By Gerry Wingenbach
2010 AAA Sprints – It’s all about fun.
When it comes to hang gliding, there is extraordinary talent and degrees of it. Colorado-based hang glider Jeff O’Brien soars in the sheer talent category. His flights are beautiful and echoing. Ranked as one of the best in
the world, Jeff’s got the wind on a string with touch and subtlety. Genius is not replicable. Inspiration, though, is contagious.
There were no losers over the Memorial Day weekend 2010 AAA Utah Hang Gliding and Paragliding Sprints, a race-to- goal competition with various waypoints that mimics the US nationals but is toned down for novice and intermediate pilots. Nonetheless, the trump cards are the same – Mother Nature and Father Time. Check out the results at http://www.systemicpartners.org/sprints/www/results.html . But it really was all about fun. No jonesing and head games, at least not until the final glide.
The everyone-wins aspect of the AAA Sprints includes informative workshops covering GPS navigation, race strategy, flying in gaggles and individual coaching. Meet organizer Mark Gaskill, national paragliding champion Bradley Gannuscio, USHPA rep Nick Greece and almost everybody else with insights helped out in the above groupings. Shadd
Heaston, for example, started discussing GPS work with John Russell and soon had a gaggle of pilots under is wing and hungry to learn. Like Yogi Berra said: If you don’t know where you’re going you might end up at the wrong place.
How were the conditions? The Point was not at its best. To the Inuit people in Canada’s high arctic, the word for weather and consciousness is the same; for us pilots, wind and consciousness are the same. But only a fool would let the weather ruin a long weekend. Friday the wind was as noisy as an ocean and it was pretty much a no-fly day for paragliders, like trying to whistle Mozart during a Metallica concert. Pilots sat on their kit bags at the edge of the ridge hoping to launch, eyeing the windsock with the avidity of a drunk watching a slow-moving barman pour a cocktail. Saturday was
doable and Sunday shined, although mellow and cerebral instructor Chris Grantham called it “strong, chunky and way unstable.”
But we all should be tipping our wings for Mark Gaskill, who quarterbacks this event like the veteran he is.
Some of the highlights at the AAA Sprints Memorial Day weekend included:
The most beautiful and heart-rendering scene was the appearance of Dave Dixon, sparkling blue eyes and smiling, a Herculean-type guy, walking with
the aid of crutches that also support a surgically doctored left wrist, the result of an April accident. (Power line or a stall? Dave opted for stall.) “Eight days in the hospital and then weeks in bed,” he said. “I just had to get out here.”
The successful test flight of the ABLE pilot program will go down in history, but that’s a story for Mark Gaskill to tell. Here’s a video of Bradley’s test launch http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_rmp34Dgj_8 .
Bradley also gave a terrific college-level course in flying during a 30-minute,
off-the-cuff presentation. Here’s some of what he said: … don’t go out and get pinned in the wind … it’s just you and the wing and what you’re comfortable with up there … make sure your speed bar is connected, it’s as important as your helmet and reserve … if you can’t penetrate out front, don’t bench up, check penetration 3 or 4 times … don’t pull big ears if you’re being blown back – go for altitude … be careful doing 360s out front, a thermal doesn’t stay out front, it gets blown back…don’t use your speed bar when low to the ground or going down wind… better to have your wing in front of you than behind you … you need your head in a swivel the whole time your flying…in a thermal, everybody turns in the same direction, determined by the first one in, look above and below, below has the right-of-way….
Spending time on the ground with Jeff O’Brien is always a pleasure. Why do good hang glider pilots make for such great people? Also informative was a conversation with Ryan Voight, a tireless crusader for safe landing zones for hang gliders. And that means safety for all of us. “Hang gliders go up and down in the air quite well,” he said, “but not side-to-side. Paragliders are the opposite.” Thanks, Ryan. That’s something we all need to remember.
Meeting Trese, Steve Mayer’s fiancé. Go ahead, read that again – it’s not a misprint. The Club’s most eligible bachelor has caught a sweet thermal. Congratulations, Steve. Good luck, Trese! (Trese, he’s a great dad. And that’s probably the best thing you can say about any man.)
On Sunday, there were seven people in wheelchairs at the Point. Anybody ever seen a wheelchair at the Point before? We’ve come a long way, baby.
The company of Nick Greece is always pleasant. A skilled pilot, who along
with Bradley test-piloted ABLE’s Phoenix One, put on a bit of an acro show with it, much to the delight of the U of U engineering professor and students who built the rig. Nick’s feedback has sent them back to the drawing board for some minor modifications. All the instruments are there, but it doesn’t sound like an orchestra yet.
President Ty McCartney worked the barbecue. Webmaster Todd Nelson (a SLC fire fighter) worked Ty, the crowd and the barbecue. Thanks, guys. The burgers and dogs were perfect.
“That’s a cute baby” is probably life’s oldest cliché. But that little two-month-old Bella Brim really is a marvel. They just don’t come any more angelic.
Watching the too-cool-by-half pilots, the ones with the high-end wings and brew-pub brew, who consider the Club uncool, not worthy of dues, hung on the sidelines because you had to prove Club insurance to fly the AAA. You guys are all thunder and no lightening. Com’on boys, ask your mama for the 50 bucks. You’ve eaten that much in Club pizza over the years. Be stronger, better, more courageous, kinder. Shawna doesn’t want to be out there chasing you down; you know how to find her. Clubs like ours are what separate people from roaches.
Myron Cook and his never-ending stream of wisdom (enthusiasm can get you through anything is what he said before launching in the AAA). If you don’t know this guy, get to know him. He’s a parable on free will.
A little acro from Mike Steen left us breathless on the ground. Like I said, genius is not replicable; inspiration is contagious.
And there was so much more, but you must be getting bored of my dribble by now. But back at you soon. Your
submissions are always welcome.
Endnote: Club members, please indulge me – I have a story that needs telling. Last Sept-Oct-Nov, I got to know a daring young Swiss aircraft pilot named Bullet, who volunteered for the International Red Cross flying medical supplies, Doctors Without Borders and much-needed food through the worst of the war-torn and drought-ridden regions of Chad, Sudan and western Kenya. I once saw Bullet quell a riot of thousands of refugees ready to storm a lightly guarded convoy of UN food trucks. He did it by putting on an airshow – buzzing the crowd, corkscrew turns, loop-the-loop and his signature move; a full stall, tumbling to the ground and then pulling up. Gradually the riot turned into a crowd, then mere spectators, and an orderly distribution of food began.
Bullet crashed and died on Memorial Day weekend while heading back to IRC headquarters in western Kenya after delivering supplies to a way-out-there clinic on the Sudan border. The impossible-to-anybody-but-Bullet LZ was a little more than a half fuel tank out from his departure point and there was a head wind going home. Bullet always pushed the envelope. He was one of the most humanitarian people in Africa’s sea of humanitarians. He was on radio during his final glide, apologizing for the IRC’s much-needed aircraft.
I was in the cockpit of a Twin Otter with Bullet one day. He was making a delivery of medicine and water filters. He asked me to hold the stick and keep my head up while he went in the rear to pee in a jar he kept for that purpose.
“No problem,” I joked. “I’m a licensed, novice paraglider pilot.”
Two minutes later he strapped himself back into the pilot’s seat, pressed against the dried-out duct tape that held his door and side window in place, used his fist to give CPR to the instrument panel and then looked at me and said: Were you kidding? Have you really hung under one of those shower curtains in the sky? You guys are crazy!