Posted by: quienessupa | December 17, 2009

Nikon Festival Contest!

I hope my video/edit convey’s my passion for Hang Gliding.

http://www.nikonfestival.com/blog/2009/12/14/colorado-hang-gliding-to-live/

Below is Rich Crowder’s (www.RICHCROWDER.com) edit/perspective

http://www.nikonfestival.com/blog/2009/12/14/a-day-in-the-clouds-2/

Momma took my key to the piggy bank and swallowed it.  This is plan B… Moving to defcon zero.

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Somehow, these puppies are sympathetic…

Zapata 2010 needs to get back on track and some more aggressive Colorado branch WRE attempts could be supported.  But I’ll need help.  Just once, and sometime between Dec. 22 and Jan 13th, I’ll make a plea for a view and hopefully a nice rating.  The highest rated video can win the 25k prize!  If the judges like it best, it could win 100k!

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PROCEEDS PLANS:

1. New Icarco 4Fight helmet (smashed other one)

2. Two Yaesu VX-150 radio’s for XC and Zapata

3. Wide angle lens for taking video/photography to the next level.  And wireless remote system

4. HD video camera (dropped mine)

5. Suitable aerobatic glider

6. LOTS of free drinks for pilot friends and a Colorado Branch WRE support division maybe.

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Posted by: quienessupa | December 2, 2009

Flying the Moyes LiteSport

Aurora

Rich Crowder hooked up with us on a few occasions to see what Hang Gliding was all about and to capture his experience via photography.  His work is stunning.  All photos in this write-up are from him.  His blog about the experiences below:

http://richcrowder.blogspot.com/2009/10/cloudbase-chronicles.html

AND:

http://richcrowder.blogspot.com/2009/11/wolcott-hang-gliding.html

Aurora

Aurora

One other pre-note:  The latest Moyes Matrix bag doesn’t come with backpack type straps.  The old bags did, but I walked 1200ft down a mountain with one of them, carrying my glider/harness and swore the whole way because the high shoulder straps let the harness backplate dig into my legs.  Mark Windsheimer (http://www.airtimeabove.com/) fixed the problem by sewing up better shoulder straps and a waist belt.  It’s been great for carrying the 100lb Atos when I land deep in no-mans land, or for hiking my flex wing up a 600ft hill once in a while.  I can’t say enough about the craftsmanship.   Since our main local site has a 80ft hike up, this backpack has been priceless.  Get in touch with him and he’ll hook you up.

OK, so, about the LiteSport 4 (149sqft).  I’ve had the pleasure for almost 7 hours and 8 flights.  Keep in mind that my flex wing perspective is limited to king-posted flexies only.  The first 3 LiteSport landings were heavy, but the following 5 have been 2 step, catch her on your shoulders landings.  It’s pretty easy to land, even if my technique is sloppy.

Aurora I’m 165lbs and the optimum pilot weight on this glider is exactly 165lbs!

alex

This glider can be tuned a bazillion different ways.  I’m pretty sure it’s close to stock tune.  So you know what I’m biased towards, I’m moving up the Flex wing performance scale for aerobatic aspirations.  If I wasn’t into aero, I’d fly into the sunset on my Sport2, It’s AWESOME!

Handling:

  • My initial comparison was that the LiteSport’s happy to bank up more than my Sport2 in light lift while maintaining my climb rate.  Maybe all higher performance wings are like this because of their efficiency and energy retention but it’s somewhat poetic how you can bank up more for half a turn and use a little yaw input to flatten out the other half.  The Sport2 is AWESOME at making the most of flat turns, but it just won’t keep climbing in the light stuff once I bank it up past a point.
  • Pitch inputs are more effective than I’m used to.  At 1/4VG, the bar is also more raked out than I’m used to, but at bank angles 30+ degrees, it seems perfectly happy to accept this position.  Maybe it’s because of its energy retention, but I can let/push the bar out during a turn, and it has the energy to tighten the turn without mushing.  It’s awesome.  It’s a different way to fly, and very engaging.
  • Stalls: I’ve become very comfortable working sometimes bumpy air very close to the mountain in my Sport2.  I’ve been careful to stay an extra margin away from the hill as I figure out my new boundaries with the LiteSport.  SO, I was flying around 29mph (best glide or better I think) and got a tip stall in a turn from some rowdy air and found the stall/recovery pretty dramatic.  The inside wing stalled and I was slipping/diving, losing about 60ft real fast!  I haven’t stalled it on purpose yet.
  • When the air is rowdy I have to remind myself to keep light control inputs.  If the Sport2 is turkey dinner, then this thing feels a bit like my first Thai dish when I get too adventurous.


  • The 2nd most stand out thing from my perspective was the energy retention.  Doing some figure eights and sometimes mild wing-overs at 3/4VG I was finding that the gaining altitude part of each was easier to manage.  Seems like I could feel the timing better when I needed to add/reduce roll input so I don’t end up pointing straight up, but I still gain enough altitude to manage speed.  Also, I can do 4 full figure eights in the LiteSport and it feels like I’ve only lost 2/3rds of the altitude my Sport2 would have.  That’s better than a free Chipotle burrito.
  • I’ve flown a U2 for a little under 2 hours and I remember enjoying the way that thing would so easily bank up into a thermal.  My dusty memory would say the U2 was a little more responsive than the LiteSport.

Alex and Matt Performance

  • During my first speed runs, and at full VG and 50mph I noticed a PIO tendency, but it was easily dealt with by changing my ham fists to cornish hen.  I also was able to keep up with Steve on his LiteSpeed 5.  Relative to each glider’s weight ranges, I think he’s a good amount lighter than me on his so my keeping up makes some sense.  But, regardless, that’s quite a feat!  She goes.

Final thoughts

In spite of being the “ideal” weight for the LiteSport 4, I’m torn somewhat because while glide performance and handling are uber important, sink rate still holds priority one at my local site.  This 10yr old LiteSport really held my weight amazingly, but I’m pretty sure the sink rate on the bigger Sport2 was a little better.  Luckily, because of Mark Windsheimer’s generosity, I’ll be able to try a LiteSpeed 4 and maybe even at 4.5 in the future.  If I had to guess, a LiteSpeed 4.5 is going to be my unicorn.  These comparison’s are priceless before making a glider purchase!  Thanks Mark!

—-All ground-based Photography by Rich Crowder—-

Posted by: quienessupa | November 3, 2009

Halloween at the Herrings

Snow Pumpkin help

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We got a good foot and a half right before halloween so I made a big pile of snow.  When Jared (Sister’s man) came over we got to thinking and decided we’d chainsaw a pumkin out of the thing.  Then the neighbors got a wild hare and made this, complete with orange spray paint inside:

Goblin

snow truck At this point, one report said this storm could easily double the 1-2 feet we’d already gotten before the next day.  Unfortunately, it didn’t do a bunch more.

Halloween costumes

Mine are the ladybugs.  Niece and Nephew in the middle.  I still need to see Transformers II.  I hear great things.

My sisters’ new little thing.  They call it Rocco.

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Posted by: quienessupa | October 23, 2009

Mid October Cold Front at Lookout was a beaut!

Some highlights:

-BIG Golden Eagle, me, and a Red Tailed Hawk shared a thermal as they climbed through me…  Just before making it to cloudbase by the towers.  One gave me the upside-down talon flash as he flew under me.

-Strange feeling shared with a tower worker that was 2/3rds up the old radio tower.  When I said “How’s it going?” right behind him, watching him look side to side, and up and down was priceless.  He seemed to think I was on the tower too!

-A yellow balloon floated out of town up near me and I got to dive at it and play catch!  It’s WAY harder than I thought, but I got close and did a tight circle around it at least.

Click on the below for a quick video of the flight.

Cold Front Hang Gliding from bj herring on Vimeo.

The day was forecasted to slowly drop temp all day.  There wasn’t a defined frontal push of wind where the temp drops afterwards… just small pulses of cooler air oozing in that were tough to identify.  It really was great with a nice NE wind of 6-10 most of the time.  Cloudbase was 8300 when Steve got there and 8100 when I finally got to it.  I think the clouds filled the sky around 10-11am when Steve and I got our butts into motion.  Pretty sure there was a 4-6 hour window for soaring.  I got 1 hour and toplanded.  Then moved my video cam to the dntube and flew for another 45 minutes before landing in the miners field.  As I broke down, the smell of Greeley filled the air and the chill deepened while cloudbase hid 2/3rds of the towers.  It was pretty Northy but my guess is that it was soarable.  Great day!

Posted by: quienessupa | August 30, 2009

Sport 2 Crash and Atos glides

Oops yesterday

BTW, I’ve had lots of response from this picture.  Got busted the other day when I should have been flying!  I tried out a buddies’ business called Posterbrain with it and it arrived the next day.  Try them out with your own picture, or mine.  They’re good people.

http://www.posterbrain.com/s/z28424/Benjamin-H/

So, I ate it at Lookout a couple weeks ago.  It was my 3rd flight and as many sled rides since my adventure to Zapata, TX.  Psycho-analysis from concussion boy after a more interesting story…

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Looking for birds at the Lookout Mountain Nature Center.

After what seemed like a record-breaking day at Lookout Thursday, I got weak to my obsession on Friday and went flying.  Loopy (PG-pilot who had flown to Canon City the day before) was in the air over Boulder (17 miles North) when I got to Lookout.  His tracklog and mine together below (PG in multi-color, Atos in blue):

Launch to Ralston Butte

I launched after 4pm and was figuring there would be persistent ENE wind into the evening to give a glass-off.  I had keen interest to see what the front range glass off was like far away from the familiar territory.  I had at least 30% chance of guessing the glass, and I was wrong btw.

After a slow and broken climb to 8,9,10k over Lookout, I went for a Boulder’n’back task, in spite of much weaker conditions than I dreamed about.

Ralston to Coal Creek

I kept going north because the thermals kept showing up before I sunk below 9kft so it was pleasantly high.  Side note: both times I’ve hunted for lift behind Ralston Butte, I’ve found unpleasant air, this time, way above it at 9k.

Loopy Thermal

I shared that dodgy lift with several swifts, a red-tail, and something else big.  Did you know you can change your 6030 polar’s while in flight?  But, you have to live w/o the vario till you get it done!

Coal Creek to Eldorado

Unfortunately, once I got to the flat-irons, I was having trouble maintaining ridge height.  Even over the dependable “Shadow Canyon”.  Two birds down in the canyon were working something but I couldn’t connect with it.  Then I tried making a phone call which really was playing Russian Roulette with my phone’s health.  If I’d just drop it, I could get a new one tho!  It kept hanging up when I put it in my helmet so I typed out a text to my Boulder friend.  With polarized sunglasses on, all this was like shooting pool with a rope, but it was beautiful down lower nearer the flat-iron’s anyway.Flatirons

I was 300ft over the flatiron’s and had given up on making the next mountain (Flagstaff) and tucked tail for Lookout.  I remember thinking how I’ve made it back to Lookout before in my Sport 2 and the 225 Falcon, with some head wind, but this was starting to feel like the day’s thermal activity was quitting.  I just needed to keep the altitude I had and get back south of Eldorado Canyon where I figured I’d find thermal producers like Coal Creek Peak and non-tree’ d heat reservoirs.

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Which is my dog’s haircut leftovers, which is the Shitsu?  Can’t tell can you.

Except for the growing reality of landing half way back, the flight back was relaxing and scenic with the late sun angle.  The Atos made magical glides.  After a 200ft climb here, 300 there, I was turning in anything I could to make that vario beep.  Coal Creek Peak and my trigger hill in front gave me the Heisman and I was about to count myself as grounded.  But, just shy of Ralston Butte, a 350fpm thermal surprised the heck out of me and put the paddle shockers on my hope, back at 9,600ft.  I now had Lookout on glide.

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Ian took the above picture.  For two back-to-back return flights to Boulder to happen in the same day at Lookout is pretty special!  Also, a PG made it to the bar for his first time, which earns him the privilege of buying everyone’s drinks.  I have a feeling that turned into an impromptu fly-in party b/c everyone was gone when I top-landed.  It’s intoxicating to fly the Atos at Lookout.

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Nobody wrecks a Sport2, except me!

After 60hrs of exclusively Atos airtime, adjusting back to the Sport2’s behavior has been fine, except this one time.  I decided to smoke it in with a high banked turn but after that turn, I had eaten up my LZ a little and my split-instant instinct was that I was way too high and had to burn off altitude with another turn or else!  That decision for one more low turn was based on Atos glide and instincts… I wasn’t too high for the Sport2.  Also, given I had just pulled on full arm extension speed, I thought I had plenty speed for another turn… which would have also been true under the Atos, but not the Sport2.

****BA-Demotivator Picture will come back****

Anyway, halfway through this last turn, I was too slow and fell the last 20-30 feet to gain airspeed and was fighting to get my right wing out of the tall grass and avoid a ground loop.  It was too late to also rock up and do a flare.  I pushed forward for one last instant and then brought my arms in to take the pounding head first like a man.  My right shoulder hit first, then my head pounded the ground enough to crack my back.  I went through a downtube and not sure if anything else is damaged.  Mark’s finely tuned eyes are going to check it out for me.

I had some kaleidoscope-like vision for 20 minutes afterword and an hour later felt like puking so I went for a brain-scan.  All is good, but if you ever get a strong concussion, take it serious if weird things happen b/c a sub-dermal hematoma is serious enough to confine you to plastic sporks with corks on them, if you’re lucky.

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