29 Jun 09

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Promises!
Why do I do these things? The last thing I said before launching to David Walsh, my co-pilot for the day, was "I promise I won't do a 'Jean-Pierre' and release from tow too early". So we towed to Hongrie where I released too early, thereby condemning us to an hour of scratching in the weeds before inching our way back towards the cumulus. Fortunately (if that is the right word) we didn't miss too much northern Alps action due to low cloudbase on the parcours and mutterings from a Pik pilot of rain on Blayeul.   


Glandasse

 
The conditions looked better for a trip to the west and, as I hadn't been to the Vercors so far this year, we decided to wander over the mountains to the west of the Durance, passing well to the west of the hang-gliding World Championships launch site on Chabre. After passing the col near Aspres we struggled a little with a lowering cloudbase but we were confident that the western face of the Glandasse would work in the westerly breeze, and so it proved. I hadn't properly ridge-soared here before, but can report that it is indeed a magnificent ridge and well worth the visit when the remainder of the Alps are unavailable.  


Vercors

On our way back south, as we crossed into the Aspres valley we saw two massive anvils ahead of us, one seemingly covering the Barcelonnette valley and the Mercantour, and the other, of slightly more interest to us, just to the south-east of Sisteron. We kept an eye on the latter while we had a go at ridge-soaring the western face of the pic de Bure, an activity I always find difficult due to the lack of scale on that face; as David observed, the surface looks like sandpaper, and it is hard to judge how close one is to the mountain.


Developing cu-nims

We abandoned our ridge-soaring exercise for the charms of circling in thermals, edging ever closer back to base while keeping a watchful eye on the developing storm. As we patrolled the sunny edge of the cu-nim we spotted two bursts of lightning in the Jabron valley, and rain pouring down on Sisteron town. We decided that an early landing might be a reasonable plan, so we let down into the circuit. Interestingly, Mike had landed earlier using RW36 in a light westerly, while we, only fifteen minutes later, used RW18 in a strengthening 15-knot southerly. That would be the outflow from the cu-nim then.


Black, black - it's all black...

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