Oz Report
Volume 12, Number 133Monday, Jul 7 2008
Laragne-Montéglin, France
http://OzReport.com
"Toto, I have a feeling we're not in Kansas anymore."

The pre-Worlds, day nine
(This topic is in: Jul.7 Jul.4 Jul.3 Jul.2 --> )
Scott Barrett wins the pre-Worlds
(Laragne-Montéglin, France)
Friday, July 4th
Despite coming in 21st on the last day Scott Barrett held onto his lead and won the pre-Worlds. The last day had very little spread in points between 5th and 25th. These were all guys that made goal quickly, so they all got about the same points.
Scott headed out in the first gaggle at the first start window. They all had a relatively bad start having to go back 1.6 km to get inside the exit start cylinder. Those of us who took the second clock only had to go back 1 km and we came back right into the lift and got up quickly, losing no height overall. Then we found very strong lift just before the first turnpoint, west down the Laragne-Chabre ridge line at COL SAINT JEAN.
Most of the first start gaggle headed east back down Chabre, while a number of us in the second start time jumped to the ridge to the south, more on the course line, at SOMMET DE LA PLA, and found strong lift to 7,400'. We could see four of the pilots with the earlier start just above us.
Next was a 16 km glide across the valley to LA GACHE. The glide was reasonable, but the lift was a bit weak at the hill side under the cliffs after we got across the valley. The lead gaggle was just over our heads, maybe two hundred feet. They had already taken the turnpoint 3.5 km to the east.
We finally got some good lift and were able to head to the turnpoint as the lead gaggle headed toward Sisteron. We worked weak lift coming back from the turnpoint and then just had to head off toward Sisteron also without getting high. We could see the lead gaggle turning in weak lift just past the town. We flew right over the citadel.
The lead gaggle was slow, very slow. Scott would later mention how even with Andreas and Mario Alonzi, they just weren't taking any chances and he had resolved to stay with the gaggle. Balazs (who was in second place) had caught up with them starting at the second start time.
We started turning on the north side of a valley on the lee side of a small ridge (the wind was 5 mph out of the northwest) here the lead gaggle had just been wasting their time. The lift was poor yet again. After gaining a mere 400' we moved over to the south side of the valley on the north facing hill sides. I saw a Gryphon vulture (gray back), circling in the valley near the hill side, but he was way below me and I felt that the hillside would be a better and kept going.
The Gryphon came over under me as I climbed up, and I changed the direction of my turns to match the Gryphon's, and we climbed out together. After climbing 1000' the Gryphon moved over a small ridge line to another face. The lift stopped so I went over and joined him for another thousand foot climb. He was right under my wing.
I was up high enough now to move over on top of the ridge line to get to the turnpoint. There were earlier starting pilots just ahead under clouds just beyond the turnpoint, the one and only cu's that we would see during the task, I jumped over to clouds called Zac and the Jeff's to come over and we climbed out fast to 7,400'.
It was a twelve kilometer glide to Malijai, a village before the plateaus that we were about to get up on on the way to goal. We came over the town and then up on the treed hillsides before the plateau. It was a search for lift on the hill sides and we didn't get that high. In front of us were two large plateaus covered with lavender fields. The mountain flying competition had turned into a flatland competition.
There were about half a dozen of us together and we worked the weak thermals to get across the plateau and jump to the next one. We could see Bruce Kavanaugh keeping up with us, but two thousand feet below. Jeff Shapiro had been above me but missed the lift on the hillside of the plateau and was soon working low with Bruce.
We climbed to 5,600' and jumped across the creek to the second plateau, found weak lift and climbed to 4,900', not enough to get to goal, but plenty to make the turnpoint east of Valensole. I found lift at the turnpoint which encouraged the others and just drifted in it toward the goal field, a sailplane port past Puimoisson. Climbing to 5,000' (2,500' AGL) it was an easy downwind glide in to a very nice air field high up on the plateau.
Attila Bertok started third and was very fast winning the day. Scott Barrett started on final glide with 600 meters below the glide line and Balazs went with him. Scott almost put Balazs on the ground 4 km from goal.
Jeff Shapiro got low in the valley between the first and last plateau and worked with ten other pilots including Robin Hamilton and Bruce to try to get up. Only he and one other pilot were able to make it out of that hole and make goal.
Jeff O'Brien was sixth in overall time to goal. He moved into tenth place overall. I was twenty fourth, three after Scott, and moved up to 17th place. Zac also made goal just ahead of me.
The US team was very cooperative and very often flew together. I think that this may be a first for the US team. The two Jeff's, Zac and I were very close to each other for most of the flight on this last day and flew together on many days.
The organization of the meet was excellent. There were twenty people helping with launches. The scorekeeping was very efficient with little waiting around to download your GPS even with 117 pilots and the scores were published almost immediately on the web.
The downsides include poor launch conditions under some wind conditions and the difficulty of calling tasks when cu-nimbs were forecasted for the mountains. The dodgy weather was unexpected.
Laragne is a great place to fly. Very open with lots of variety and challenges as well as many large fields to land in if necessary. The town is romantic and charming and has a great market day on Thursday. There is a lot of history to take in in the area, great cycling, mountain climbing, rock climbing (see Jeff's pictures), and swimming in the creeks. The wife and family will enjoy themselves here much more so than some other places that we go to where the flying is great.
Last day at goal:
| # | Name | Nat | Glider | Time | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Attila Bertok | HUN | Moyes Litespeed 5 | 02:21:41 | 904 |
| 2 | Alessandro Ploner | ITA | Icaro Laminar | 02:34:30 | 864 |
| 3 | Carl Wallbank | GBR | Moyes Litespeed RS3.5 | 02:50:09 | 839 |
| 4 | Balazs Ujhelyi | HUN | Moyes Litespeed s 4,5 | 02:37:02 | 824 |
| 5 | Dan Vyhnalik | CZE | Aeros Combat L14 | 02:40:58 | 798 |
| 6 | Fabien Agenes | FRA | Aeros Combat L13 | 02:55:00 | 793 |
| 6 | Jeff O'Brien | USA | Wills Wing T2 154 | 02:41:47 | 793 |
| 8 | Luis Rizo Salom | FRA | Moyes Litespeed RS3.5 | 02:41:59 | 791 |
| 9 | Christian Zehetmair | DEU | aeros Combat L14 | 02:55:05 | 790 |
| 10 | Hakan Andersson | SWE | Moyes Litespeed RS 3,5 | 02:42:01 | 789 |
| 11 | Andreas Olsson | SWE | Wills Wing T2 | 02:55:11 | 784 |
| 11 | Hans Kiefinger | DEU | Aeros Combat L13 | 02:55:10 | 784 |
| 13 | Richard Lovelace | GBR | Aeros Combat L | 02:43:27 | 782 |
| 14 | Jesper Hassing | DNK | Aeros Combat L12 | 02:36:00 | 781 |
| 15 | Tullio Gervasoni | ITA | Moyes Litespeed S | 02:55:20 | 780 |
| 16 | Mario Alonzi | FRA | Aeros Combat L12 | 02:55:22 | 779 |
| 17 | Francis Gafner | CHE | Aeros Combat L13 | 02:44:28 | 774 |
| 18 | Anton Struganov | RUS | Aeros Combat L | 02:55:28 | 773 |
| 19 | Raimund Kaiser | AUT | Icaro Laminar Z9 | 02:55:25 | 772 |
| 20 | Anton Minskiy | RUS | Aeros Combat L | 02:44:50 | 771 |
| 21 | Scott Barrett | AUS | Airborne C4 - 13.5 | 02:56:31 | 765 |
| 22 | Koos De Keijzer | NLD | Icaro Laminar Zero 7 | 02:58:59 | 748 |
| 22 | Zac Majors | USA | Wills Wing T2C 144 | 02:49:19 | 748 |
| 24 | Gary Wirdnam | GBR | Aeros Combat L | 02:49:37 | 745 |
| 24 | Davis Straub | USA | Wills Wing T2 - 144 | 02:50:02 | 745 |
| 26 | Gordon Rigg | GBR | Moyes Litespeed S4 | 02:49:44 | 742 |
| 27 | Blay Olmos Quesada | ESP | Icaro Z8 | 02:50:10 | 738 |
| 28 | Gianpietro Zin | FRA | Wills Wing T2 - 144 | 02:51:12 | 731 |
| 29 | Artur Dzamikhov | RUS | Aeros Combat L | 03:03:18 | 725 |
| 30 | André Disselhorst | NLD | Aeros Combat L13 | 03:04:46 | 716 |
| 31 | Laurent Thevenot | FRA | Aeros Combat L | 03:10:35 | 693 |
| 32 | Vladimir Leuskov | RUS | Aeros Combat L | 03:10:12 | 692 |
| 33 | Francois Isoard | FRA | Aeros Combat L13 | 03:10:14 | 689 |
| 34 | Malcolm Brown | GBR | Aeros Combat L | 03:08:58 | 685 |
| 35 | Joakim Hindemith | SWE | Moyes Litespeed RS4 | 03:13:29 | 671 |
| 36 | Endre Kovacs | HUN | Aeros Combat L | 03:18:14 | 658 |
| 37 | Eric Mathurin | FRA | Moyes Litespeed RS 4 | 03:29:29 | 600 |
| 38 | Uli Eysel | DEU | Moyes Litespeed S-4 | 03:40:15 | 598 |
| 38 | Jeff Shapiro | USA | Wills Wing T2 144 | 03:29:42 | 598 |
Overall:
| # | Name | Nat | Glider | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Scott Barrett | AUS | Airborne C4 - 13.5 | 3482 |
| 2 | Balazs Ujhelyi | HUN | Moyes Litespeed s 4,5 | 3363 |
| 3 | Dan Vyhnalik | CZE | Aeros Combat L14 | 3311 |
| 4 | Carl Wallbank | GBR | Moyes Litespeed RS3.5 | 3302 |
| 5 | Mario Alonzi | FRA | Aeros Combat L12 | 3141 |
| 6 | Fabien Agenes | FRA | Aeros Combat L13 | 3078 |
| 7 | Luis Rizo Salom | FRA | Moyes Litespeed RS3.5 | 3004 |
| 8 | André Disselhorst | NLD | Aeros Combat L13 | 2895 |
| 9 | Andreas Olsson | SWE | Wills Wing T2 | 2885 |
| 10 | Jeff O'Brien | USA | Wills Wing T2 154 | 2883 |
| 11 | Hans Kiefinger | DEU | Aeros Combat L13 | 2832 |
| 12 | Christian Voiblet | CHE | Aeros Combat L12 | 2818 |
| 13 | Tullio Gervasoni | ITA | Moyes Litespeed S | 2783 |
| 14 | Gary Wirdnam | GBR | Aeros Combat L | 2774 |
| 15 | Alessandro Ploner | ITA | Icaro Laminar | 2640 |
| 16 | Francois Isoard | FRA | Aeros Combat L13 | 2635 |
| 17 | Davis Straub | USA | Wills Wing T2 - 144 | 2623 |
| 18 | David Matthews | GBR | Moyes Litespeed S3.5 | 2571 |
| 19 | Bruce Kavanagh | GBR | Wills Wing T2 | 2531 |
| 20 | Hakan Andersson | SWE | Moyes Litespeed RS 3,5 | 2497 |
Discuss Pre-Worlds - nine at the Oz Report forum link»

California Fires
Near the launch in Santa Barbara
(Eliminator launch, Santa Barbara, CA, USA)
Tony de Groot <<magicwednesdays>> writes:
We have a pretty big fire going in the Santa Barbara range just west across Hwy 154 from the Eliminator launch in Santa Barbara. It's raining ash on my house here in Goleta. It is also threatening to move toward some other pilots houses near Hwy 154 in the Trout Club. As long as it stays west of 154 and the winds stay down it should be o.k. There were supposed to be sun downer winds which would blow the fire toward the city but so far the really strong winds haven't materialized. Still, evacuations are taking place in some areas in the Goleta area near the base of the mountains. Flying has been poor in the mountains but with all this activity and planes zipping around we'll stay out of the air until it is over.
http://www.techbanyan.com/archives/458
Well, the winds have cranked up and there is so much smoke and ash at my house right now. Man am I tired of all these fires, and smoke and ash! Supposedly of the hundreds of fires in California (this was on the radio), this fire in Santa Barbara is #1 in priority because of it's location to city and houses.
Here is a link with some good pictures of the fire. These pictures are from yesterday before the winds kicked in. Now it's really hard to see because the winds which are 30 miles per hour at the moment are blowing smoke directly out toward the city of Goleta.
http://www.rchoetzlein.com/fire/
Discuss Fires at the Oz Report forum link»

Col de Bleine
Going far in rigids at the great cross country site to the south
(Col de Bleine, France)
Tisseau Vianney <vianney> writes:
While the pre-Worlds were starting, I drove down to Col de Bleine to meet up with ATOS VR pilots Gil Souviron, Bruno Capelle and Fred Pignet, and local flex wing pilot Jean Charles Balembois. We flew 245 km on the 25th (triangle Bleine-Briançon-Dormillouse-Bleine - http://vianneyphoto3.free.fr/Bleine25/ ) and 280 km on the 26th (Out and return Bleine-Coiro-Bleine - http://vianneyphoto3.free.fr/Bleine26/). I posted a link with photos and story for my friends (sorry I wrote the whole thing in French since it was mostly for local pilots), but I'll give one an idea of our flights.
I'll be reporting from the Worlds in Monte Cucco for the Oz Report.
The track logs show basically big out and return flights just to our east in the higher Alps. Here and here.
Discuss Col de Bleine at the Oz Report forum link»

The pre-Worlds, US team results
(This topic is in: Jul.7 Jul.4 Jul.3 Jul.2 --> )
Zac didn't get counted
(Laragne-Montéglin, France)
| # | Name | Nat | Glider | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 10 | Jeff O'Brien | USA | Wills Wing T2C 154 | 2883 |
| 17 | Davis Straub | USA | Wills Wing T2C 144 | 2623 |
| 48 | Jeff Shapiro | USA | Wills Wing T2C 144 | 1955 |
| 51 | Zac Majors | USA | Wills Wing T2C 144 | 1916 |
| 88 | Derreck Turner | USA | Moyes Litespeed S5 | 1231 |
| 99 | Jack Simmons | USA | Wills Wing T2 | 915 |
Team results overall: http://www.chabre2009.com/Results/Teams_overall.html
We were in seventh. With Zac counted we would have been sixth.
| 1 | United Kingdom | 9368 | |
| 2 | France | 9343 | |
| 3 | Hungary | 8571 | |
| 4 | Germany | 8142 | |
| 5 | Italy | 8004 | |
| 6 | Sweden | 7779 | |
| 7 | U.S.A | 7754 | |
| 8 | UK B | 7631 | |
| 9 | Czech Republic | 7285 | |
| 10 | Netherlands | 7230 | |
| 11 | Switzerland | 7125 | |
| 12 | Russia | 7045 | |
| 13 | Austria | 7013 | |
| 14 | Spain | 6866 | |
| 15 | France 2 | 6347 | |
| 16 | Denmark | 5152 | |
| 17 | Argentina (Plus) | 5089 | |
| 18 | Dutchies 2 | 5043 | |
| 19 | Mexico | 3733 | |
| 20 | Norway | 3728 | |
| 21 | Australia | 3482 | |
| 22 | Russia 2 | 3441 | |
| 23 | Dutchies 1 | 3212 | |
| 24 | Ireland | 2660 | |
| 25 | Beloyar NPP | 2491 | |
| 26 | Israel | 1927 | |
| 27 | Lithuania | 1393 | |
| 28 | Slovakia | 1319 | |
| 29 | Belgium | 1306 | |
| 30 | Colombia | 987 |
Discuss Pre-Worlds - team at the Oz Report forum link»
