effect, giving me yet another headwind. However, I made it back with altitude to spare—Pete radioed the wind direction and handed me a beer after landing.
No one made goal, but Jim won the day, landing shortly after tagging the RT314 turnpoint.
Task 4
The weather for Task 4 looked good, with light wind, modest lift, cummies, and cloudbase forecast to be 3,500 ft.—a respectable forecast for the eastern shore. We set a 57km triangle with goal at Ben’s house.
The beginning of the day involved a series of low saves. Though we started out climbing the blue, there were clouds to the east in the convergence zone, and we were clearly on the edge. Decisions at the start of this day were quite varied—Pete went back to the start thermal for a relight before heading onward, I decided to glide downwind on course to a cloud that seemed reachable and in the convergence zone, and Jim saw a wispy to the southwest, and headed for it managing to keep the tow field in glide. He connected with a nice
climb and was on his way.
I had a few good climbs but kept finding myself low and needing to scratch out. At one point was at a mere 600 ft. before finding some zero sink to search in. I managed to change gears quickly and having just pulled off a low save from 800 ft. I patiently worked the broken zero to 50 fpm lift, keenly focused on every foot of altitude gain. It took me 5 minutes to climb 200 ft. staying very flat and not banking despite occasional spikes of 100 fpm. I felt like a frog jumping from lily pad to lily pad. After breaking 1,200 ft. the thermal came together and thirteen minutes later I topped out at 3,200 ft.
Jim, John, and I were equidistant from Temple, the
first turn point. However, I was 4km left of the course line and 1,000 ft. below the others. Given my lower altitude, I opted to continue flying downwind and slightly off course line to the next cloud, hoping I could get back on course once higher, and I found a nice thermal that brought me to 3,200 ft. There was a nice stretch of fields going through a forested section heading to Tem-
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Gliders in goal after Task 1.
Post Task 4 merriment.
ple, which I followed like a road on glide getting down to 900 ft. before once again finding broken zero lift. I noticed some eagles circling in the area, headed over to them, and quickly got established in the 300-400 fpm core, which took me back to 3,400 ft.
As I tagged the Temple turn point, I saw Pete out front thermaling, which was a huge relief. After flying for almost an hour and a half by myself, mostly down low, I was excited for some company. We shared the thermal, but after reaching 3,600 ft, the climb started to fall apart, so I left Pete to go on glide to a nice looking
cloud 2km left of course line bringing me closer to the Ridgely turnpoint. As I continued, climbs were stronger and more consistent.
Once over the familiar fields surrounding Ridgely, where I have flown numerous times at Highland Aerosports, a flood of memories came back. I knew the fields well and had a high degree of confidence I’d make goal. I tagged the Ridgely turnpoint, found a good thermal on the final leg, and headed for goal. I arrived fourth into goal, with Pete showing up 20 minutes later.
With 5 of 6 of us in goal, everyone was ecstatic. It was a challenging day, but, at least for me, it was the most rewarding flight of the week. The LZ couldn’t be better; we landed on a beautifully cut lawn next to Ben’s huge saltwater pool. We all put on our bathing suits and raided Ben’s fridge.
John won the day yet again, followed by Jim and then Ric.
Task 5
Task 5 was the last day of the comp, and the forecast was perfect for a beach run. Biden had
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Charles Allen landing at the beach for Task 5.
Pilots at the beach after Task 5.
TASK 5: We all flew over the ocean and did wingovers for the Dewey Beach crowd prior to landing.
MAY 18-21, 2023
left his Rehoboth beach house, so there was no longer a TFR impeding our task. Encouraged by the great forecast, we packed our bathing suits.
The task was a 90.5km dogleg to a turnpoint at Willav, a grass strip, followed by goal at Indian Beach. In the spirit of being a fun comp, we put an 8km radius around Indian Beach so pilots could make goal and land at the last viable field before having to fly over the unlandable town of Rehoboth on route to the beach, making the distance to Indian Beach just under 100k.
Tom McGown, a local pilot not in the meet, joined us for the day, launched first to wind dummy, and once established in lift, we all promptly started launching. We had some nice consistent climbs that took us quite high. I had to pull out one low save after a long glide, but with patience, I managed to make it back up to 5,900 ft.
Jim made goal first, followed by Pete a few minutes later, and I was 10 minutes after them. I watched Jim and Pete land at Indian Beach from afar and radioed for them to snap pictures of me landing. Indian Beach
is private, so it was sparsely populated compared to the dense summer crowds on Dewey Beach just up the coast. We all flew over the ocean and did wingovers for the Dewey Beach crowd prior to landing. John landed about 10 minutes after me and, despite having the fastest time on the course, was third for the day because he took the 2:15 p.m. start clock. Though Knut and Tom didn’t land on the beach, they both made goal landing close to each other at nice fields just inside the 8km Indian Beach goal radius.
While the 2021 HC was terrific, 2022 raised the bar. Not only were many personal bests had, but many genuinely unique flying achievements were made, cementing memories that will be cherished and last a lifetime. Despite being a comp, the sense of camaraderie at the HC differs from other events, making it more fun than larger sanctioned comps. In the air, everyone helps each other on the radio, and on the ground everyone is included in the festivities whether in group dinners or sharing stories around the campfire.
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DUNE AND AEROTOW COMPETITION • DEMO GLIDERS • FILM FESTIVAL
HANGGLIDINGSPECTACULAR.COM 51 st 51 st SCHEDULE & DETAILS
Personal lessons and advancements in the Valle del Cauca
by Angela BICKAR, OGNJEN GRUJIC, BENJAMIN SMITH, JOE POPPER
: In the winter of 2022, four of us (along with a few others) signed up with Eagle Paragliding for a memorable flying tour in Colombia. We had 7-14 days of flying with Rob Sporrer and his team of exceptional guides—Jeff Shapiro, Marty DeVietti, Reavis Sutphin-Gray, Austin Cox, Brian Howell, Logan Walters, and Chris Garcia. The tour included daily coaching, debriefs, and the opportunity for in-air coaching via XC tandems. Evening presentations covered thermalling, gaggle flying, weather, the mental aspects of flying, and more. We were learning all the time, everywhere—it felt like drinking from a fire hose!
We all thoroughly enjoyed our experiences in Colombia and decided to collaborate on an article to
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| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | GATHERINGS
Towasis tow training weekend at Laney’s Airfield, NC. Photo by Jared Yates.
COLUMBIA
of the
share our highlights and key takeaways. Flying in the beautiful Valle del Cauca and landing between vineyards, sugar cane, and corn fields was an incredible experience. The locals were friendly and always there to welcome us with big smiles and offer us a ride back to the hotel. We also enjoyed connecting with unique, interesting people
2022
Sunrise from the hotel. Photo by Joe Popper. Marty DeVietti kicking his eaglets out
nest at the Los Tanques launch. Photo by Benjamin Smith.
Eagle Guides (first bottom, left to right: Austin Cox, Marty DeVietti, Brian Howell, Jeff Shapiro, Chris Garcia, Flaco, Logan Walters, Reavis Sutphin-Gray. Photo by a local.
and making new friends on the tour. Flying-wise, we all made significant leaps in our progression. We flew long and far, became more efficient at thermalling, got comfortable with landing out, and reached our personal bests.
However, each of us also faced a personal struggle that affected our flying. Our sport is incredibly mental, and for many, the psychological aspects of our sport are the most challenging components to master. A big part of the Colombia tour was dedicated to the mental aspects of flying—this was where the Eagle crew truly excelled.
The four of us combined efforts to relate our personal mental struggles with flying, how they affected our flying and progression, and how we overcame or worked towards overcoming them. We each had a great experience working with our Eagle instructors and the incredibly supportive community of pilots with whom we had the pleasure of spending the tour. We hope the community will find our stories insightful, relatable, and, for those who face similar struggles, helpful in overcoming them.
Ognjen Grujic
Personal challenges: task overload, motion sickness, positivity
Throughout my flying career, I have faced many obstacles that hindered my progression. The one obstacle I have struggled with most was air sickness which always set in at about 45-60 minutes in thermic air. It prevented me from truly diving into the XC game for a long time. I tried it all! I stopped drinking alcohol, made sure to get a good eight hours of sleep, and I drank three liters of water a day to avoid dehydration. While the problem became less severe, it did not disappear. I started to believe that the problem was physical and that there was nothing I could do to entirely overcome it.
I went to Colombia with a lot of excitement but also with a ton of fear. I worried I might have to cut my flights short due to air sickness and would miss out on perfectly flyable days.
The smoke from a burning field makes an excellent wind indicator. Photo by Benjamin Smith.
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“We were learning all the time, everywhere—it felt like drinking from a fire hose.”
Throughout the clinic, the Eagle instructors talked a lot about the importance of being positive, having a good attitude, and being kind to oneself. Most importantly, they shared their personal struggles with flying and the mental tricks they used to overcome them. I loved what I was learning, and it helped me grow tremendously. One of the key takeaways for me was the importance of a positive attitude and self-talk, especially when the monkey brain turns on in rough air.
Toward the end of the first week, I got a chance to put this advice to good use. The air got rough, the monkey brain wanted me to land, and I could feel some mild motion sickness setting in. I calmed myself down by deciding to postpone landing for another 45 minutes. With some calming thoughts and self-talk, it worked! The air sickness did not get worse, and I continued flying.
I took one thermal after the other and ended up on the other side of the valley. A glance at my watch revealed that I was way past the 45 minutes I had promised myself. Soon after, things got rough again. I got low with a few landing options and started overanalyzing the landings with respect to a potential retrieve. The air sickness got to me super fast. I threw up over my shoulder and landed soon after. Even with this rough ending, I was shocked to see that my flight had lasted 2 hours and 38 minutes, my new personal record.
Evidently, my motion sickness problem was not physical—I took control of it with a positive attitude and self-talk. Towards the end of the clinic, after many discussions with the instructors, I realized that several factors contributed to my issue. I suffered from self-induced task overload, and my motivation for flying focused too much on the numbers game rather than the journey and the joy of flight.
Identifying the core of the issue helped me to resolve it quickly. I started flying with a big smile and enjoyed every second in the air. I started seeing each flight as an adventure, no matter how long it was. I also saw my progression as a journey rather than a competition. Following this experience, I had multiple long flights without air sickness, but I also had three consecutive days of sledders that I loved. The third one was particularly memorable with a beautiful onehour hike out. I crawled under a barbed wire fence, jumped over streams, and hiked through the fields.
The new me enjoyed it all, while the old me would have kicked the rocks and felt bad because of the sledder. Positivity works!
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Pilots Jeff Shapiro and Charles Chaffee walking past a sugar cane field after landing. Photo by Benjamin Smith. Cumulus clouds above and endless landing options below. Photo by Benjamin Smith.
Angela Bickar
Personal challenges: comparison, letting go of expectations, changing the narrative This trip was my second to Colombia with the Eagle crew. I love the tours because they enable me to surround myself with exceptional pilots and like-minded individuals. They challenge me to leave my comfort zone and make leaps in my paragliding progression.
I have been flying on and off for seven years, starting when my daughter was just a baby. I’ve had many memorable flights but also had some setbacks. My most significant setback was my reserve toss in June 2021 at Woodrat, Oregon. This was the first time it hit home that I was not invincible. It made me question why I fly and if the risks in this sport make sense for me as a mom. I am still working on rebuilding my confidence and bump tolerance.
I went to Colombia, anticipating this to be a challenge, but I was optimistic and still hoping for personal bests. However, the flights were not happening, at least not how I wanted them to. On day six, my teammate Ognjen and I landed early after a flight of only 12 minutes. I thought that by this point in the tour, I should be flying better, longer, and farther. As I was packing up my wing, tears filled my eyes. I felt impostor syndrome and was overwhelmed thinking about how everyone was progressing faster than me. I tried to heed the lesson that comparison is the killer of joy, but in the moment, it was difficult to rise above the emotions.
On our hike out, Ognjen reminded me that I could change the narrative. I took his advice to reframe the day and focused on the positives: I successfully parked the wing on a slope in a tight spot; I could celebrate a good launch, safe landing, and my growing confidence in landing out.
It was great timing that our guides, Chris Garcia and Marty DeVietti, gave a talk on the mental aspects of flying that evening. They emphasized a growth mindset: the belief that, with time, effort, and practice, we can improve. We can see challenges as opportunities to improve and use setbacks as a springboard to success. They also spoke about letting go of expectations and outcomes. Like flying the day and not the desire, Colombia was a reminder for me to let go of the pilot I was last
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LEFT: The hike up to launch. Photo by Joe Popper. RIGHT: The streets and surrounding hills of La Unión, a great place to find roasted chicken! Photo by Benjamin Smith.
summer and to embrace the pilot I am now.
Many of the same themes are echoed in my guide Jeff Shapiro’s book recommendation: “Meditations” by Marcus Aurelius. “Meditations” led me to discover additional books on the wisdom of Stoic philosophy by Ryan Holiday: “The Obstacle Is the Way,” “Ego Is the Enemy,” and “The Daily Stoic.” When friends ask about highlights from Colombia, I share that I am most grateful for these transformative lessons that have given me a mindset that serves me well in paragliding as well as in my personal and professional life.
Benjamin Smith
Personal challenge: team flying is not for me, yet … Have you ever heard of a new pilot doubling their hours on a single trip to Colombia? That’s what happened to me this year. As a relatively new P2, I came into the 2022 trip with 18 hours, and I left with 36 and some new personal best flights. My goal for the trip was to get more hours, and I succeeded in that respect.
We received fantastic training from the Eagle instructors, and I valued all of it. But how could I apply those grand ideas to my beginner-level skills? Team flying, for instance, is an excellent concept that Eagle strives to incorporate in their XC teaching and radio coaching. When team flying, the more pilots you have sampling air, the greater the chance of finding the best lift. However, for this to work, you need everyone to stay together, flying at the same speed and altitude.
In Colombia, I tried to stay with the team, but I found myself repeatedly arriving late to the party,
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PWC pilot magic. Photo by Reavis Sutphin-Gray.
A gaggle of pilots working a thermal in the flats between La Union and La Victoria. Photo by Benjamin Smith.
angry), I realized I had to fly my way and at my speed. I discovered that I should do things like top out every thermal, keep recycling until I have someone (or something) marking lift for me, or even retreat to lift if nothing is developing out front. This strategy kept me in the upper half of the sky, where it’s easier to stay in lift.
It started coming together for me on my last day in Colombia. I found myself deep over steep terrain, and I had not seen any other pilots for the better part of two hours—they had left me behind because I was recycling so much.
After being on glide for about 10 minutes, I realized that if I didn’t find lift soon, I was looking at some challenging landing options. Everything below me was shaded out except for a cone-shaped hill next to a winding mountain road. The sun was illuminating this spot. It looked like a perfect little thermal trigger. I could imagine the lifting air dripping off of it. I headed straight for it, and voilà, I found lift. Though it was weak, I managed to gain about 500 feet before I spotted some birds and went to join their climb. Pretty soon, we were all skying out.
I allowed my wing to bite and steer toward the lift, and my vario sang. As I climbed, I found myself wondering where the birds went. I looked left, right, forward, and behind. When I finally looked up, I saw a big black bird soaring one meter above my wing, at the same speed, in the same direction, and maintaining an exact distance from my wing. We flew together for a couple of minutes before separating. What an extraordinary moment! There were no other pilots, just birds, finding a single trigger point above scary terrain. It was a magical day for me, redeeming all of the frustration and anger from the mistakes and bomb-outs of the previous days. I developed new strategies and regained perspective.
At this stage, I’m trying to get long flights to build hours, and I need to stay high in the sky to give myself the best chance. In taking my time and flying at my speed, I am finding I can stay in the air a lot longer and discover things I couldn’t if I were trying to keep up with the team. I’m looking forward to the day when I have the skills to team fly and knock off big XC flights with others, but for now, I am content to fly slower and stay up longer.
Joe Popper
Personal challenge: focus on the accomplishments, not the perceived failures Colombia can be whatever experience you want. If you are a beginner, it is a great place to improve your skills and initiate the XC experience. For intermediate and advanced pilots, it is a place to go big. Valle del Cauca is huge, with opportunities to fly far in almost any direction. In my first year, nearly every flight was a personal best, with the next day being even bigger and better. My skills
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were a bit off this year due to what I call COVID rust, but I still had an amazing time. The general progression of the day in Colombia was to launch around 10 a.m. into moderate lift. Launch sits at 5,300 feet, and cloudbase sits at 5,500-6,000 feet at that time of day. As the day progresses, base will slowly rise to 10,000-12,000 feet (on good days). During my trip this year, my max altitudes were 8,000 to 9,000 feet, and my flights averaged 2-4 hours. Others in my group got higher and flew farther. This year, it rained a lot in the morning, which made the early flying marginal, and I had several days where I struggled to stay up and find lift. On other days, I hung in with the big dogs for the whole day.
However, I spent too much time on negative thinking. I had several days where my group got low. I worked hard to focus on coring the thermal and flying where my fellow pilots were. Yet invariably, I would sink out, and the group would continue. This pattern continued enough that I began to give up sooner each time. When you are sitting on the ground watching your friends fly off, it’s so easy to become self-critical. I failed to focus on the other days when I would be the first to cloudbase and watch my friends catch up. I only focused on the negative and the self-criticism, and I didn’t take the time to recognize those accomplishments.
My fellow authors seemed faster at recognizing the need to be positive. For me, self-reflection happened during the writing of this article. I found I need to focus on the long list of successful accomplishments that occurred during an amazing flight and enjoy the journey. To put this in perspective, on a day where I missed a low save, I was joined on the ground by a highly rated world-class comp pilot who also missed his low save. It happens. Focus on the positive, learn the lesson of the day, and move past that negativity.
Conclusion
In coming together to write this article, comparing our experiences highlighted our shared mental struggles. We learned that reframing our experiences positively and welcoming challenges enabled us to grow. The challenge and struggle keeps us coming back, and we are grateful for the journey.
to right, top
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Left
to bottom: Ognjen Grujic, Marty DeVietti, Eric Kurzhals, Dave Pennington and Shaun Wallace.
2022 GLOBAL RESCUE XREDROCKS
by Gavin McClurg | photos by Ben Horton
: Hike-and-fly racing has been popular in Europe for almost two decades. The Red Bull X-Alps kicked it off in 2003, then races like the X-Pyr, Bornes to Fly, EigerTour, and VercoFly came into the mix in the following years. Now, dozens of others are happening across the continent, even in winter. Their popularity boomed even more when COVID shut down all the chairlifts and gondolas in 2020, turning just about every European pilot into a hike-and-fly pilot.
But here in the U.S., hike-and-fly racing hasn’t had the same trajectory—this is likely, at least partially, due to the terrain. Launches and nice places to top land are ubiquitous in the Alps. In North America, not so much. Our terrain is more treed, more rocky, more nasty, more private land, and way less accessible—it’s just gnarlier! However, after attending the Red Rocks Fly-In for a few years in southern Utah, I started thinking it might be possible to run a hike-and-fly race in the U.S.
Pilots launch day 2. Ben Abruzzo and Rob Curran stay high (and in color!), day 3.
I experienced remarkably reliable weather at the end of September and incredible cloudbase even that late in the season. Plus, the fall colors were a mind-boggling backdrop.
The potential for a race glimmered on the horizon for me, but most of the credit for the vision of a hike-andfly event goes to Stacy Whitmore, a local pilot in south-
ern Utah. While I agreed that flying in southern Utah is nothing short of epic, I didn’t have his conviction that it could work as a hike-and-fly arena. But Whitmore, having pioneered many of the launches in the area, saw the possibilities. His dream was to create an event that would attract some of the big-name European pilots to share both their abilities and methods, allowing our community to rub shoulders with some of the best in the world.
He asked me how we could get the Europeans to come. I responded, “Big prize money and good speaking fees!” And thus, the XRedRocks was born. The 2021 event featured two divisions—Pro and Adventure, and we landed on a format unique to hike-and-fly racing that, to my knowledge, hasn’t been done before: a three-day stage race. Each day, all participants would start together and race towards a declared goal. Each day would be scored as its own race, but the three days would be cumulative.
Day 1 racers take off on the first hike across Poverty Flats. Ari Delashmutt and the rest setting off on day 2.
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So, in theory, you could have a bad day and still win overall.
And then COVID hit. For the inaugural 2021 XRedRocks, Europeans weren’t allowed to travel to the U.S., so it was strictly a North American affair. But the weather was perfect; Utah did indeed work for hike-and-fly racing, and we had an awesome event. In the Pro division, Matt Dadam took home five grand in cash, followed by Bill Belcourt, and five-time X-Alps legend Honza Rejmanek. The tasks favored pilots who
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Gavin McClurg sets up the day. Looking into the Koosharem Valley, on the first launch on day 3.
TOP LEFT: Local ripper Lindsey Ripa takes to the skies. RIGHT: Aaron Duragoti soars over the autumn colors.
had great flying skills over those who had a fast ground game.
For the 2022 event, we had a race that had minimal resemblance to the previous year. We updated the name to Global Rescue XRedRocks, as we successfully brought on a title sponsor. We also managed to get some of the biggest names in the sport to attend: Italian pilot Aaron Durogati, a six-time Red Bull X-Alps athlete and the only pilot to have won the Superfinal twice, he holds several records including the Asia distance record—a 308 km FAI whopper in the Himalayas; Swiss pilot Patrick Von Känel, who placed second in the 2021 Red Bull X-Alps; French pilot Tim Rochas, a veteran world cup pilot and test pilot for Niviuk; and
Unfortunately, the weather in 2022 was about as brutal as it could get. A hurricane off the coast of California (which is pretty much unheard of) and a series of hurricanes and tropical depressions in the Atlantic combined to make for wet and windy weather all the way into Utah. The weather made task setting challenging and safety a serious concern.
On Day 1, our weather window for flying was short. We knew overdevelopment was guaranteed; it was just a matter of exactly when. A challenging course was set
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Frenchman Tanguy Renoud-Goud, who, until recently, held the world record for the most vertical climbed and flown in a single day and who will be a rookie in the 2023 X-Alps.
Swiss pilot and X-Alps legend Patrick Von Känel enjoying the colors of Utah.
starting at Poverty Flats, where the athletes would have to climb almost 3,000 ft. over several kilometers, launch quickly and fly down to the main LZ in Monroe. They would then have to decide to carry on by foot over 40 kilometers to goal near the town of Salinas or make another 2,500 ft. hike to the Cove launch and try their luck racing against the weather.
I estimated the fastest anyone could reach the first launch would be 90 minutes. Durogati showed up in 67 minutes, smiling and not even breathing hard. Rochas was hot on his heels and launched in under three minutes (give that a try— it’s really hard). Then a slew of athletes (including Eric “the Hammer” Klammer, who was the first to the top every day of the 2021 race and now had some competition), many of whom had participated in 2021 and had clearly taken training for 2022 seriously, were off the hill in quick succession. Nearly everyone who made it to the Monroe LZ chose the flying option from Cove, and the race was on. Durogati and Rochas had a comfortable lead, but as the steep and rocky
hike to Cove wore on, Durogati went full beast mode and pulled well ahead. I have raced with Durogati many times over the years and have seen how he moves. He’s always magnificent uphill, but this performance was in the ludicrous category. It was inspiring stuff.
Durogati made mincemeat of the 40 km flight to goal, landing a solid 20 minutes ahead of Rochas but declared the flying tricky. Large cells were dropping virga in our vicinity. Thankfully the fast-growing nimbus clouds shaded everything out so quickly that the energy backed off and allowed many pilots to thread the needle and make goal in the air. Goal in both divisions rapidly filled up with extremely happy and talkative pilots thrilled with their adventure and happy to be on the ground. Unfortunately, many athletes who were not fast on the ground didn’t make it to Cove before it was blown out and couldn’t launch. For some, it was a lot of walking and a long day. The day was short for those who could move fast on the ground early and make it into the air.
The weather on Day 2 was even worse, with higher forecasted winds and a very energetic sky. A task was set that would be physically demanding and keep the flying below
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Chris Moody and Jason Wallace grinding uphill.
the nuclear winds aloft. I estimated the fittest athletes could complete the course by 2 p.m. Again, I was way off. Durogati again decimated the ground game, crunching the first hike of 3,600 ft. and several kilometers in 1 hr. 32 min., with Rochas and Klammer just behind.
From launch below Monroe Peak, the athletes had to fly down to Poverty Flats, tag a ground turnpoint, and then either race into goal back in Monroe by foot or make a short hike and go for it in the air. Durogati chose the latter option and was in goal just before 11 a.m. Meanwhile, Isaac Lammers and Will Buckner charged insanely hard in the Adventure division, completing the physical course in 1st and 2nd (they would have been in 4th and 6th, respectively, in the Pro class)! Once again, the day punished those who were not fast enough on the ground. Launch got blown out 90 minutes after Durogati launched, and many pilots ended their day there.
The task setting got no easier on the final day of the race. High winds were again forecasted, but thankfully overdevelopment would not be as much of a risk. We decided to move the entire operation to the east and do an out-and-back route in the Koosharem Valley, a place with more wild animals than people (one of the turnpoints was near a ghost town).
Many of the most hearty participants on Day 3 covered well over a marathon on the ground. Most only got one short flight. Walking against the wind defined the day. But as we closed on the deadline, suddenly, the wind began to ease, and a few lucky (and very fast) pilots who had charged hard on the ground found themselves in a position to get back into the air and grab an absolute gem of a flight.
Canadian and 2023 X-Alps competitor James Elliot won the task in incredible style, flying nearly 60km in what he described as “magic air.” He landed at goal a comfortable 20 minutes before the mandatory land-by time. Being at goal and witnessing the elation on James’ face was something I’ll never forget. Thrilled barely describes it! Durogati landed in second, just a few hundred meters short of goal about 40 minutes later, declaring the flight “one of the best of my life!” We then learned he, Rochas, and Jared Scheid had diverted from their course and lost about 40 minutes helping another participant who had a scary (and thankfully injury-free) landing during their walk, so the win was declared a tie. The Global Rescue XRedRocks this year was really tough. It rewarded those pilots who had trained hard and could muscle it out on the ground and make solid flying calls when the opportunity was there. We didn’t fly as far, high, or deep as we wanted, but those days will come. They always do. But we had a great time in an arena where we’ve only scratched the potential.
Podium for the Pro Class. left to rright: Jeffery Longcor (4th), Kevin Carter (3rd), Aaron Durogati (1st), Tanguy Renoud-Goud (2nd), Tyler Burns (5th).
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Patrick Von Känel dancing with the Utah colors.
“We didn’t fly as far, high, or deep as we wanted, but those days will come. They always do.”
2022 Tater Hill Open
Part 1: Paying better attention to changing conditions
by Bubba Goodman
: The 2022 race was the 17th Tater Hill Open that I have coordinated. I’ve been flying the region since the late 1970s and have banked hundreds of hours and thousands of flights. I know this place well, and I thought, for the most part, that the weather was predictable. Our competition safety records speak for themselves. Until 2022, we never had any deployments. However, just one day in a friendly competition changed everything about how I look at the weather and pilots’ attitudes toward unsafe conditions.
For the 2022 event, we had a great turnout, with over 60 registered pilots. The two practice days were incredible. On Friday, many lucky pilots got over ten grand, and the site was flyable all day. Saturday could have been better, but still, people flew late into the day. Sunday morning, we had a pilot meeting at the LZ. By 9:30 a.m., we were running pilots up the hill. The mountain was ridge-soarable when we got there with a few early clouds. The forecast was for overdevelopment later, around 4 or 5 p.m., so the task committee came
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up with a short task for both the open and sport classes. All turn points were in front and north, away from where the weather was supposed to be, with good LZs nearby.
The launch window opened at 11:45 a.m., and the start was 1:00 p.m. It was still blue over the back, but we had weak-looking clouds out front. As soon as a couple of pilots stuck, launching began quickly. A few bombed out, but, for the most part, everyone was staying up. It didn’t take long for it to OD toward Grandfather Mountain. This development is quite normal and routinely happens there first. We could see rain some distance away and convergence clouds behind launch, but out front, where the task was run, it was still clear.
There was talk on the radio of rain, but it was early, and pilots were happily running the task. However, as the rain to the south crept slowly toward us, I was getting more concerned and radioed to launch to ask what pilots up there saw. A couple saw rain behind launch to the north, so at 1:27 p.m. I stopped the task. As always at comps, when I stop the task, call the day, or can’t run a task, pilots will sometimes choose to launch or stay flying for a bit.
This day was no different. Some folks tried to get down as fast as possible, others took their time, and others stayed high and enjoyed some airtime. Behind launch, things were starting to build up, and pilots were having a hard time getting down. There were about 10 pilots up on launch, including a couple of hang gliders. We could see a big wall of dark clouds heading our way, so we were scrambling, trying to put things away. I was helping hide the gliders when I looked over my shoulder and saw a paraglider pull up and launch. The gust front was rapidly heading up the back of the mountain, and by the time we loaded everyone in the two trucks, it was blowing 40+ over the back. We drove down in a hailstorm with pouring rain.
When we got to the LZ, most pilots were on the
ground, but four were still in the air. Pilot #1 was having a great time surfing the storm, staying ahead of the gust front. Pilot #2 was trying to stay ahead and get down in a safe field. Pilot #3 had disappeared in the clouds, and folks on the ground were trying to help him by radio. Nobody knew who Pilot #4 was.
The first three pilots all landed in the same field some miles away. Pilot #1 had a great flight by staying in front of the storm, whereas Pilot #2 did not. He had tried many ways to come down, including B-line stalls—he was a little shaken by the experience. Pilot #3 flew through hail, snow, and rain and was coached from the ground on how to descend using advanced maneuvers. He, too, was shaken up by the experience.
What about Pilot #4? Around the same time the other pilots were landing, we received selfie pictures of a pilot on the ground in a big field with a reserve behind them. Only then did we realize who the pilot was. Looking at their tracklog, we saw they were up over 18,000 to 19,600 feet and finally threw their reserve to land safely. So here were four pilots, all in the same air, having totally different flights. The first three were caught in the air, while the fourth pilot chose to launch despite the approaching wall of rain, thinking he would take a sled ride down. All of this happened in a very brief period as
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Buck Nichols at Tater Launch. Photo by Lucas Soler.
The ideal conditions Tater Hill typically offers. Photo by Bubba Goodman.
the weather shifted just as quickly. The weather in this area has changed in the last ten years. We can no longer count on what we think we know or our past experiences. Did the pressure of the comp come into play? Maybe. I had 60 pilots wanting to fly, and though the weather was iffy, it was nice and flyable for a short period. Additionally, the forecast for the rest of the week was not favorable, so we wanted
to get a round in. In the end, pilots decided to fly even after I called the task, and a few chose not to launch. Most of the pilots had a fun flight and made the conservative decision to land early.
Will I be a little more conservative next time? Yes. It was the first day of the comp, and it usually takes a day or two to figure out a few bugs in the system. We didn’t know who Pilot #4 was, and since they launched when and where they weren’t supposed to, nobody was watching. On top of that, they had no buddy to tell us who they were. We got very lucky on this day at Tater.
The rest of the week was a wash, with only a few late afternoon soaring sessions after the winds backed down. Some folks went home, but others stayed to enjoy the fantastic weather; they went mountain biking, swimming, and hiking, and participated in clinics hosted by Kari Castle and Chris Grantham. We had a good turnout for the final dinner of the event; the food was great, thanks to Joe Koening. All six or seven hang glider pilots showed up and got some great swag from all the generous sponsors.
Comp pilots safely retrieving Lucas Soler after forced landing by storm. Photo by Lucas Soler.
The storm over Tater launch. Photo by Lucas Soler.
Many folks told me that despite the lack of flying, the meet was a success, and they had fun. For me, though, the disappointment of not flying and the precarity of the storm surfers weigh heavy. I’m always asked why I have so many rules at the comps, and this past comp made it clear why: I’ve had 17 years of watching pilots take advantage of or ignore the systems in place. Comps make some pilots do stupid things. It only
Part 2: Cloud Suck Really Sucks
by Tony Davis
: Day one of the 2022 Tater Hill Challenge in Boone, North Carolina, was shaping up to be completely uneventful. Pilots were launching but, with a few exceptions, were getting little altitude above launch. Some even bombed out and landed early. Bubba Goodman, the event coordinator, talked about ending the task and calling it a free fly day.
takes one person to screw things up for everyone. No doubt, this year, I will be more cautious of conditions and keep better track of pilots.
I think it’s safe to say everyone at the comp learned something. I can only hope that the reality of how lucky a few pilots were is not lost on everyone. We all need to pay more attention to conditions, even if we think we know them well.
Based on the advice of a more experienced pilot, I was holding off on launching in hopes of more favorable conditions as the day progressed and the sun had time to do its thing. As this was my first competition and my first time flying at Tater Hill, I was attentive to what Bubba and the other event organizers had to say about conditions.
Though there was rain in sight much of the time, it was quite some distance away. I was told that this rain typically stays to the south of where we were flying, and though we needed to “keep an eye on it,” there should be little to no impact in our immediate area. Large overdevelopment is often held at bay by a ridge system and rarely becomes a concern for pilots flying at Tater Hill. And this prediction was accurate—until it wasn’t. From launch, we could again see rain to the south, but it seemed far enough away to be of no consequence. The local experts kept an eye on things and eventually decided to cancel the day’s task but keep the site open for free flying. I decided to launch wearing only a thin shirt and no jacket, not something I usually do, expecting an uneventful sledder. I also did not have my inReach satellite device with me because I thought it would be a short ride down from launch to the LZ. From now on, however, I will always plan for an eventful flight, even if
Radar image along Tony Davis's flight path from around 1:04 p.m. to 3:03 p.m.
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I expect a sledder.
I launched at 1:26 p.m. into smooth air, and, as luck would have it, I got a bit higher above the launch than expected. I gained altitude in mostly ridge lift as there was little thermic activity out front. This lack of lift away from the hill would soon change.
Once I reached about 500 feet above launch, I had a unique vantage point of the imposing weather and could see what others could not. Rain was approaching from the south, but ominous weather was also growing to the east; this eastern threat was likely not visible to the folks on the ground. I radioed what I was seeing and decided to head toward the LZ.
Over the LZ, I encountered light lift that allowed for some thermaling, but nothing seemed problematic. I had little reason to feel concerned about getting down quickly. However, things soon transformed. Conditions changed slowly at first, but when the change came, it seemed exponential rather than linear. The lift went from light to something you might long on a great XC flight, to something challenging to get down in, to, suddenly, something dangerous. The storm that caused this unexpected lift looked far away, but it had consequences for pilots over the LZ. Moving forward, I now have firsthand experience of how weather can impact you from further away than you might realize.
I made my one big mistake of the day before the dramatic change in conditions. Other, more experienced pilots on site agreed that most of my piloting decisions were sound, except for this one. When I first saw other pilots starting to descend using big ears, light spirals, and wingovers, I wrongly assumed I had plenty of time to get down, and I lingered in the air. I started using
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Just after landing, looking north toward the still "friendly" skies. The sky was much more imposing to the south. Photo by Tony Davis.
“A change in the weather is sufficient to recreate the world and ourselves.”
-Marcel Proust
big ears initially, but when I got low, I decided to play around in the air a little longer. A few other pilots were flying around, and I felt safe lingering in the air too— this was a big mistake. I had seen the development from the air and had already decided not to continue flying, so I should have followed my plan and gotten down immediately.
With little warning, the lift became stronger—it wasn’t sudden but grew consistently. Big ears alone were no longer effective. Eventually, I found all my movement was up, even with ears. I had recently completed my first SIV and had practiced spiral dives; I should have done one here while I still had the chance, but I hesitated.
While continuing to try big ears and full-speed bar (which resulted in either going up slower or, at best, maintaining level flight), I could see the rain and a lot of wind approaching. It looked like things were going to
get nasty soon. For the first time, at about 1:57 p.m., I felt like I needed to get down NOW! Unfortunately, the lift kicked in stronger, and I felt that nothing short of a full spiral dive would get me down.
Just as I decided to commit to the spiral and did a 360 to clear the airspace, I saw a lightning strike just past the LZ. I decided to turn and run. After making the mistake of not getting down when I could, the decision to run from the storm was my best option given the circumstances. For the first time on this flight, since reporting conditions after I launched, I made a radio call. I identified myself, said I was having trouble getting down, and was running from the storm.
Once I had just a bit of distance between me and the storm, I saw a likely alternate LZ below and decided to try the spiral one more time. Unfortunately, just as I was committing to the move, I was sucked into the
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Tony Davis on big ears trying to get down to the LZ before things got bad. Photo by Luke Higginbotham.
cloud. Pulling the G-forces associated with a spiral while simultaneously being sucked into a cloud was incredibly disorienting. I tried to come out of the spiral as I had learned, slowly bleeding off the energy, and went into level flight, using my instrument to head north toward Mountain City, Tennessee.
During most of this flight, I had the calm and reassuring voice of Richard McDermott, a paragliding instructor from St. Louis, speaking to me on the radio. It was comforting to hear someone telling me that I was doing the right things; keep running from the storm, keep heading north, and, for now, worry more about flying than getting down. For anyone on the ground in a situation such as this, I would recommend staying in radio contact with the pilot in a bad situation. Let them know they are not alone, provide coaching if needed and possible, but mostly, just “be there.”
Once in the cloud, all I could do was keep the wing overhead and pointed in a safe and consistent direction. I held a steady north heading, primarily because McDermott advised this direction on the radio as the storm was still advancing from the south. This information was crucial as I was new to the area. Though I know north from south, the initial advice I received to head toward Mountain City was lost on me.
As a piece of advice, if you see you are about to enter a cloud, take a heading of the direction you want to go
using your instrument or compass while you can still see. I had often heard how disorienting it can be to fly inside a cloud in whiteout conditions—I now have firsthand experience with how true this is. Several times, every sense in my body told me I was turning left (I don’t know why, but it was always left), but by looking at my compass, I could tell I was flying north. However, I found it difficult to reconcile the fact that to fly straight north (according to my ball compass), I had to do what felt like a moderate amount of weight shift and brake input to turn right.
After coming out of the cloud at an elevation of around 8,400 feet, I witnessed one of the most beautiful vistas I have ever seen. I exited the cloud somewhere near the middle, looking down at a field of smaller cumulus clouds, with other cumulonimbus clouds around me and nothing but blue skies and wispy cirrus clouds above. It was breathtaking. I wish I could have relaxed and enjoyed it more, but such was not the case. There was more piloting to do.
After leaving the cloud, I faced something of a dilemma. I could see the ground through small openings in the clouds below. It was dark down there and did not look like somewhere I wanted to be flying. As disconcerting as it was in my location, the ground below looked worse. There was another large cumulonimbus to my north, the direction I needed to fly. If time was of
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The day started off normally, setting up for launch. Photo by Tony Davis.
no concern, I likely could have flown around the cloud. However, the occasional lightning flash and thunderclap reminded me that I needed to keep running north. I either had to take the time to avoid the next cloud and lose distance from the storm or intentionally fly back into the white room. I chose the white room.
After about 40 minutes of flight, the air was getting smoother. Maintaining a north heading with minimal weight shift was more manageable, and things were starting to brighten up a bit. I was spending less time in clouds, and the ground below looked more inviting.
At about 2:35 p.m., I finally cleared the clouds for the last time. While things were relatively calm and clear, the bad weather was still headed my way, so I knew I needed to get on the ground. I was finally losing altitude and found a little sink—unfortunately, there was nothing but trees below me. Since I needed to make it to an
acceptable LZ, I came off big ears. Fortunately, releasing big ears was all I needed to clear the trees and easily make it to any of the several great landing spots directly in front of me.
I was now on a glide path to a nice LZ. At around 2:43 p.m., another voice came over the radio, my friend Andrew Copeland. Copeland reassured me that everything looked ok here but also that the approaching weather might be worse than I realized, including very high winds and a lot of rain. Copeland advised foregoing the gentle S-turns I was currently doing to bleed off altitude and do something a little more aggressive. A spiral with big ears was the recommendation. “Just pull big ears, pick a side, and fully commit with weight shift,” Copeland said. I did this, and it worked very well, even though I never did a full spiral, only moderately tight 360s.
USHPA PILOT 49
THERE AND BACK…
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I lost a lot of altitude very quickly—it was a smooth maneuver with minimal G-forces compared to a spiral dive. As an added benefit, I didn’t have to deal with all the excess energy I often experience when coming out of a spiral dive. At long last, I was finally on the ground.
I engaged in several conversations on rapid descent techniques following my experience. A couple of more experienced pilots suggested that the G-forces associat-
ed with spiraling down on less than your entire wing (on big ears, asymmetric, etc.) might put excessive stress on the lines still supporting your weight.
I was flying a BGD Base 2 paraglider, so I went to the source and asked Bruce Goldsmith if there were any concerns about spiraling down on big ears with this glider. He responded, “The problem with a high-G maneuver where not all lines are being used is the possibility of structural failure of the lines. All gliders are load tested to withstand 8G at max load. However, that
is with all the lines. If you remove some lines, the safety factor is also reduced. This is the reason why I advise not to do a spiral dive with an asymmetric collapse on production gliders.”
He admitted that he does not personally have experience with spirals with big ears but would look into it more as he does not know how high the G-forces are in this maneuver. I pointed out that the G-forces on the pilot seemed much lower spiraling down with big ears than with a normal spiral dive, and Bruce offered, “If the G-forces are low on the pilot, then the line loads will
also be low. So, this maneuver is likely not to overstress the glider or lines.”
As a final thought to this narrative, if I had immediately committed to a spiral dive or B-line stall when I first realized I needed to get down quickly, I likely would have landed at the LZ and avoided the day’s excitement—but I hesitated. I hesitated because I am not yet completely comfortable with these rapid descent techniques. Eventually, I tried both a spiral and a half-hearted B-line stall, but by that time, the cloud had veto authority. The bottom line: I need more practice. As they say, dig your well before you get thirsty.
Lucas Soler flying at Tater Hill Open 2022. Photo by Justin Crane.
Flying in Wind Part 2: Handling Headwinds
by Dennis Pagen
: Most of us have experienced flying in headwinds because, right from the start, we learn to take off and fly forward in at least a trickle of wind. As we progress and fly higher, we still head into the wind toward our landing field. This practice continues until we learn to turn 90 degrees and more, set up landing patterns, and progress to soaring. So headwinds are our constant companions, if not our friends.
Here, we will look at stronger headwinds and tactics for tackling headwind flying in competition and general cross-country flight. Even if we never graduate to XC or comps, knowing headwind tricks will significantly improve the effectiveness and safety of everyday flying.
EXTENDING YOUR REACH
We begin with a reminder of the techniques useful for penetrating a wind. Off the top of my head, I can recall six or seven cases of pilots not reaching their intended landing field due to headwinds (sometimes combined with sink). In areas where trees were plentiful, the result was landing in stressfully small spaces or grasping tree branches. Other times, the combo of headwind and sink resulted in barely making the landing field. I’ve been involved with a few such incidences myself over the years. The first thing we can do in this case is to understand speed-to-fly concepts. Speed-to-fly is the principle that there is one speed (only) to fly for maximum efficacy (that is, best glide over the ground). This “best” speed varies with the type of glider, the wing loading, and the movement of the air (headwind, tailwind, crosswind, near calm, lift or sink). It would take pages to dive into this pool of knowledge (for this kind of knowledge, pick up a book on free flight), but for our purposes here, we can simply say: speed up in a headwind.
By the time we are flying high, we should all know that a glider (hang or para) has a maximum glide ratio airspeed. This airspeed gives the glider its best lift-to-drag ratio, which is also its best glide over the ground in zero wind. But in a headwind, flying at best glide speed will not result in the best glide over the ground.
As noted above, how much you speed up depends on several factors. An easy rule of thumb is to add about half the speed of the wind to your best still air glide speed. For example, in a hang glider with a best glide airspeed of 27 mph in a 10 mph headwind, we would add 5 mph to 27 mph to get an ideal airspeed of 32 mph. In a paraglider with a best glide airspeed of 20 mph, you would add 5 mph to get 25 mph in a 10 mph headwind. These back-of-the-envelope ballpark figures are a reasonable starting point for the novice pilot. However, many pilots have instruments that calculate the wind as well as lift and sink with their GPS function and indicate the best speed to fly in the current conditions. However, conditions can rapidly change (for example, you fly into sudden sink or a headwind gust), so it behooves us all to be able to judge the conditions and quickly make an adjustment before the instrument can figure it out. It’s ideal to learn to feel the correct response rather than rely
To understand the concept of speeding up in a headwind, imagine flying straight into a wind equal to your flying airspeed. In this case, you will be descending vertically since your airspeed over the ground is zero. But if you speed up, you will make some progress over the ground, and thus your glide path is improved.
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solely on your instrument. Staring at your instrument is dangerous in traffic and takes your attention away from the hundreds of little cues and clues about what is happening with the changing, churning air.
All pilots should experiment with their glide ratios and airspeed in all different conditions at their local sites. Try flying out to the landing field and see how airspeed changes affect your glide path. With this practice, learn to judge the spot you will reach ahead of you as you glide.
Another aspect of safe flying is being vigilant about the air’s changes as the day progresses. If you are soaring over launch, you can occasionally look at the wind indicators and how other pilots are progressing as they make passes in different directions. Also, you should fly defensively and always maintain a reasonable glide to your landing area. You can scout for alternative bailout areas as a backup, but having a cutoff point to initiate landing is most important. At our local sites, we have a cutoff point for new and intermediate pilots. At one site with a distant landing field, our rule is: leave for landing the instant you get below launch level.
On a recent flight, a couple of friends were 1,300 feet above launch when sink swallowed the area, and they were on the ground in minutes. They had to head out to land in this sink and a headwind. Fortunately, they had a good altitude buffer, but I have seen pilots in similar conditions where the landing field was beyond reach.
With all the above in mind, be observant, leave plenty of margin for the unexpected, and learn to fly at the most efficient airspeed in various headwinds.
USING GIFTS OF LIFT
Now we look at flying in headwind away from our primary (launch) mountain or hill while covering flat ground. Sure, we may be able to reach another mountain upwind, but generally, upwind flying will involve some flatland or mostly flatland flying. Pilots will often find themselves in such a situation when cross-country flying, whether it’s for competing or simply breaking the home binders and heading out for adventure.
Early on in hang gliding competitions (1981) and from the first XC paragliding comps, we began flying triangle courses. Such flight circuits bring pilots back to the launch area, so multiple days of competition have shorter retrieves.
USHPA PILOT 53
BY WILLY DYDO
paths was important. I remember big triangles in this era in Chelan, Washington and Lakeview, Oregon. Also, throughout the ‘90s, we had meets in the Sequatchie Valley, Tennessee, with multiple crossings of the valley (into the wind on half).
With all that in mind, we began to practice. The way I did it locally was to try to reach a mountain upwind across a 5-mile valley. The idea was to tag that mountain, soar it to gain altitude, and return to launch. At first, the task was difficult, but with loads of practice, I learned to use lift lines and streets. These factors are the main components to successful upwind flying. Lift lines occur when little convergences well up or thermals get strung out parallel to the wind. Such lines of lift are often very weak, but they greatly enhance your glide path or can even give you a magic carpet ride. Of course, when there are lift lines, there can be compensatory sink lines or random blots of down air. Practice is necessary to develop the skill to instantly recognize such lines of lift. Also, you want to learn to stay in the line as you progress into the wind by altering your path to one side or the other
if the lift dwindles. With practice, you can get good at making the most of lift lines.
Cloud streets (thermal streets when there are no clouds) can present even stronger lift in a line parallel to the wind. Cloud streets are common in the eastern U.S. and anywhere cold fronts move through. With the presence of clouds, they are easy enough to see, and often cloud shadows can help you determine which cloud line looks best or continues the longest. Of course, when there is solid cloud street action, there will be sink streets too. In such conditions, it is doubly important to be in the line of the lift and stay in this line when flying upwind.
THE SAWTOOTH
The final factor is patience with a capital P. In a pure headwind (no lift), if we are gliding upwind a long way, especially high above the terrain, it can seem like we are hardly progressing. In these situations, pilots tend to gradually fly a little faster when things don’t seem to be moving until they are flying faster than the best speedto-fly. Think about this factor, recognize it, and prevent it by learning efficient flying techniques long before you glide into a strong headwind with lots of altitude. In truth, this outcome is so common among new pilots on their first high flight that it has a name: dive syndrome. When flying cross country using thermals or any other source of lift, our flight path resembles a sawtooth zig-zag pattern with the teeth pointing up. The reason for this flight path is that when we find a thermal and climb, we drift with it downwind—away from our goal upwind. Then we eventually leave the thermal to glide into the wind at a (hopefully) flatter path to find the next thermal. With the next thermal, we repeat the process. In this manner, we gradually “sawtooth” our way upwind. Of course, the stronger and higher the thermals and the lighter the wind, the easier it is to progress upwind in this manner.
One trick of the technique is to know when to leave each thermal to maximize your forward gain. The longer
54 USHPA PILOT
PHOTO
you stay in a thermal, the higher you may get, but often the lift slowly diminishes, and you may rise into a higher headwind. Both of these factors tend to lose position, as you drift more and more downwind with each circle. In fact, given each day’s wind profile and thermal behavior, there is an ideal height to leave the thermal.
This ideal cannot be determined without knowing the details of the conditions. Still, it is important to remember that there is an ideal, and we should experiment enough in our upwind flying practice until we can judge, as best as possible, when to leave a thermal to glide upwind. In general, most inexperienced pilots stay in the thermals too long in a headwind. In competitions, we often fly with other pilots nearby, so by paying attention, we can quickly learn what strategies provide the best results. In one competition, pilots can learn skills that may take a year of flying on our own to acquire.
From personal headwind experience, and that of many others, I can report that it can be very disheartening to see your hard-earned distance fritter away as you circle backward in the thermal or watch your altitude dwindle as you glide into the wind searching for a savior shot of lift. And that’s where the patience comes in. It can sometimes be astounding how much ground you cover when thermaling and flying on a downwind course. But it is negatively impressive how much ground you don’t cover when sawtoothing upwind. But good pilots do it often with success. So train your patience as you train your thermal and best gliding skills. Perhaps by the time we are flying upwind in comps or choose to do so on our own, we have already become adept at thermaling and gliding, so the main thing to think about and work on is patience.
Here are a few anecdotes relating to flying headwinds and lines of lift. In Chelan, on a long triangle with the last leg into the wind, only one pilot made goal. He did it by heading a bit off course to the north to reach a band of clouds promising better lift and thermal blocking of the wind. In Brazil, I once flew 15 miles straight at a very fast speed without losing altitude in a convergence
line. In Texas, I flew about 20 miles along course line in a cloud street. In Florida, I cruised along a lift line approximately 3,500 feet off the ground when it quit, and I wandered to the side. In massive sink, I tried to cut sideways to get some relief, but I lost it all and was soon grounded in angst. Closer to home, I once had to cross from one street to another and lost 3,000 feet in the crossing. On one task in Florida, pilots braved a horrendous headwind (more than predicted), and many of us went down, zig-zagging back and forth. I was with my Brazilian friend, Conrad Heilman, when we picked up some scrabbly lift about 500 feet off the ground. We drifted back with it, barely climbing, and I eventually left it, thinking we were losing too much ground. I flew forward looking for better prospects but was soon landing and thinking that no one would make goal in such conditions. Later, I learned that our shaggy thermal eventually turned on about a mile downwind. Conrad got very high and continued to make stuttering progress to reach goal. Only a few made it that day, and I relearned my lessons when flying in a headwind: practice patience, patience, patience.
DYDO
USHPA PILOT 55
PHOTO BY WILLY
Flight Testing Lilienthal's Experimental
by Markus Raffel
: For most people, hang gliding is a sport that started about 60 years ago when Francis Rogallo’s flexible wing was adapted into modern hang gliders and paragliders. Many will also remember the early pioneers of that sport. They came together to fly all kinds of self-invented homemade flying machines during the first Otto Lilienthal Hang Glider Meet in 1971. But what happened before those days, and why was that event named after Otto Lilienthal? To many, Lilienthal is only remembered for crashing one of his gliders and eventually dying from his injuries, saying anecdotally, “Sacrifices must be made.”
However, some may recall that Lilienthal scientifically investigated the effect of wing camber for the first time and proved it to be the essential element in creating lift. His lift versus drag data was the first data the Wright
brothers successfully used.
Only a few hang gliding and paragliding community members may know that Otto Lilienthal made over 2,000 glider flights and corresponded with many leading aviation enthusiasts and scientists worldwide, including Russian Nikolai Zhukovsky, Englishman Percy Pilcher, and Austrian Wilhelm Kress. Lilienthal was a member of the German Society for the Promotion of Aeronautics and the Royal Aeronautical Society. He sold patented gliders to aviator T. J. Bennett in Oxford and Professor G. F. Fitzgerald, a physicist at Trinity College in Dublin, Ireland.
He also corresponded with many Americans, primarily members of the Boston Aeronautical Society (of which he was an honorary member). One of the society’s founders, James Means, invited Lilienthal to
56 USHPA PILOT
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | HISTORY
At Marina Beach the Otto Lilienthal’s Experimental Monoplane sits in position shortly before launching, Photo by Andrew Balk.
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America to establish a flight training school. Lilienthal also corresponded with Octave Chanute (later a friend of the Wright Brothers), Samuel Pierpont Langley (who visited him in Berlin), and Greely S. Curtis (who gained first-hand experience in gliding on a visit with Lilienthal beginning in September 1895).
In April 1896, William Randolph Hearst, the New York Journal publishing mogul, bought a glider made by the famed German aviation pioneer and became the only American known to own a Lilienthal glider. Hearst sponsored test flights by New Jersey athlete Harry Bodine. Eventually, the Lilienthal glider soared for a few hundred feet in some smooth air and then settled to the ground. An eyewitness of that time reported enthusiastically [1]: “The spectacle of a man supported on huge white wings, moving high above you at racehorse speed, combined with the weird hum of the wind through the cords of the
[1]Tom D. Crouch A Dream of Wings: Americans and the Airplane, 1875-1905; W. W. Norton 2002
machine, produces an impression never to be forgotten.”
Like many early pioneers, Lilienthal realized there was more to flying than doing so in a straight line. He had learned that shifting the body could change the direction of flight, but this method had its limits. Being a trained mechanical engineer, he began working on changing flight direction without using the body. He quickly invented, patented, built, and teste flew an automatic pitch control system based on rubber band actuated leading-edge flaps, the so-called Vorflügel.
Lilienthal also developed and flew wing tip rudders and the control mechanisms that led the Wright brothers to success in their 1902 Glider: wing warping and rudder actuated simultaneously via a hip cradle. He incorporated all of these controls into his 1895 Experimental, and we included them in our replica.
The Experimental was the most complex apparatus that Lilienthal had built, and, while building a replica, we had to ask ourselves: How can one test fly a glider built by someone who flew very successfully but eventually
USHPA PILOT 57
At Marina Beach, Andrew Beem flys the Lilienthal replica towards the surge. Photo by Markus Raffel.
crashed and died more than 125 years ago? The answer? Carefully, carefully, carefully!
Replica Test Flights
In 2016, more than 125 years after Lilienthal’s first flights in 1891, after a few successful full-scale wind tunnel tests, the German Aerospace Center (DLR) was looking for partners for flight testing Lilienthal replicas in the real world. They found open-minded, courageous supporters in the American hang glider community, including Andy Beem, Billy Vaughn, and George Reeves.
After successful flight tests of a replica of Lilienthal’s Normalsegelapparat (the world’s first aircraft produced in series) in the spring of 2018 at Marina Beach, California, the pilots flew the Large Biplane replica in June 2019
The three pilots who flew both the replica of the world’s first man-carrying biplane and the Experimental glider with the control mechanisms reported the following:
Andy
For a few years, I’ve felt the historical significance of showing Otto Lilienthal’s influence on the Wright Brothers. I am very impressed with Lilienthal’s engineering and design, which used mainly weight shift for take-off, control, and landing. It’s also inspiring to see some of the techniques he employed that the Wrights later perfected to make their gliders more controllable and ultimately develop the world’s first airplane. This year, I tested the replica of Otto Lilienthal’s Experimental in various wind conditions. I eventually found the correct settings to deal with the lesser static stability of this glider that likely resulted from the deactivation of its leading-edge control mechanism. Once the proper settings were found, it was wonderful to fly.
George
When we flew the Lilienthal biplane in the summer of 2019, everyone landed it safely right from the beginning, and Andy, who did most of the flights, even made perfect flare landings. This year, with all the additional features that this experimental aircraft had, we decided to deactivate them during most of the flights to limit the aircraft’s complexity and practice safely. On our third day, we had the right amount of constant western wind, and when we saw Andy flying reliably, Billy and I took the opportunity to test the glider with weight shift control. It was well-trimmed and flew nice and easy.
Billy
You can spend a lot of time reading, going to the museums, and seeing the aircraft, but there is something irreplaceable about flying these replicas. The Lilienthal biplane was very intuitive to fly. I am a hang glider pilot, and I was right at home. It felt fantastic and simple and landed just the way I thought it would. Flying an aircraft with wing warping and rudder control requires more training, even if the control mechanisms are already coordinated and tuned, as is the case for the 1902 Wright Glider. However, the Lilienthal experimental Vorflügelapparat can also be flown with only weight shift control when the wind is steady and smooth. My flight on that aircraft at Marina Beach was another humbling experience and a valuable one that you can’t get in any other way.
58 USHPA PILOT
at the same location.
In March 2022, all three pilots came together in California and teamed up to test Lilienthal’s most advanced glider: the Vorflügelapparat, which Lilienthal called the Experimental.
Flying this replica was an even bigger adventure than flying the other two gliders. The replica was made from reproduced 1895 shirting (English fabric), willow withies, steel wires, pine wood, and wood glue. It had a wing area of 250 square feet and a wing span of nearly 9 meters, and it was questionable how, or even if, it could be controlled—the Lilienthal method of shifting the center
THE FLYING MAN
of gravity (done chiefly by shifting the legs) had its limits. Andy Beem piloted the first free flights in that majestic white glider at Marina Beach. Even though the leading-edge flaps proved effective during the DLR’s wind tunnel tests, the team here decided to keep the flaps securely closed rather than risk an unintended opening while in flight. The free-flight test showed that the automatic pitch control might have been a nice thing to have. On one of the launches, the glider flipped on its back, and its front ring dug into the sand on some of the landings. However, in the end, the glider was successfully flown by five American hang glider pilots.
A new, 350-page biography of mankind's first aviator. In contrast to all books on the subject, it takes the reader right up to the present day, to the aerodynamics laboratories of the German Aerospace Center, where Lilienthal's airplanes underwent spectacular tests with today's aeronautical research equipment, and to the coast of California, where one of the authors – supported by American hang glider veterans - learned to master the world's first aircraft. Markus Raffel and his supporters devised training equipment and a personal training program to follow in Lilienthal's footsteps to learn and test flying in his spirit. The second author, Bernd Lukasch, was for many years director of the Otto Lilienthal Museum in Anklam, Lilienthal's birthplace, where Lilienthal's numerous aircraft constructions are documented and reproduced today.
The book is also available as an eBook that contains links to 27 videos showing the wind tunnel and flight tests. It is the first comprehensive text biography of Lilienthal available in English.
Springer.shop directly (eBook and print): https://link.springer.com/book/10.1007/978-3-030-95033-0
Printed version in the museum shop too, of course: http://www.lilienthal-museum.de/olma/eshop.htm
USHPA PILOT 59
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USHPA PILOT 61
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P2 3 Kraig Necker CO Brian Clark P2 3 Ian Nelson CO Misha Banks
P2 3 John Nicoll CO Misha Banks
P2 3 Mahir Omeragic CO Mauricio Fleitas P2 3 Matt Oppenheimer CA Christopher Grantham P2 3 Nicholas Papadopoulos CO Johannes Rath
P2 3 Tess Prince CO Misha Banks
P2 3 Iaroslav Rastrigin CA Jordan Neidinger P2 3 Franklin Reilly CO Patrick Johnson P2 3 Trevor Reynard CA William Purden-Jr P2 3 Nathan Riggs CO Mauricio Fleitas P2 3 Don Ruffin CA William Purden-Jr P2 3 Michael Schaffner AZ Chandler Papas P2 3 Mutiara Schechinger CA Emily Wallace P2 3 SCOTT SCHLICHTER CO Aj Frye
P2 3 Ian Schroeder CA Rob Sporrer P2 3 Troy Sedlacek CO Misha Banks P2 3 Patrick Shepherd CO Johannes Rath P2 3 Darin Smith CO Mauricio Fleitas P2 3 Bryan Smith CO Misha Banks P2 3 Matthew Spitalny CO Douglas Brown
P2 3 Chris Stevenson CO Misha Banks P2 3 Shyamsundar Subramanian CO Johannes Rath P2 3 Chris Sullivan CA Jeffrey J. Greenbaum
P2 3 Jacob Syage CA Christopher Grantham P2 3 Ian Thomas CO Johannes Rath
P2 3 Matt Tierney CO Misha Banks
P2 3 Lisa Tierney CO Misha Banks P2 3 Raffi Tokhalyan CA Marcello M. DeBarros P2 3 Samuel Travis AZ Dustin Miller
P2 3 Brandon Ussery CA Jonathan Jefferies
P2 3 Tut Villanueva CO Mauricio Fleitas
Patrick Wambach AZ Jordan Neidinger
Todd Wiersum CA Denise Reed
Mary Wilcox AZ Jesse L. Meyer
Shane Wilcox CO Patrick Johnson
Mark Yerdon CO Johannes Rath
Christopher Zink CO Misha Banks P2
Ryan Zwicky CO Johannes Rath P2
Katharine Biegert VA Ben White
Brandon Brantley TX David W. Prentice
Jordan Bruce MO Ian McManus
P2 4 Marcus Cammuse KY Grayson Brown
P2 4 Ghan Desai VA Rob Sporrer
P2 4 Noah Fatsi VA Grayson Brown
P2 4 Shelley Fluke NC Kelly Myrkle
P2 4 Dustin Gebhardt NC Luke Weaver
P2 4 Robin Hamilton TX Chandler Papas
P2 4 Brittany Hilborn VA Ken W. Hudonjorgensen
P2 4 David Hilborn VA Ken W. Hudonjorgensen
P2 4 Rowen Johns GA Johannes Rath
P2 4 Stepan Kalinin NC Jesse L. Meyer
P2 4 John Kenney FL Cynthia Currie
P2 4 Bert Kosbar SC Nathan Alex Taylor
P2 4 Stephen Manston AL Grayson Brown
P2 4 Michael Mintz FL Harry Sandoval
P2 4 Viktoria Olskaia FL Zion Susanno-Loddby
P2 4 Boni Sori Muda Pane FL Zion Susanno-Loddby
P2 4 Jimmy Pearce OK Chad Uchino
P2 4 Jacob Rosemond NC Luke Weaver
P2 4 Renzo Scheidema GA Alejandro Albornoz
P2 4 Buddy Sessoms FL Nathan Alex Taylor
P2 4 Otton Siqueira VA George R. Huffman
P2 4 Adam Smith NC Kelly Myrkle
P2 4 Mark Swilling DC George R. Huffman
P2 4 Glenn VanHouten TX Scott C. Harris
P2 4 Dimitri Velednitsky NC Grayson Brown
P2 4 Ian Whitlock SC Nathan Alex Taylor
P2 4 John Whitman GA Alejandro Albornoz
P2 5 Scott Badger NH Jamie Messenger
P2 5 Jean-Marc Berteaux MA Calef Letorney
P2 5 Galen Beske NJ Nathan Alex Taylor
P2 5 Dana Boudreau NH Patrick Kelly
P2 5 Jude Camberos OH Joe D. Hutton
P2 5 Obe Costello OH Grayson Brown
P2 5 Desiree Dake NY Salvatore Scaringe
P2 5 James Louis Donovan NY Chris W. Santacroce
P2 5 Brian Douglas IL Mariyan Radev Ivanov
P2 5 Jack Durels CT Harry Sandoval
P2 5 Fathy elmostehi NJ Thomas McCormick
P2 5 Michael Ennabe NH William H. Gottling
P2 5 Peter Gish NH William H. Gottling
P2 5 Nickolas B. Grady NH Rob Sporrer
P2 5 Margo Hamm NH Rob Sporrer
P2 5 Jennifer Herne NH Marc Chirico
P2 5 Patrick Hoban NJ Thomas McCormick
P2 5 John Holowesko MD Rob Sporrer
P2 5 Nathan Mackouse PA Mauricio Fleitas
P2 5 Daniel Markel PA Thomas McCormick
P2 5 Jordan Miedema IN Johannes Rath
P2 5 Scott Mizerek NJ Thomas McCormick
P2 5 Diego Neira PA Thomas McCormick
P2 5 Cong Minh Vu Nguyen NY Marcus V. Santos
P2 5 James Noel NH William H. Gottling
P2 5 James O'Neill PA Luc Lachapelle
P2 5 Janek Pfeffer NY Thomas McCormick
P2 5 Dylan Pieper WI Mariyan Radev Ivanov
P2 5 Annie Shoup MA Rob Sporrer
P2 5 Jiri Sip OH Ben White
P2 5 William Slofer Jr DE Thomas McCormick
P2 5 Andrew Spidahl MI Grayson Brown
P2 5 Milan Vidakovic PA Thomas McCormick
P2 5 Brian K Walker IN Jesse L. Meyer
P2 5 Zachary Wambsganss NH Misha Banks
P2 5 Edward Zhang MA William H. Gottling
P3 1 Pablo Aguilar Vergara WA Matt Senior
P3 1 Joseph Ahearne OR Randolph Ruffin
P3 1 Edward Bourguignon WA Matt Senior
P3 1 Marion Brodhagen WA Roger Brock
P3 1 Mirco Dommann OR Zion Susanno-Loddby
P3 1 Russell Gelfan WA Steven R. Wilson
P3 1 Olga Grunskaya WA Denise Reed
P3 1 Brian Healy AK Nathan Alex Taylor
P3 1 Paulina Jenney WA Denise Reed
P3 1 Jared Kellerer WA Roger Brock
P3 1 Wade Lippincott WY Andy Macrae
62 USHPA PILOT
P2 3
P2 3
P2 3
P2 3
P2 3
P2 3
3
4
P2 4
P2 4
RGN NAME STATE RATING
RTG
NAME STATE RATING OFFICIAL
RTG
OFFICIAL
RGN
Ratings Issued July, August, September 2022 (continued)
RTG
P3 1 Jeffrey Merkley OR Brad Hill
P3 1 Chirag Mishra WA Rob Sporrer
P3 1 Sydney Miyahara WA Nathan Alex Taylor
P3 1 Brian Olsen WA Derek Baylor
P3 1 Andrew Pattison MT Jennifer Bedell
P3 1 Terrell Poole ID Nathan Alex Taylor
P3 1 David Preston WA Marc Chirico
P3 1 James Swanson WA Denise Reed
P3 1 Stephen Teller WA Matt Senior
P3 1 Rebecca Wilson WA Calef Letorney
P3 1 James Winter OR William Purden-Jr
P3 2 Steven Michael Fels CA Jeffrey J. Greenbaum
P3 2 Kelly O. Foreman CA Brian Kerr
P3 2 Casey Gerstle CA Robert Black
P3 2 Luise Gleason CA Rob Sporrer
P3 2 Nicholas Hill CA Jesse L. Meyer
P3 2 Janica Lee UT Dale Covington
P3 2 Alec Page UT Gary Begley
P3 2 Krishna Harsha Reddy Kothapalli CA Jesse L. Meyer
P3 2 Wade Taylor CA Robert Black
P3 2 Juan Vargas CA Jeffrey J. Greenbaum
P3 2 Ethan Veneklasen CA Jesse L. Meyer
P3 2 Carrie Vockrodt NV Mitchell B. Neary
P3 2 Warren Williams UT Jonathan Jefferies
P3 2 Wren Yocom UT Jonathan Jefferies
P3 3 Mariam Ahmed CA Marcello M. DeBarros
P3 3 David Andrade CA Jordan Neidinger
P3 3 Andy Barber CO Kevin McGinley
P3 3 Dylan Beard CA Jordan Neidinger
P3 3 Andrew Bradberry CO Misha Banks
P3 3 Robert Brown CA William Purden-Jr
P3 3 Richard Browne NM Chris W. Santacroce
P3 3 Rik Bundey CA William Purden-Jr
P3 3 Terry Camp CO Chris W. Santacroce
P3 3 Ellie Delbridge CA William Purden-Jr
P3 3 Nathan Duray AZ Chandler Papas
P3 3 William Erkelens CO Johannes Rath
P3 3 Heather Eves CA William Purden-Jr
P3 3 Alexis Falquier CA Rob Sporrer
P3 3 Peter Foster CO Stacy Whitmore
P3 3 Alex Haberich CO Gregory Kelley
P3 3 Arjun Heimsath AZ Chandler Papas
P3 3 Kenneth Wayne Henderson CA William Purden-Jr
P3 3 Dana Hunt CA William Purden-Jr
P3 3 Shervin Khorsand CA Marcello M. DeBarros
P3 3 Alix King CA Cynthia Currie
P3 3 Michael King CA Cynthia Currie
P3 3 Grant Matchett AZ Patrick Johnson
P3 3 Andrew Melville CA Rob Sporrer
P3 3 Joseph Milunas CA Marcello M. DeBarros
P3 3 Aaron Morrissey CO Gregory Kelley
P3 3 Jim Murphy CA Jordan Neidinger
P3 3 John Nagyvary NM T Lee Kortsch
P3 3 Michael Renner CA William Purden-Jr
P3 3 Dennis Shen CA Max Leonard Marien
P3 3 Julia St Clair CA Emily Wallace
P3 3 Ezra Stallings NM Charles (Chuck) Woods
P3 3 Garrett Stowall CO Misha Banks
P3 3 Bjorn Sumner NM Chris W. Santacroce
P3 3 Zach Vasnick CA Emily Wallace
P3 3 Matthew Walker CA Jonathan Jefferies
P3 4 Dominique Bagnato DC George R. Huffman
P3 4 Harry Barzilay FL Jc Perren
P3 4 James Brindley SC Austin Kasserman
P3 4 Rodrigo Coelho TN Austin Kasserman
P3 4 Zakey Faieq VA Ben White
P3 4 Helene Fiorucci GA Austin Kasserman
P3 4 Peter Horine TN Austin Kasserman
P3 4 George Pitcock GA Kelly Myrkle
P3 5 Daniel Bartus NH John Atwood
P3 5 Nicholas Boccia NH Calef Letorney
P3 5 Moon Choi BC Matt Senior
P3 5 Mike Curran MA Joachim P. Roesler
P3 5 Josh Gleiner NH Calef Letorney
P3 5 Warren Green MI Mitchell B. Neary
P3 5 Daniel Jazwinski MA Calef Letorney
P3 5 Lindsay King MD Rob Sporrer
P3 5 John McCarten Misha Banks
P3 5 Slawomir Pasieczny NY Thomas McCormick
P3 5 Viacheslav Pavlov NH Andrey Kuznetsov
P3 5 Cameron Peters MA John Atwood
P3 5 Marco Puerto NY Zion Susanno-Loddby
P3 5 Kristopher D. Reynolds MA Calef Letorney
P3 5 Mike Sopyla NH Calef Letorney
P3 5 Charles Walsh NY Philippe Renaudin
P4 1 Lynn Bryson OR Kevin R. Lee
P4 1 Adrian Forman OR Kevin R. Lee
P4 1 Peter Forster WA Mitchell Riley
P4 1 Moriah Gottschalk OR Max Leonard Marien
P4 1 Kevin Graupman WA Mike Bomstad
P4 1 A. David Hoffman ID Jeff Shapiro
P4 1 Andy Holmes WA Roger Brock P4 1 Daniel Jackson WA Marc Chirico P4 1 Peter Kabai WA Mitchell Riley
P4 1 Chad Uchino WA Denise Reed
P4 1 Alex Williams WA Mitchell Riley
P4 2 Jorge Eduardo Andrade da Silva UT Marcus V. Santos
P4 2 Asher Brown UT Ben White P4 2 Janaina Franca UT Marcus V. Santos
P4 2 Mitchell Friedeman UT Johannes Rath
P4 2 Dodam Ih CA Jeffrey J. Greenbaum
P4 2 Jonathan Mallory UT Ben White
P4 2 Dale McMahon CA Brian Kerr
P4 2 James Ryan McPherson CA Jason Shapiro P4 2 Benjamin Moody UT Scott C. Harris P4 2 Tristan Selva CA Robert Posey
P4 2 Mickey Sensenbach CA Joseph B. Seitz P4 2 Steve Toney CA Jesse L. Meyer
P4 3 Jonatas Alves Ferreira CA Marcello M. DeBarros
P4 3 Ed Armstrong NM Paul Gurrieri P4 3 Myles Connolly III CA Rob Sporrer
P4 3 Joel Hanson CO Mauricio Fleitas
P4 3 Don Herres NM Jeffrey J. Greenbaum P4 3 Miles Higgins CO Johannes Rath
P4 3 Martin Johnson CO Kevin McGinley P4 3 Marshall Maccready CA Josh Waldrop P4 3 Quint Morrison CA Marcello M. DeBarros P4 3 Michael Pavlik CO Gregory Kelley P4 3 Bryan Sillorequez CO Misha Banks P4 3 Cole Vandenberg CA Rob Sporrer P4 3 Cameron Weber CO Mauricio Fleitas
P4 3 Alexis Wheeler CA Juan E. Silva P4 3 Jay Brandon Whiteaker CA William Purden-Jr P4 4 John F. Lindsay TN Austin Kasserman
P4 5 Davidson RS Alves MA Davidson Da-Silva P4 5 Nogah Bergman Israel Charles (Chuck) Smith P4 5 Adam Chappell VT Calef Letorney
P4 5 Quinn Connell NH Calef Letorney P4 5 Helder De Lucio NY Davidson Da-Silva P4 5 Karim Hamdi NY Philippe Renaudin
P4 5 Cristian Camilo Martinez Henao NJ Luis Ameglio P4 5 Ricardo A. Tejada NY Thomas McCormick
P5 1 David Dexter Binder HI Chair Safety and Training Committee
P5 1 Paul Gurrieri HI Chair Safety and Training Committee P5 1 Paul C. Schaller-Franco HI Chair Safety and Training Committee
S0 2 John Csukran UT Jeff Katz
S1 5 Michael Gross NY Jeff Katz S2 2 Jake Trevino UT Jeff Katz
S2 3 Wyatt Ebert CO Douglas Brown
S2 3 Rob Eschbach CA Douglas Brown S2 5 Quinn Connell NH Calef Letorney S2 5 Peter R. Williams MD Douglas Brown S3 3 Logan Hulett CO Carl Weiseth
S4 2 Arash Farhang UT Carl Weiseth
S4 3 Dante Wardlaw CO Carl Weiseth
RGN NAME STATE RATING OFFICIAL RTG RGN NAME STATE RATING OFFICIAL
64 USHPA PILOT
CALENDAR
Submit listings online at ushpa. org/page/calendar. A minimum 3-MONTH LEAD TIME is required on all submissions. Tentative events will not be published. COVID reminder: Please contact event organizers regarding the status of events and any local COVID requirements.
JAN 27 - FEB 4, FEB 4-12 & 12-20 > EAGLE PARAGLIDING COLOMBIA TOURS > 3 weeks of tours near Roldanillo Colombia. Pilots of all levels will get coaching on thermaling, XC Flying, Tandem XC. We’ve offered tours for over two decades all over the world. The number of high caliber staff members supporting pilots at Eagle clinics and tours is unprecedented. Let Austin Cantrell, Marty DeVietti, Chris Garcia, Brian Howell, Jeff Shapiro, Rob Sporrer, and Logan Walters support you in achieving your goals for the week. www.eagleparagliding.com
CLASSIFIED
Rates start at $10.00 for up to 200 characters. ALL CLASSIFIEDS ARE PREPAID. No refunds given for cancellations. More info: ushpa. org/page/magazine-classified-advertising
HAWAII > PARAGLIDE MAUI > Call Paul Gurrieri for information about flying on Maui. Our school offers beginner to advanced instruction, year round. It takes 10-14 days to get your P2 license. 808-874-5433 paraglidemaui.com
NORTH CAROLINA > KITTY HAWK KITES > The largest hang gliding school in the world, teaching since 1974. Learn to hang glide on the East Coast's largest sand dune. Year-round instruction, foot launch, and tandem aerotow. 1902 Wright Glider Experience available. Dealer for Moyes, Wills Wing, and North Wing. Learn to fly where the Wright Brothers flew, located at the beach on NC's historic Outer Banks. Also visit our NH location, Morningside Flight Park. 252-441-2426, 1-877-FLY-THIS, kittyhawk.com/hang-gliding
BUYERS SHOULD SELECT EQUIPMENT THAT IS APPROPRIATE FOR THEIR SKILL LEVEL OR RATING. NEW PILOTS SHOULD SEEK PROFESSIONAL INSTRUCTION FROM A USHPA CERTIFIED INSTRUCTOR. USED HANG GLIDERS should always be disassembled before flying for the first time and inspected carefully for fatigued, bent or dented downtubes, ruined bushings, bent bolts (especially the heart bolt), re-used Nyloc nuts, loose thimbles, frayed or rusted cables, tangs with non-circular holes, and on flex wings, sails badly torn or torn loose from their anchor points front and back on the keel and leading edges. USED PARAGLIDERS should always be thoroughly inspected before flying for the first time. Annual inspections on paragliders should include sailcloth strength tests. A porosity check isn't sufficient. Some gliders pass porosity yet have very weak sailcloth. If in doubt, many hang gliding and paragliding businesses will be happy to give an objective opinion on the condition of equipment you bring them to inspect.
BUYER BEWARE.
MAR 10-12, APR 14-16, NOV 10-12, DEC 8-10 > EAGLE PARAGLIDING
SANTA BARBARA CLINIC THERMAL
XC CLINIC > Santa Barbara, CA has a very long mountain flying season extending from September through early June. These clinics are aimed to get pilots familiar with the thermal triggers, and lines to take to get from lift source to lift source moving down the range. We often set tasks similar to race to goal events much like the SB HoeDown organized by local flying guru Aaron “Cracka” LaPlante. www.eagleparagliding.com
MAY 19-21,
OCT 6-8 > EAGLE PARAGLIDING OWENS
VALLEY CLINIC > Bishop, CA. We fly the Owens in the spring and fall. The Owens Valley offers a variety of launch locations, and we will make a move to the launch which matches our forecast for the day. We can work as a group and team fly here as well. The area is world famous and worth a trip in the fall or spring for some classic flying, and XC opportunities. www.eagleparagliding.com
JUN 18-24 > EAGLE PARAGLIDING WOODRAT MOUN-
TAIN CLINIC > Woodrat Mountain, Ruch, OR. This clinic is aimed at getting pilots familiar with the fundamentals, techniques, and theory to excel at thermal flying, and making XC moves. Clinic discussions include reading terrain features, thermal triggers, with a goal of moving from lift source to lift source flying XC. After attending this clinic, you will have a better understanding of the moves necessary to get down range. www.eagleparagliding.com
SEP
23-24 > 2023 USHPA BOARD OF DIRECTORS
MEETING > Richfield, UT. USHPA is excited to host the Annual Board of Directors meeting in Richfield, UT before the Red Rocks Fly-in. Please visit the website for updates. www.ushpa.org/boardmeeting
NEW HAMPSHIRE > MORNINGSIDE > A Kitty Hawk Kites flight park. The Northeast's premier hang gliding and paragliding training center, teaching since 1974. Hang gliding foot launch and tandem aerotow training. Paragliding foot launch and tandem training. Powered paragliding instruction. Dealer for Moyes, Wills Wing, and North Wing. Located in Charlestown, NH. Also visit our North Carolina location, Kitty Hawk Kites Flight School. 603-542-4416, www.flymorningside.com
VIRGINIA > BLUE SKY > Full-time year-round hang gliding instruction, scooter towing, platform towing, powered harnesses, part-time aero towing, part-time paragliding, custom sewing. Wills Wing, Moyes, Icaro, Swedish Aerosport, Woody Valley, 804-241-4324, www.blueskyhg.com
USHPA WEBSITE CONTENT COORDINATOR > Have experience with content review? USHPA needs your help! We are in search of a volunteer to review and index content on ushpa.org to help our updating process. Interested? Visit ushpa.org/volunteer (259 characters)
PARACRANE TOURS 2023 > Paragliding tours to Costa Rica, Brazil, and Europe with veteran tour guide Nick Crane. Small groups, flexible schedule, epic flying. Costa Rica, Jan. 17-27 & Feb. 1-11 / Brazil, March 10-20 / Austria, Slovenia, Italy, Sep. 7-17 / France, Switzerland and the Coupe Icare, Sep. 20-30. www.paracranetours. com, contact: nick@paracrane.com
GUNNISON GLIDERS > XC to heavy waterproof hang glider gliderbags. Accessories, parts, service, sewing. Instruction ratings, site-info. Contact Rusty Whitley 1549 CR 17, Gunnison CO 81230. 970-641-9315.
Every pilot knows the importance of accurate flight info, weather conditions, and airspace avoidance. The Oudie N shows you all of that, plus live weather and much more on a bright, high definition, full color display so you can focus on flying higher and farther than ever before.
68 USHPA PILOT 68 USHPA PILOT
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