23 Jun 13

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Beau Soleil


Dijon-Brognan, yesterday

An early start was called for in order to catch the 0735 ferry to Calais. The weather was very like an English summer - cold, poor visibility and buckets of rain accompanied us to Dover, and stuck with us until we reached central France. At Dijon the skies opened up and reminded us what we had been missing in the UK. 
This morning, after checking in at the club office, I attended to a matter of some importance. It had been brought to my attention that the Union Flag that had been raised last year was in a poor state of repair, which of course simply would not do. A replacement had been couriered to me in England, and it was duly delivered to Claude in the office with strict instructions to raise it as a matter of urgency. Honour was quickly restored and satisfactory diplomatic relations have been resumed.   


Phew!

 

Then it was back to business as usual. Rig, check that nothing had fallen off the glider after its 750-mile trundle from Cambridge, have lunch and fly. In a poorly judged attempt to show off, I released under a juicy cumulus en-route to the Gache, which of course didn't work. I spent a tense few minutes below the top of the low part of Gache before using a "tres delicate" thermal to climb away. 
Lac St Croix


Parcours

Cloudbase started at around  6000ft and slowly climbed to around 9000ft over higher terrain. I first headed south to take a look at the gorgeous colour of the  lac St Croix, and then headed north for the start of the parcours at the montagne de Coupe. There were several step-changes in cloudbase as I approached the parcours, which occasionally indicates wave (the wind was westerly/15 knots at this time).   


Pic de Bure

There was a lot of cloud north of Morgon and I decided to give myself an easier first day by crossing the Gap valley to the pic de Bure, half-expecting some wave there. None appeared, so I continued further west into the Die valley, where I found that the thermals, in the strengthening northwesterly wind, were getting more turbulent and harder to use.  I spent the rest of the afternoon pottering around Sisteron, searching for and eventually finding some reliable wave in the Rosan valley. Up to six knots in places, I topped out at FL110 and called it a day.


Rosan valley wave

As I arrived directly overhead the club to see which way the wind-sock was pointing, I noticed that I was in a wide band of wave going up at a steady 4 knots. I gave this some thought, tightened my straps another notch and started my circuit. I hit the rotor on downwind and bounced my way to a safe, if spectacularly exhilarating landing.  
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