The Playtypus Papers
The Playtypus Papers
The Playtypus Papers
TJl::- 40 years Platypus, Sailplane & Gliding magaJ? zine's star writer by his own admission, has
been entertaining gliding enthusiasts (with some
success) as well as lecturing and admonishing them
(with no success whatever) in what started as occasional jottings but soon developed into a regular
treadmill. Despite his sporadic attempts to escape,
the Editor of the day always dispatched the
Rottweilers to drag him back to his desk.
Every aspect of gliding is covered, from the sublime (soaring vast distances at near-stratospheric
altitudes over California, New Zealand or the French
Alps) to the squalid (problems of basic bodily functions at low altitudes and retrieves from quagmires
inaccessible to any wheeled conveyance). Early
attempts in open cockpits to stay airborne at all, and
thousand-kilometre flights in super ships, are given
equally heroic
treatment.
While we're talking about accessibility, although
these pieces were originally written for glider pilots,
they can all be enjoyed by non-aviators, especially
those who are curious about the sport of soaring
and the strange people who do it.
The ATC
class of
1949-with
Platypus
ringed in
white and
Keith
Mansell,
EGA
Treasurer,
arrowed
Vttom tfye iDTtdtnq
G^
<^^-
^|
fah.
(j
Michael Bird
Editors' note
A large proportion of the cartoons no longer exist as originals, and have had to be scanned in
from old copies of Sailplane & Gliding. We apologise for the fact that the customary pin-sharp
quality of Peter Fuller's illustrations is therefore lacking in some instances.
Acknowledgements
In addition to all the people named on the title page who have
helped in bringing this book out I must also give special thanks, in
strict alphabetical order of surnames, to: Roger Quiller Barrett;
Gillian and Bryce Bryce-Smith; Bill Craig; Ted Hull; Jane Reed; Dave
Starer; Helen (Evans) and Nick Wall; and Gillian and Justin Wills.
One of their chief contributions was to help me decide what to
keep in or throw out from a 40-year pile of writings. However they
also supplied deep insights into the likely preferences of the readers of the book, as well as ancient photographs and even more
ancient memories, and modern solutions to seemingly insoluble
modern technological problems. I am eternally grateful to them all.
Platypus
Contents
Introduction by George Moffat.........................................................6
Foreword by Platypus........................................................................ 7
Platypus: a Chronology .....................................................................8
.9
............21
.....................................................
..35
......................................57
67
.133
....139
TAILPIECE .......................................................................................155
INDEX.............................................................................................156
COVER PHOTOGRAPH CAPTIONS ...................................................160
Foreword by Platypus
These little pieces are based on articles I have written over nearly 40 years, most of them for
Sailplane & Gliding. "Based on "seems pretty loose, but I have not been able to resistthe temptation to tidy up stuff that was hurriedly hand-written, sometimes in airport departure
lounges during fortuitous operational delays, and mailed to the editor at the very last minute.
Indeed, some weird things I seem to have uttered years ago, before I got my first Apple in 1981
and started processing words, are simply mis-readings by the distracted editor of my artistic
scrawl, which appeared in the magazine without correction, the author being by then several
continents away. Naturally I have a right, nay a duty, to improve on the original.
In the hope that enthusiasts from other countries - and indeed people who are not glider
pilots at all- might read and enjoy this book, I have explained things that all British pilots would
take for granted. For instance, I shall decode incantations such as CBSIFTCB, the prayer before
take-off, the careless omission of which is savagely punished by the Gods. I also needed to shed
some light on names and events that have been forgotten by the old, or never heard of by the
young. To meet that requirement has entailed some additions and amendments.
However I promise that where years ago I made some kinds of forecast, or issued clarion
calls for change, which now seem way ahead of their time and uncannily prescient, I have
not faked or fudged the record. Would I do such a thing? After all, it would be so easy for
any of you to check.
In the magazine, whatever is said in one month's column doesn't have to take any responsibility for what was said in another month's. Each one stands alone. The apparent mood
swings may be of interest to the clinical psychologist writing a thesis, but they often don't
mean anything more than that, for example, it seemed fun on one occasion to play with the
idea of a Utopian future for our sport, then on another occasion to imagine a future that
looks more like something out of Bladerunner or Alien 2.
Consistency is therefore one thing you should not look for in this book. I find I have contradicted myself all the time. I find that I said I would never again fly in the Alps, then just
when everybody else felt it was safe to go to the Alps I was suddenly back there again. Well,
as George's countryman Walt Whitman said, "Do I contradict myself? Very well, I contradict
myself. I contain multitudes."
The period to which these pieces collectively refer covers most of the active history of
British sporting gliding, especially if you take out the six wartime years when soaring was
forbidden. There is a danger of this book being seen as a historical document, to be pored
over by academics in hundreds of years time. However to treat this souffle as a meticulous
chronicle would be a grave error. These pages are my prejudices. If you are a serious archivist
you had better read this in comfortable chair with the book in the left hand and a bag of
salt in the right. Others, less pedantic and censorious, might prefer a glass of malt to a bag
of salt: it is for the laid-back malt-whisky drinkers that this volume is compiled.
Platypus: a chronology
An old friend has suggested that a list of key dates in my life will help the reader put
the following pieces into some sort of context. Here it is, heavily expurgated.
1934
Born Stoke-on-Trent, Staffordshire
1949
Gliding A Badge, Castle Bromwich
1954-7 Magdalen College, Oxford till 1957: gave up Logic #
took up Politics as a better preparation for the real
world
1958
Joined London Gliding Club, Dunstable
1958
Bought quarter share of Slingsby Kite 1 with Ted
Hull and partners
1959
Completed Silver 'C' in open-cockpit Prefect,
Dunstable-Membury 85kms
1960
First competition (Dunstable Regionals) with Geoff
Kerr in Olympia
1960
Bought fifth share in aero-towable Cadet, restored
by Peter Fletcher
1960
Editor of London Gliding Club Gazette till 1963:
"Platypus" nom de plume invented
1960
Bought fifth share in K-7 with Peter Hearne and
partners
1961
First time in Nationals, Lasham, League Two K-7
with Mike Riddell, R Q. Barrett, M Broad
1961
New Skylark 3 with Mike Riddell
1961
Skylark 3 3rd in Northerns at Camphill
1962
First (and only one ever!) contest win, Northern
Regionals in Skylark 3
1962
UK 100km goal speed record, Camphill-Ingoldmells
at 116 kph in Skylark 3
1962
Firth-Vickers team trophy with Mike Riddell,
Skylark 3, Nationals League Two
1963
First time in Nationals League One (Lasham) with
the big boys in Skylark 3: sank without trace
1963
Married Janie Miller, two children: Alexander
(1964) and Sophie (1967)
1965
Editor of World Championships daily newsletter,
South Cerney, UK
1966
Bought new Dart 17R with Ted Hull and partners
1967
300km out-&-return for first leg of Gold Badge and
Goal Diamond
1968
Became Director Odhams Magazines, then
Publisher, Ideal Home magazine
1969
Gold 'C' height in cloud during Nationals, completed Gold Badge in Dart 17R
1970
Dinged (Dung?) Dart 17R in cricket field: first Platcrash worthy of the name
1971
First soaring in USA: Black Forest Gliderport,
Colorado, Schweizer 1-23
1972
First soaring on Continent: Zell-am-Zee, Austria, K-6e
1972
New Schempp-Hirth Standard Cirrus with Carr
Withall and partners
1973
Janie and Michael divorced
1973
Bought new Slingsby Kestrel 19 with Carr Withall
and partners
1974
Married Veronica Snobel (Mrs Platypus)
1974
First foreign contest: Huit Jours d'Angers in Kestrel
19
1974
Bought Kestrel 19, grand piano and 800 bottles of
French wine; piano survives
1974
Bought the late Ray Stafford-Alien's Capstan
1975
Fl<j \v in Hahnweide contest in Schwabian Alps
(Germany) in Kestrel 19: came 2nd two days, blew
last day
1976
First 500km in Kestrel from Dunstable
1976
First Mrs Platypus pieces appeared in Sailplane &
Gliding
1977
1977
1978
1980
1980
1982
1983
1985
1986
1986
1987
1987
1988
1989
1990
1991
1991
1992
1993
1993
1994
1994
1995
1995
1997
1997
1998
1998
1998
1998
1999
1999
1999
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r/-"S fl O
e Wv O 0
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"Tradesman's Entrance' is a very 1930s expression. In those days such signs were posted on
the back gate, where a path led up through
the kitchen garden to the cook's door of any
typical bourgeois residence in the Home
Counties. In the war, however, butchers and
grocers made a point of coming instead to
the front door, if they came at all, where
they were treated like royalty by the lady of
the house in hopes of getting a little something over the meagre rations of the period.
Nowadays there aren't any cooks or maids,
tradesmen don't deliver and the sign-makers, never short of something to extol or prohibit, have gone over to printing savage
threats against smokers.
The fact that a hollow in the rolling
Bedfordshire farmland adjacent to our field is
called The Tradesman's Entrance would give
away to a non-gliding social historian both
the date of the London Club's origin and the
type of comfortable citizen who could afford
to glide. To have to arrive through this declivity, low and grovellingly slow, is proof of a
cocked-up approach, poor airmanship and
altogether the mark of a cad. By doing so
you show yourself up as a member of the
servant class, earning scorn and demotion.
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14
15
aware that last season's courses were a financial disaster entirely because of the weather:
the total absence of rain, fog and high winds
resulted in a ruinously high number of
launches with consequent wear and tear on
gliders, tugs, winches, cables, tractors, etc.
With luck next season's weather will revert
to normal and the members will be more profitably confined to the swimming pool, sauna,
solarium - and the new girl behind the bar. But
there must be no air display. Let me refresh
your memory - if that is necessary - about the
last one.
The day was supposed to begin quietly with
the arrival of visiting power pilots from all over
the country and a few gentle joyrides in the
T-21 for members of the public. The visiting
pilots fell (in some cases literally) into three categories: those who could not take-off properly;
those who could not land properly, and those
who could not quite manage the bit in between.
In the second category a Piper Tri-Pacer, after
sniffing nervously around the circuit a couple
of times, landed on Hangar Ridge, trickled
down into the gully and there stove in its nose
wheel and prop. The public might have thought
this was all normal, or at least a planned part of
the entertainment, except that Geoff Kerr on
the public address interrupted his immaculate
commentary with an undeleted expletive
which raised more comment than the flying.
In the first category, a Cessna took off with
a small boy as passenger and made a neat furrow with one of its wheels in the roof of a
Jaguar parked in an enclosure packed with
hundreds of people and cars. The Cessna got
airborne OK, but it was found impossible to
open or shut the Jaguar's doors, so it was a
write-off. Which is nothing to what would
have been written off had the passenger been
an adult. Amazingly the Jaguar owner was
delighted: he obviously hoped to get a brand
new one. 'Just wait till I tell the insurers how
it happened!'
In the last category, Godfrey Harwood
arrived with a motorised Ttitor, probably the
most inefficient aeroplane ever built since the
Spruce Goose. He proceeded to do aerobatics,
of a sort, in an aircraft that was marginal even
in level flight. The distinguished chairman of
the EGA Technical Committee described it
well. The Motor Ttitor 'ran out of height, speed,
power and control simultaneously' and
16
plunged into the side of the hill which was covered with spectators. There was no fire, and the
cut and shaken pilot was rushed to the Luton
and Dunstable Hospital. His wife Rika, it is
said, rushed in shortly afterwards, shouting
'Don't worry darling, I've found your false
teeth under the wreckage'. 'What do you mean,'
he says, I've got all my teeth right here!' The
only way we will ever discover how false teeth
came to be discarded on the Downs is by asking the club member who is always watching
the goings-on on the Hill through a telescope2 .
The Technical Committee chairman actually was in no position to criticise this performance, since while joyriding he managed in
landing to bounce the T-21's wheel on the
wings of two parked Blaniks in one pass,
creasing them as badly as the aforementioned
car. Like the Jaguar, the metal wings were not
repairable. After this the numbers of joyriders
fell off somewhat. Since joyrides were the
prizes in a raffle, the club did quite well out of
this sudden loss of nerve on the part of the
winners. Our T-21 was unmarked and the two
Blaniks belonged to other clubs, so again God
- or somebody - was on our side.
The spectators were having a grand time.
The parachutist ended up on the clubhouse
roof with a broken leg3, and in the middle of
what was supposed to be a solo acrobatic display in the Jaskolka, Ralph Chesters looked
down through the top of his canopy to see the
Luton Flying Club pass through the middle of
his loop as they strafed the field, the timetable
having got into some disarray. Ladi Marmol,
the emigre Czech pilot, roared under the
Whipsnade power wires while Derek Piggott's
plane just scraped over. The crowd went wild.
I don't anybody was using radio to co-ordinate
things; it was all loud-hailers and waving of
arms in the early 1960s. John Hands, the marshal, was going round like Gregory Peck in
Twelve o'clock High muttering about living on
borrowed time.
Finally, there were those pestiferous hot-air
balloons. Thank God they will just be a shortlived fad. First the unmanned Montgolfier
2 The false-teeth story is now said to be apocryphal.
But then so is most history.
3 The parachutist was Mike Reilly, who drowned in the
English Channel after making a jump for the film
"The War Lover" starring Steve McQueen.
17
The following year a great soaring pilot, grounded for many years by sinus problems, returned to
the sport, and told me the definitive story of the
Olympia in the trailer. For the pilot was Charles
Wingfield, who had no idea how much his little
adventure had been embellished over the years.
Read on.
18
<*,>
19
20
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
'
>c?!P
o
o
."
3
6
/.
:.,,
Jit*.
10
This may sound odd if applied to the typical situation when you are traversing a vast
expanse of dead air, travelling hopefully
towards a far distant area of potential lift. But
that is the whole point. You say to yourself, as
you toboggan smoothly through these
Doldrums, "If at this very moment I were to
encounter a thermal, what strength would it
have to be for me (for me, not some other pilot
with far greater skills than me) to stop and circle in it?"
Tbp pilots expect stronger thermals than
mediocre pilots like me because they habitually find stronger thermals than I do and so they
are entitled to set their ring to a higher rate of
climb than I do. (Of course the top pilots can't
tell us how to find these stronger thermals:
generally they don't know how they do it.)
Of course as you traverse this great
expanse of air between thermals all sorts of
things change, in particular the appearance of
the sky ahead. So your Instantaneously
Acceptable Thermal also changes, maybe
improving to 3kt or dropping to lkt; so that
your ring-setting changes, and you speed up
or slow down accordingly.
Seen from the side therefore your glide path
is not a straight line at all - even if the air
through which you have travelled is in a flat
calm devoid of lift or sink - because of your
changing expectations. That is perfectly right
and reasonable since we live in a world of
uncertainties. It is a bit like the market for gold
- pure speculation.
I suspect that this does not in any way contradict one word of Helmut Reichmann's classic book or the OSTIV papers, but I feel it
expresses it in a much simpler form. For one
thing it doesn't ask you to calculate laboriously the average strength of past thermals (old
theory) or to guess the strength of the thermal
ahead or the strength of the lowest part of the
thermal where you are likely to enter it
(Reichmann) but simply asks you to express
your general state of confidence about the sky
ahead. That embraces in one number all your
worries about sink, the possible disappearance of the cloud you are hoping to use, the
distance of the next thermal, etc, in one simple, highly subjective question, "What rate of
climb would I accept right now?"
One interesting thing about this approach is
that it confirms the Reichmann view that you
should hardly ever fly with the ring set to zero,
29
Spellbound (1994)
Incidentally, you can always tell the truly bril
liant pilots when they rush into print: they
have the most creative spelling. Moi, I scorn
spellcheckers on the computer because
although I am a crummy pilot I can spell like a
whiz. Yes, say the computer people, but even
Charles Dickens can hit the wrong key on his
word-processor. So I have just put this column
through my Mac's spell-checker and it throws
out lots of words, "Not in Dictionary: soarers.
Try soars, sharers, Sierras." I like that. I've
shared soaring in the Sierras with soarers. You
won't believe this next one. "Not in Dictionary:
Sailplane. Try Sail plane (two words)." Who are
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37
38
39
40
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It was nothing!
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43
I've since been told that Benjamin Franklin first said it.
44
Platypomes (1983)
Whenever I fly on a task I find myself churn
ing out limericks about the towns that repre
sent the turning points. The limericks have
nothing to do with gliding but help keep the
mind occupied - so as not to waste time on
such trivia as navigation, calculating rates of
climb, average cross-country speeds, final
glides etc. Since everyone will soon have com
puters to do all those things for us, there
should be no need for the brain cells to do
anything but meditate. Contest pilots could
be given a theme by the task-setters immedi
ately before take-off and the winning pilot
would be the one who had written the best
sonnet - or epic poem if it's a 500 km triangle
- by the time he gets back. The prizes for
speed and distance will of course be awarded
to the manufacturers of the glider and the
onboard avionics.
Thus, for a West Country turnpoint:
A daring young nun of Devizes
Has a habit the Bishop despises
It's not the cut of her cloth
That brings on his wrath
But her love life, which rather surprises.
I like the double entendre on habit, geddit?
No? Oh well, please yourself.
There's also the Ghoulish young lady of
Frome, who likes to make love in a tomb, and
to the north the Cunning old craftsman from
Goole. The list is endless.
Flying eastwards is trickier. Bury St
Edmunds and Cambridge aren't very
amenable and the editor won't let me do the
one about the young lady from Diss. The
number of times she says this is a family mag
azine - has she seen what they get up to in
family magazines these days?
SPOON
SOON
WARD D
"Some camphor blocks, please," I say calmly, trying to keep my head absolutely level
and hoping they have forgotten the Polaroid
glasses episode of the week before.
"Got a bad chest, then, dearie?" she says,
handing me the merchandise, shipped all the
way from the People's Republic of China.
'Thank you, Madam, but my chest is in as
good shape as your own." (A gross exaggeration, but never mind.) 'If you are desirous of
knowing my purpose, I intend to set fire to
this stuff to make clouds of dense black
smoke."
I notice she is edging towards the telephone, so I ask her for a notorious brand of
cheapo hairspray which smells like a Bangkok
bordello on a Saturday night, but fixes a trace
in a trice at half the price. (I really don't know
why I hire copywriters to do advertisements
for me when I have all this unused talent.)
She is about to promote a brand more in
keeping with my status as a mature company
45
I DISPEI
46
Galloping paranoia.
ta
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A task-setter's hat
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50
Excludes Patagonia.
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not round a task of his own devising. The winner of the previous day (modesty forbids me
to say who that was) suggested in his witty
speech that the chairman's lovely wife should
buy her man a GPS for Christmas. I think she
did, if only to help moderate the language
around the house.
I could cite several cases from my own
career in olden days before GPS, where I have
earned substantial points gains as a contest
wore on, so that by the very last day I was
remembering to switch the barograph on
before take-off (then, even better, remembering to put it in the glider), to go round the task
the right way, to take my pictures in the right
sector, to photograph the start-board before,
and the fin and the clock after, the flight, and
generally avoiding a host of little irritations
and punishments. What a rare joy it is to the
coarse contest pilot to see his name on a score
sheet quite unsoiled by Administration
Penalties. Admin Penalty on the score sheet
means, "You've done nothing really wicked
but you have been a pain in the bum to the
organisation, and we are going to make you
suffer for it."
"Ah, but now we are in the era after GPS,
and free from the problems that turnpoint
photography brought," you interject sagely.
"Nowadays such spectacular opportunities for
Winning by not Screwing Up surely do not
arise?"
If you believe that youll believe anything.
One of my friends, in a goal race to another
club (on a day when the weather man thought
that getting back to our own site was impossible) did a fizzing final glide to a field so empty
of gliders that he congratulated himself on
leaving his fellow competitors well behind. It
was only on the approach that the truth
dawned on him: he'd entered the GPS co-ordinates wrongly with his banana-like fingers.
Pilots in England (not to mention France
Spain, Algeria, Mali, Upper Volta and Ghana)
can earn excellent WBNSU points by correctly
distinguishing between east and west co-ordinates. Let your competitors forget to tell their
GPS which side of the Greenwich meridian
the turnpoints are, but you will remember,
won't you?
At least 50pts can be gained by remembering to re-program the GPS logger from SOsec
to lOsec intervals, because a fast, tight turn on
53
LOVE
HATE
Gin-clear visibility.
Gin-clear gin.
Task setting.
Meteorologists.
Tasks.
Task setters.
Final glides.
Final glides.
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Swept past.
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60
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62
Better to be a Philistine
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lives and our toys. By helping designers to discover minute little tricks of hydrodynamics or
aerodynamics, the computer has brought into
being hideous new keels for yachts, and added
all sorts of baffles and other unsightly junk to
racing cars. Can any sane person possibly say
that a new Formula One car is as good looking
as an old Mercedes racer?
The answer is No. I'm afraid that creeping
uglification is here to stay, and we shall have
to live with it.
But there are two consoling thoughts. First a
tour round any art gallery will demonstrate
that over the centuries fashion fools us into
believing that the most extraordinary costume
is in immaculate good taste, once people get
used to it. Thus in a while gliders without
winglets will begin to look somehow incomplete. Even now I feel cheated if I get aboard a
Boeing 747 that hasn't got winglets. Why are we
being fobbed off with second best? "We want
our winglets!" we yell as we bang our spoon on
our dinner tray, and are only mollified by a trip
to the flight deck and a second round of free
drinks served by the captain.
The other is that for any proverb, however
profoundly true it may be, there is an equal
and opposite proverb that is just as true. Bear
in mind that an ugly glider soaring is always a
more beautiful sight than the prettiest glider
sitting in a ploughed field. So in place of the
now unfashionable, "If it looks right it'll fly
right," we new realists say,"Handsome is as
handsome does."
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;*** ^
de-rig in pitch dark in a field knee deep in cow
pats, nor drive 200 miles in the wrong direction and 200 miles back again (French villages
have similar-sounding names) and still
remain on speaking terms with the instigator
of all this suffering. Platypus's friends, however, do all this and more. For my part, I have
learned to understand their jokes. At the
beginning, when they reported picking up
Platypus on the radio at 500ft over Evesham
(when in fact they had not heard from him at
all) they were puzzled by my phlegmatic
calm. It was however ignorance rather than a
humourless sangfroid; I just didn't know how
low 500ft was. Now I giggle politely and hope
it is a joke again.
I have learned a lot of things since taking
up with Platypus. I have learned, for instance,
never to go on a retrieve in a mini skirt - apart
from the difficulty of climbing barbed wire
fences, the horse flies near some Continental
gliding sites are vicious and ungentlemanly.
So I always arm myself, when going anywhere
near a gliding site, with trousers, Wellies, sunglasses, fur coat, sun hat, food, knitting, reading matter, money, a corkscrew and a complete change of clothes (see note on cow dung
retrieve). Thus prepared for any weather and
all eventualities, I can await Platypus's return
in as much comfort as possible.
I have learned that Platypus is generally
sweet-tempered and tolerant. Two things,
however, drive him into a frenzy. One is when
I do something wrong when towing the glider
to the launch point, and the rope snaps.
The other thing which can prove greatly
disturbing to the serenity of my home life is
a letter from Kirbymoorside bringing tidings
of another mandatory modification. Four-letter words echo around the house and we
have a bad half hour before Platypus regains
an even keel.
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Prop salvaged.
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The moral is: men who are tempted to infidelity, stay faithful to your loved one, do not
stray, for that can only lead to woe. That's right,
stick with your glider. Take a cold shower every
morning and go up to the club without fail. You
never know, the Lord may smile on you and
drop the wingroot on your partner's foot or
ground his airliner in Dubai. Your reward shall
be in Heaven - ie anywhere over 5,000ft clear
of restricted airspace. Here endeth the lesson.
PS. My apologies to women glider pilots for
leaving them out of this farrago. Researches
into this small but increasingly important
group are only just beginning. Offers of information and assistance gratefully accepted.
First-hand accounts preferred.
Washout (1971)
It was really a form of frustration that was to
blame. Here it was, the last weekend of June,
and I hadn't had a decent cross-country at a
time when I'd usually done hundreds of miles.
That was simply because I'd opted for a latish
contest and my partners enjoyed the brilliant
conditions of the early part of the season. Luck
of the draw. But all the same, that did not prevent my pencils being chewed to matchwood
as cumulus burbled past the office window,
framed against a dazzling blue background.
At last the glider, the pilot and the weather
were to meet. It was like one of Nelson's tars
finding his first woman after umpteen weeks at
sea. Caution was thrown to the winds. The
winds threw it back again, gusting to 40 knots
and howling round the windsock to the accompaniment of millions of marble-sized hailstones that pummelled and rocked those gliders that some fools had been rash enough to
rig. To hell with that. I was going to aviate. The
gods of thunder and lightning could go hang.
The moment we saw a patch of blue sky
large enough to make the aforementioned
sailor's pants, we launched. First tentative,
then successively brisker, updraughts bore us
heavenwards as the wind at the same time
obligingly whisked us out of controlled airspace into the flatlands of East Anglia. I had
no plan but to get to, say, Cambridge, attain a
vast height and, with luck, hack my way back
home against the wind.
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There can be some very good soaring weather at Easter, especially if the wind has a bit of
north in it. But that can mean snow, too. One
Easter Weekend day many years ago I
enjoyed myself soaring back and forth along
the front edge of a massive and impenetrable
snowstorm, which gradually pushed me
south-westwards until I decided to land at a
friendly site 20 miles downwind before I
ended up in Cornwall. I rang my home club
and told the member who answered where I
was, and that I would call again later when
and if I wanted an aerotow retrieve.
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3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
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Soaring costs
Men's jokes seems always to be about the things which they don't understand and
are in fearful awe of: for example, death, money, women, stall-and-spin accidents
and so on. Women's main source of jokes is men, except that they do understand
men and are not in awe of them one bit. You ought to sneak up on a rowdy henparty and eavesdrop if you don't believe me. Though do remember your Euripides
and the ghastly fate of the guy who did just that and got caught.
The particular source of anxiety I deal with here is economics, rightly termed the
Dismal Science, since it appears that whatever you do to improve things just makes
things worse.
However, as in so many walks of life, you don't have to be super clever to get by
in finance: you just have to avoid doing blindingly stupid stuff. (Like owning shares
in four gliders at once? Ed.) Unfortunately, not doing stupid things is beyond some
of us. Like moths to flames, or spacemen nibbling at a Black Hole, we can't help
being drawn closer and closer....
Soaring costs
culating the flight times from the speeds, and
badgering my parthers to lend me the computer discs on which we have put nine years
of Peschges data but with several individuals'
figures all mixed up.
Finally, exhausted, I called three of
Britain's most famous glider pilots to get their
opinion about how to escape this quandary.
The two famousest both said, "We've never
kept regular logbooks since we got our Silver
badge. Wish we had. Don't worry, the EGA
doesn't require it after your Silver." I was quite
flabbergasted as well as relieved. I thought
that I was always supposed to keep a proper
logbook, and that by not keeping one and
staying quiet about it I was not just being an
idle slob but a sneaky and dishonest one, too.
The third famous pilot let me down disgracefully as a witness for the defence: unlike the
more famous two, he had recorded every
minute of 22 years' gliding in a series of logbooks as immaculate as his moustache, but he
was an RAF type, so what can you expect?
So I sent off my 39 seasons' rough calculations to the adjuster and said wearily that that
was all I could manage, expecting the roof to
fall in at any moment through the combined
wrath of God and Lloyds. Nothing untoward
happened in fact, and the repairers did get
paid. But, and this brings me to our third item,
I got a courteous but firm warning, not about
logbooks, but about the need to hold back the
start of any repair work till a detailed inspection had been done by the underwriters'
appointed agents. I think they are absolutely
entitled to make that point. (Ain't that big of
him? Ed.) But strict adherence to such
requirements will put an end to one of the
most hallowed traditions of competition flying, namely the frantic all-night repair job
which is quoted for even while the dust and
debris are settling, and commenced before the
sounds of the crash have ceased echoing
around the hills. Have we not all witnessed, or
participated in, that dramatic scene, like a
Victorian narrative painting? Dawn glimmers
faintly on the horizon, promising, or rather
threatening, an early start to a perfect soaring
day. In the workshop, silhouetted against
harsh lights, Ralph Jones and his sons sweat
over glass-cloth and resin. Huddled under the
limp windsock the ashen-faced pilot and tearful crew are praying for rain, or at least a
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Soaring costs
Soaring costs
unnaturally jeers: "Look sweetie, some poor
clown hopes someone else has got a spare
Dart 17 starboard wing just lying around!
People really are weird!"
"Well, darling, what's that thing cluttering
up the loft that I'm always asking you to tidy
away and you always say you'll throw it in a
skip next time builders are in the neighbourhood, which they never are?"
Pipe hangs sort of suspended in mid-air...
"Great Scott! It's a - "
It can't be - '
In unison: It's a Dart 17 starboard wing!
It's a Dart 17 starboard wing!"
At least this little scenario is what the
owner of an intact port wing is imagining as
he hopefully pens his ad. After all, gliders are
not like power planes, with their marked preference for spins in one direction, depending
which way the prop is turning. So the law of
averages should send the answer to his prayer.
Pete Wells says don't joke, there is indeed a
serious trade in odd wings. He was called by a
chap who wanted a replacement wing for a
Polish glider. Pete happened to have just such
a wing, which was duly collected. However
the person who called - obviously not the
pilot at the time of impact, since he or she
would be unlikely to forget - had not examined the surviving wing much closer than,
say, a hundred yards distance. That's right,
you guessed it. They were now the owners of
two port wings and still no starboard wing.
This was eventually bought from the manufacturers. Oddly enough, nobody tried to
return the surplus wing to Pete and ask for
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Blackmail (1992)
During the nineteenth century some fellow in
London made a respectable income - well, a
sleazy income - by writing to dozens of
women, their names picked at random, saying, "Dear Madam, Your secret is known to
me. Unless etc etc." Eventually some lady of
impeccable reputation and a totally clear conscience (a rarity, it seems, in view the amount
of money he collected) put the police on to
him, and his squalid little game of extortion
was up. This gave me to ponder on the various ways we try to get people to do what we
want them to do.
The management of this organ have in
their desperation used all sorts of moral pressure to get me to produce my copy on time everything except bribery, that is, there being
no allocation for bribes in the BGA's budget.
They would, if they could, threaten me with
the exposure of some guilty secret of which I
am ashamed - very difficult to use on someone who has no shame. (Or is it that I have an
impeccable reputation and a totally clear conscience? Tkke your choice.) Other more physical means of suasion are foiled by savage
dogs guarding my house and especially my
trailer. So the editor's most frequent appeal is
to vanity. "Everything you say is read by
everybody in gliding, and your advice is Holy
Writ. People hang on your lips!" That doubtless explains why I mumble so much.
Anyway, vain though I am, this piece of blatant flattery is transparently pathetic nonsense. If people do read, or more likely skim,
what I write, they say, "He's only the resident
buffoon. This is the never-to-be-taken-seriously column, as a relief from the Bill Sculls and
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Soaring costs
Chance of a lifetime.
Soaring costs
would still be worth it. People like John D
make the glider seem like something from
outer space, an opportunity that you can't
afford to pass up, the chance of a lifetime. His
work on the gliders is very good, but the copy
is even better.
Some sellers fear that the mere fact that
one is trying to sell a glider means there must
be something wrong with it. They strive to
reassure the potential buyer by citing some
force majeure as an excuse for disposing of it.
Marriage is frequently pleaded; alternatively
we learn that the seller is emigrating to
Australia (maybe to avoid getting married)
and cannot take the glider along as excess baggage. However the best excuse - or worst
depending on your point of view - that I have
seen for some time appeared in an ad in a
recent S&G, which offered to undercut any
Nimbus on the market. This glider must go. A
broken leg has put paid to next season's flying/'
There, I am afraid, you see the hand, or at
least the heavily bandaged foot, of the amateur copywriter, who has obviously done no
time with J Walter Thompson. What he leaves
horribly uncertain is how he broke his leg
(about which of course everyone here at S&G
feels genuinely sorry). For Heaven's sake,
where was the glider at the time, and what is
its state now? If he broke his leg skiing then
for a few pennies more he could have made
that clear. It might seem irrelevant and extravagant to go on about what happened at
Kitzbuhl, but it might have reassured many
people who would otherwise hang on to their
chequebooks.
We also wonder about that rather vindictive note, This glider must go." He might just
as well have added, "and never darken my
doorstep again!" Does he blame the glider for
his broken leg? Perhaps the fuselage or wingroot fell on him while rigging, thinks the
potential buyer. If he was underneath at the
time, the glider is probably undamaged, and
the potential buyer cheers up perceptibly at
the thought. Perhaps, though, the vendor
kicked the Nimbus in a rage after stopping
five feet short of the finishing line. I've known
Spanish airline pilots do that to their planes
when they refuse to do what they were asked.
The mind runs riot. Hypotheses burgeon. Oh
dear, oh dear.
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The first golden rule of hardsell copywriting is, don't mention broken legs and gliders
in the same paragraph. The second rule is,
don't be afraid of long and fulsome praise for
the product. The third is, eliminate the negative and accentuate the positive: don't say
why you must sell, tell them why they've just
got to buy.
As Dr Johnson said, "Promise, large promise is the soul of an advertisement."
Broken leg, my foot.
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Soaring costs
Used in an invoice.
Soaring costs
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Soaring costs
Fluent French.
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Demented fellow-passengers
(1992)
Gliding in Australia in January has many joys
- chief among which is that one is not in
Britain. I was flying around in the ASH-25 at
Benalla with a visitor from London and he
said, clearly unimpressed by the modest thermal we were in, 'This is no better than July in
England." "But it isn't July in England/' I
retorted, 'It's bloody January!" He had no
answer to that.
Australia in January does, however, have a
few bugs. If you do not succeed in the immediate pre-take-off ritual of chasing out the flies
with your hat before closing the canopy, then
you have half a dozen absolutely demented fellow-passengers zooming around the cockpit for
the next five hours. If you get up to 10,000ft the
colder air makes them rather more docile, but
if you are desperately trying to centre at 500ft
over some featureless waste with not a habitation or a road in sight, that is for the flies the
ideal moment to force you to land so that they
can get out and walk home and tell all their
friends about their nightmare journey. They
****+**$$$$.
Immediately surrounded.
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Plat: What speeds are achievable with presentday gliders on tasks up to SOOkms?
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Crossing frontiers.
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Just as you can be too obsessed with the competition treadmill, you can also be too
obsessed with breaking records. The experience is everything; the beauty of it - different
scenery, flying over water, crossing frontiers,
soaring from one country to another. Maybe I
miss out from time to time on days when I
could have had an enjoyable flight, but have
not flown because it wasn't a record-breaking
day. That's wrong.
Just fly cross-country, fly long distances
whenever you can. It becomes a way of life.
A straight-out distance of over l,500kms has
been achieved in South America in their
1999/2000 season in a Stemme. Biarritz may
now finally be beaten.
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not joking - I am guilty of having sent hundreds of people to certain outlandings. I used
to he happy to get just one pilot back: that
proved my task was feasible. Now task-setters
want 70% or more back, and that's right. But
it takes guts to scrub the task for safety reasons, especially after several days of bad
weather.
Scrubbing after the entire field has been
launched, or even announcing which of two
or three pre-declared alternative tasks will be
flown, is a good idea. Brian Spreckley, who
ran the Spanish comp, did an airborne scrub
of the little class on the day of my ding, and
I'm sure he is right to want to make this a general rule. This way the director has an hour
more in which to judge the weather. Sure it
might waste an aero-tow, but the launch price
is a small proportion of the total expense of a
competition, even without counting the cost
of the odd crash.
We need also to encourage people to land in
safe places without sacrificing large numbers
of points on those days when mass glide-outs
under a dead sky are unavoidable. (Gosh,
those used to be fun: Tirst one to open his
brakes is chicken, yah, boo!'') Mike Fairman's
request in the last S&G letters pages, asking
that contest pilots be credited with the furthest
distance they have registered on the GPS-logger, so that they can turn back and land at a
safe field, is already enacted in some competitions . It was agreed by the pilots in Spain and
implemented by at least one pilot who was
clever enough to find a real aerodromo to
squelch down in. The new rule is called GNSS
(I don't know what that means but, "Going
Nowhere, $%*() Scared" has been suggested)
and seems to he an excellent innovation.
/rBlimey, Plat, you'll be recommending
engines next!"
Well, I won't be as abusive as I would once
have been when that topic was raised. The
notion that a usable engine gives competitors
an unfair advantage is nonsense. The standard objection is that such people will venture
over unlandable terrain and motor out of it if
they don't get lift. In practice the wonderful
unreliability of engines ensures that such
people will fill the obituary pages rather than
the lists of champions.
However the mere thought of Platypus and
engines will make any mechanically-minded
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I read a book of summaries of the OSTIV lectures on the way home, and despite the best
efforts of the cleverest brains in the gliding
movement to render their papers totally
incomprehensible, I actually understood
some of it, or I think I did.
By the number of papers, I guess that lots
of theoretical work is going into the World
Class glider of 13.4 metres, no flaps and a
fixed wheel. I look out from my study and
shudder at the 13.4 metres. To keep such a
device airborne in northern Europe would not
just require the combined talents of Heide
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an unfair advantage. No pair flying was evident and no codes, so far as I know. It's possible that, "May be landing in a field of spinach
at X-ville" meant, "I've got a Popeye of a thermal at X," but so far as I could tell spinach
meant spinach. It's very different in Europe in which, as a good European, I include
Britain - where all sorts of conspiracy and
trickery are encouraged under the euphemism of "teamwork."
The first big mistake a British pilot can
make about gliding in the western USA is
thinking that it is going to be easy, because of
the strong average rates of climb, the almost
stratospheric cloudbases and unlimited visibility. A talent for working half-knot thermals
with the cloudbase at 1,400ft over Middle
Wallop or Lower Slaughter15 is not to be
despised, but it does not prepare you for the
hot, mountainous terrain in the Sierras where,
despite the sunshine, huge expanses of air are
often just too tired to go up. The baleful influence of the big lakes many miles upwind of
the contest area was such that slight shifts of
wind could kill vast areas of lift. The place
where the whole field was forced to land one
day would the next day be yielding abundant
thermals, and vice versa: yesterday's great
thermal source would be today's sinkhole. By
sink I mean sink: 15kts down or worse is common out west. I learnt the hard way by landing out twice in the first two days.
That's another thing different from
England: in the Sierras great expanses of
thousands of square miles can be unlandable.
Local knowledge helps not just in finding lift
but in having an unmapped airstrip or a small
dry lake bed in mind when traversing what
looks like the other side of the moon.
ooo
After a landout on Day 1 I determined to follow the other pilots and learn from them on
Day 2. This cowardly plan was working fine at
first; I took no initiatives whatever. However
conditions were turning out to be blue, stable
and much poorer than forecast. All the more
reason to cling grimly to the tails of the leaders. Then, while we were already half way
down the first leg, I was thunderstruck to hear
15 Foreign readers please note: these places really do
exist.
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meandering track made of football-sized boulders, through a dense thicket and across a rickety bridge consisting entirely of loose planks,
by a four-wheel drive truck that offered massive ground clearance.
The conventional saloon car (sedan) is almost
a rarity in Nevada. Everyone seems to have some
kind of four-wheel-drive all-terrain pickup truck,
a camping van, an RV (recreational vehicle) or
some other variant on the idea of having fun,
going anywhere and looking rugged. It's the auto
motive equivalent of jeans, boots and a cowboy
hat. But they are very practical too, if you make
a habit of landing out in the Sierra Nevada.
At least these retrieves did not try to compete with those special delights of British outlandings - rain and mud. Everybody in
Minden complained about the terrible weather, though the sun beat down relentlessly.
"Where are the usual 20,000ft cloudbases?"
they wanted to know. Nobody had done better
than 15,000 so far.
Day 3 delivered the high bases, and I got
the hang of it and came 3rd. It was like getting
gloriously drunk in that I can't remember a
thing about it.
On Day 4 I spiralled in a great crowd of
sailplanes up to the mandatory ceiling of
17,500ft. (The organisers were meticulous
about airspace. The legal limit is 18,000ft and
the 500ft band ensures we have no excuse to
infringe that limit "accidentally".) That was
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I was one of the only two to get back, and joyfully expected to reap hundreds of extra points
to make up for the defeats of Days 1 and 2. Big
mistake. Under the local US rules, large numbers of landouts devalue the day severely,
whereas in Britain you can have a 1,000-point
day even if nobody gets back - we frequently
do in fact. I suppose it is a fair rule at Minden,
since it has to be a freak day that keeps a lot of
pilots from completing the task. So I remained
doomed to be the bottom of the pile.
The next two days were similar race days,
including a rendezvous with the World Hang
Gliding Championships at Bishop in the White
Mountains, which top 15,000ft. "Like flying
through a swarm of gnats/' said Gary Kemp,
who won the contest in his Pegasus. The White
Mountains are where I am going to try for my
1,000km Diploma before I get much older.
Beautiful, spectacular, breathtaking - where's
my book of cliches? All the cliches are true,
though.
Incidentally Pete Harvey, later to become a
formidable UK Nationals pilot, was taking part
in those World Hang Gliding Championships, so
we doubtless saw each other in our respective
gaggles. It was quite perilous for the hang-gliders,
with the turbulence close to the rock collapsing
several contestants' wings. Three hang-glider
pilots had to deploy their parachutes, and others
extricated themselves from, an inverted position.
The heating in the western USA is so much
greater than in the Alps that the risk of an upset
even with a conventional glider is serious. Keep
your speed up!
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Much concern is being felt by American glider pilots at the threat to ban all types of gliders from the great national parks - in which
the DFCBGA and I have recently spent much
time with tripods (a sure index of a serious
photographer) and black and white film with
orange filters (an even surer sign of a serious
photographer, causing ordinary tourists with
their point-and-click cameras to step back
respectfully). Without wanting to say, "I told
you so," I do remember writing about this
threat in S&G some years ago after encountering scores of hang gliders, paragliders and
conventional gliders swarming around every
crag in the French Alps. At what point, I
asked, do these stop being an occasional and
attractive enhancement to the scenery and
start becoming an eyesore? Conventional gliders usually fly higher, though some pilots
can't resist the sadistic thrill of making low
passes at ISOkts over hikers. The irony is that
ground-borne visitors are the ones that inflict
the physical damage and pollution with millions of boots and car exhausts.
However, lovers of nature and the environment, splendid folks that they are at heart, are
not in the Kasparov or IBM Deep Blue league
when it comes to relentless logic and consistency. In Germany an environmental group
has tried to stop a gliding club's operations
because the gliders on the approach might disturb some rare species of fauna. If the glider
pilots were grounded, it does not occur to the
extreme environmentalists that the frustrated
soarers might pollute the atmosphere by having to drive many miles further to find a site,
or that they might take up power flying, or
take four-wheel-drive vehicles across vulnerable terrain, to get their kicks. If they prevent a
young chap doing something potentially
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The first task of the contest was a 500km triangle with the last turnpoint at Laredo, way
down south on the Rio Grande, which is the
US/Mexican border. All the local experts told
me afterwards that nobody starts a 500km task
before 2.30pm in a big ship. Not knowing the
conventional wisdom, I set off at 1pm with
Duncan Gumming, an ex-Briton now a naturalised Californian (an ancestor of his was
knifed to death by Robert the Bruce in a
church, if you are interested) in the back seat
of the ASH-25. Deciding never to circle so long
as we had at least 4,000ft above ground, we
found splendid stretches of as much as 100km
that could be covered by pure dolphining,
wings level. 'This is the life!" we crowed. The
absolute joy of soaring, and no mistake.
Then far to the south we saw streaks of
high cloud, early warnings of massed stratus
and rain coming to meet us. If we had been
making a movie this apparition would have
been accompanied by a low, menacing rumble of bass fiddles, as in Jaws. A hurricane in
the Gulf of Mexico, the pet name of which I
have forgotten (as you know, hurricanes now
alternate male and female names to placate
the politically correct lobby) was spreading its
baleful influence northwards, and its outliers
soon fell across our track. So, back to good old
English soaring technique - a slow 30km glide
into wind from 7,000ft at the end of the cloudstreet to the turn, then 40km back through
dead air to capture the rapidly receding cumulus. But our troubles were over: more joyous
dolphining merged effortlessly into a final
glide to finish with a 128km/h average speed.
Naturally, being a coarse glider pilot and
no gentleman (I can't speak for Duncan) I had
a very satisfying cackle at the prospects for
the experts who departed after 2pm, since the
murk was spreading relentlessly over the
whole southern part of the task area. Most of
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a lead-weighted sock...
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fly nine hours and have no problems; sometimes it can get you after just 30 minutes, as
happened to me in a Nationals on one of those
epic flights round Wales and back to civilisation. (There go our three Welsh subscribers.
Ed.) Seven and a half hours of discomfort rising relentlessly towards agony. No bags, bottles, tubes-total lack of preparedness. I began
to regret, not for the first time, the gap in my
education when I failed to make the grade in
the Boy Scouts. When I eventually gave up the
battle and landed at Bicester they couldn't
understand why I steered the Nimbus right up
to the far hedge and baled out over the side
away from the control tower.
You mustn't risk dehydration, so you have
to drink lots, and what goes in has to come out
sooner or later. Well, to be accurate, a biologist
told me that most of the fluid we take in
comes out in sweat, believe it or not. (Anyone
who has flown with me believes it.) We should
be thankful for small mercies: we only have to
find a home for about 40%.
The high-technology solution is a system of
vessels and pipes leading to the outer air
down near the tow-hook (preferably aft of the
hook, if corrosion is something that bothers
you, which it should). I won't go into the
squalid details, but the chief snag about what
looks like a very impressive piece of plumbing
is that the pilot is supine-on his back, or very
nearly so, with knees on a level with his chin,
depending on the attitude of the aircraft-and
therefore confronted with the difficulty of
making water go uphill at the beginning of its
journey into the void. Putting the glider into a
steep dive to get the right angle of dangle is
not a good idea for a number of obvious rea-
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ing (similar to ordinary instrument panel piping) and a device which looks like a modified
condom. Its main advantage is that it would
probably work in any attitude. Its only disadvantage is that it would take some effort to
overcome initial squeamishness, and could
well take your mind off aviating, not just for
part of the flight, but the whole time. No
doubt female versions exist, since sex is no
bar to the disabilities of old age.
Lastly there is a commercially-available
solution, both for men and women, by P&H
Enterprises, for use in cars and vans when
there is no opportunity to get out for relief. (If
you are a security van driver you may not be
allowed out of your vehicle for fear of robbers.) It is designed to be as elegant and
unembarrassing as anything doing that job
can be, and comes in a neat plastic bag that
looks to the inexperienced eye as though it
contains your overnight toothbrush and toiletries. The disposable bags come with selftightening clips that close the neck of the bag
after use, so the bags can be stowed rather
than ditched on the countryside. Men can
even get underpants that harness to the
Carloo. This looks like the best all round
answer.
While in some gliders with extremely
reclining positions water will still have to be
pushed uphill somewhat, so that some risk of
getting a little damp may be unavoidable,
pilots flying such machines will just have to
reconcile themselves to not wearing their
Sunday best while on long flights, and to dousing themselves in aftershave when greeting
the farmer's daughter**. I'm glad for reasons
of visibility, more that anything else, that
ultra-supine gliders have gone out of fashion
since the 1960s.
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club. He wanted to overcome the classic problem of pushing water uphill, and he had the
bright idea of pulling it uphill instead. So he
built a device consisting of an assortment of
plastic tubes with latex on the end, a car windscreen-washer pump, and a 12 volt battery to
extract the fluid by brute force.
"How did it work in flight'?", I asked.
Well, it never quite got to that stage, he
said. He decided to test it out while lying on
his back on the bathroom floor. His first mistake was to switch the thing on. When he did
this he found it gave a violent and most disagreeable suck (I forgot to ask whether six
volts would have given a more agreeable
suck) which left painful marks. His second
mistake was to have left the bathroom door
open, so that when his wife-who as a gliding
wife is more or less permanently braced for
the unexpected-heard the strange noises
coming from this Heath Robinson machine,
shortly followed by even stranger noises coming from him, she dashed into the bathroom.
There is no record of their subsequent conversation, which I leave to your imagination.
To us in the great soaring movement that
narrative is absolutely credible. But I was wondering what the man in the street would have
made of it all if he had read about it in the
News of the World, which would certainly have
reported the story if our inventive friend had
used 24 volts and had required the immediate
aid of the ambulance or police, or even the fire
brigade. Knowing what Fleet Street journalists
are like when they get their teeth into a bit of
scandal, I simply shudder to think.
As a subplot for a bawdy novel I give this
idea free (which is very generous of me, since
the story wasn't mine in the first place) to
Tom Sharpe, who could no doubt work it up
into a masterpiece of bad taste.
I have seen the future ... but I'm not sure it works
Ever since our sport began, people have been describing serious or fantastic scenar
ios of gliding as it might be in the future. We today can laugh patron/singly at the
people who in the mid-1930's stated quite solemnly that Britain's major gliding clubs
would in future have to be set up in the extreme western parts, because the pre
vailing winds were westerly and long cross-countries could only be achieved by fly
ing downwind. The idea that sailplane performance and pilot skills would make
wind direction irrelevant had never occurred to them
I wonder: what similarly foolish futures are today's experts predicting for gliding
in the 21st century? Remember, should you wish to be regarded as a seer, the two
important things about forecasting are:
1) If you are going to make precise predictions, such as the winner of the Soccer
World Cup or the price of IBM shares, you must choose a date so far in the future
that when if you get it wrong everyone else has forgotten. If you get it right you can
of course remind them, with great fanfare.
2) If, however, you are bold enough to try to forecast the near future, make sure
everything you utter is vague, hazy and capable of multiple interpretations after the
event, like Nostradamus.
I should say that Nostradamus usually covered himself both ways, making very
hazy predictions about the very distant future. That is why he is so hugely admired
by the gullible, of whom there are many, and exploited by the crooked, who are not
above tinkering with the text to make it fit after the event
The first of these items, Almanac for 1990, totally disregards both of these crite
ria for the sagacious soothsayer. Tinkering with it to make it fit what actually hap
pened in 1990 proved impossible.
140
I have seen the future ... but I'm not sure it works
141
I have seen the future ... but I'm not sure it works
abortive and ruinous expedition to the
Himalayas (where the inscrutable local rulers
rendered him every assistance short of actual
help) to suggest that his fellow glider pilots
may not have all the marbles that God gave
them, verges, some would say, on chutzpah.
The burden of Doc James's argument, in case
you are interested, is that by flying a motor
glider on a light throttle you can get 40: 1 and
obviate the need for a 14,000 racing ship. A
bit more power and you emulate the best the
Open Class can throw at you.
Ye-es. The reductio ad absurdum of that
logic is to pack all the Booker members into a
747 (or better still, a DC-10, suggests a
Dunstable pilot) and fly the whole show
round the world on a light throttle. The cost
per passenger mile would be far cheaper than
gliding. I'm sure there's a flaw there somewhere, but I'm not sure what it is.
Nevertheless the strange things that
Brennig says usually have embedded in them
some nugget of truth: in this case he is raising
two valid questions: are we paying an unnecessarily high price for performance these days
and what is the most cost-effective way of covering the ground in soaring flight?
An incomplete answer to the first question
is that it doesn't cost any more in real terms
than twenty years ago. But of course we could
still be paying more than necessary because
of the artificial constraints of contest flying,
which may improve the breed, but only
improve it from the point of view of contest
pilots. The chief distorting factors are the
entirely arbitrary 15 metre limit on the
Standard and Racing Classes and the emphasis on speed-flying in the best part of the day.
The best definition of cross-country cost-efficiency for the ordinary club pilot would be the
cost per closed-circuit mile across a whole year.
Clearly the glider that could soar cross-country before 1 pm and after 6pm not just in the
summertime but in the early spring and late
autumn or even the winter, daylight permit16 Footnote: See S&G, June 1977, p115 "An increase in
wing span costs very little compared with the
installing of flaps. An 18m Class with all other restric
tions of the present Standard Class would allow much
better and cheaper gliders than the Racing Class,
which is therefore fundamentally a regrettable devel
opment in the wrong direction."
Unmarketable impediments.
142
I have seen the future ... but I'm not sure it works
I have seen the future ... but I'm not sure it works
"Now there's general panic! Many contestants are leaking like mad as they jettison ballast, desperately trying to get away. Odds
against white-haired veteran Ralph Jones are
soaring - excuse the pun, punters - as he sits
there, grimly holding onto his water as
always. He's a rank 200 to one outsider. All the
others are away and today's Dunstable-ParisBrussels triangle is a pretty short task. But
hold it! Just use the split-screen facility and
you'll see the latest satellite pictures on the
right half of your wall. Yes, it shows groundheating two degrees above forecast and the
strato-cu is breaking up into some pretty nice
streets. Wily old Ralph must have installed a
miniaturised satellite link in his cockpit; those
weren't carborundum-fibre repairs he was
doing last night after all. The Tote board is
going crazy! Watch the odds tumble.
Remember, you can bet any time till the first
glider crosses the finish line."
"Lee has to make another big gamble soon.
Should he release from his balloon now at 300
metres or should he wait till he's sure of contacting a thermal? He's got to drop 150 metres
in a dead stall before he gets flying speed.
There have been some nasty accidents with
some of the eager types - especially when they
forget about the Hill! If that happens today,
viewers, we'll bring you action replays courtesy of Lloyds (remember the motto 'Disasters
we deal with immediately. Catastrophes take a
little longer') so stay tuned/'
"No, he's hanging on, drifting away at about
ten knots; he's got to come back over the steward's cameras to start or his flight is void.
Someone's started! Dave 'Stubble' Watt, releasing at only 200 metres, plummets down the
curve of the Bowl, pulls up into a chandelle
then tiptoes at 250km/h along the ridge to
Dagnall. Press the button for Channel 17 which
143
144
I have seen the future ... but I'm not sure it works
I have seen the future ... but I'm not sure it works
I was looking forward to getting away from
gliding and broadening my cultural interests
in London and Paris, when I get this phone
call from a chap who says we can ship a
two-seater in a container to Australia for the
whole winter for almost nothing. So off to
Australia we go. Bubbly, bimboes and Bizet in
Paris will just have to wait.
My vision of the future of our sport is a
pretty jaundiced one, as befits a person entering the curmudgeon phase of life. I am sure
that by the time my successors are celebrating
the club's centenary in 2030, the public lavatory on top of the hill will have expanded into
Terminal Seven of London's fifth airport.
Gliders will be able to go 20 miles from a thousand feet, which will be just dandy because
nobody in England will be allowed to go above
a thousand feet. Because everyone will have
so much leisure time, when we host the
National Championships it will consist of a
solid month of polygons all packed into a tiny
area around Bletchley; it will be so tedious
that it will be compulsory, like jury duty.
In the Welsh mountains, however, there
will be a legend amongst the shepherds that a
great black sailplane, having shed all its gelcoat in 20 years of non-stop flight, is still piloted by an ancient aviator, permanently airborne and permanently lost, his beard streaming out of the clear-vision panel, living off
rainwater and small birds and even the occasional unwary sheep, uttering his distinctive
one-note cry, "There must be wa-aave here
somewhere." At dusk villagers will hustle their
pets indoors while pretending they don't
believe a word of the story of the dreaded
Jay-Jay-Bird. But those of us who are still
around will know it to be true
Sometimes I look back enviously from this
age of increasingly crowded airspace and
A matter of survival.
145
146
I have seen the future ... but I'm not sure it works
I have seen the future ... but I'm not sure it works
way. There are also two subscribers called
Glide, two more called Sinker, and a least a
dozen by the name Soar. I just thought you
would like to know the useful ways in which I
spend the winter months when I am not scaring myself silly in the New Zealand Alps.
Anyway, this lovely name made me think,
always a dangerous activity. Why not make all
the airliners glide, absolutely dead-stick, into
Heathrow? After all, if the space shuttle can
approach in total silence and touch down like
a feather, a Boeing 747, with a lift/drag ratio
many times better, can do so too.
There is a snag, of course. A single plane
can do that easily, but in a stream of airliners
all forced to follow the same three-degree path
(roughly 17 to one) at prescribed intervals,
many are going to have to use power to adjust
their position on the glide-slope when they
get a bit low or a bit slow.
Answer? Technology! Abolish all the current ground-based air traffic control systems.
Every plane in Plat's brave new world will
have collision-avoidance electronics (based on
GPS or radar or something; don't hamper my
racing brain with the details). They will all
come in at whatever glide angle, at whatever
speed and even from whatever direction suits
them, as long as they are quiet. I suppose it
would be nice if they agreed which runways
to use, though even that may be unnecessary
once we have ironed out the wrinkles, like
how to get them off the runways fast enough
to avoid the planes coming the other way.
What I envisage is a high-tech version of the
basic see-and-be-seen system, with minimal
radio chat between pilots, at any busy British
gliding site, or at a small American airport
without a tower.
There would always be objections: nit-picking, unimaginative, pedantic gripes about one
little problem or another. Like, if the engines
get cold through being throttled right back you
can't fire them up again quickly in an emergency, such as having to go round again. I delegate that small headache to the engine makers. Come on, you chaps, just redesign the
darned engines, or it's the Gulag for the whole
team. Well, we haven't got Siberia here in
Britain, but we can create the equivalent:
make them live indefinitely on airline food
served in a tiny, cramped space in thin,
unbreathable, recycled air, bombarded by
147
Motorgliding (1969)
The notoriously unreliable Tail Feathers News
Team, just back from covering a motor glider
jamboree on the Continent, report yet another sporting vignette of triumph and tragedy.
It appears that mountaineer Rudi Heidensieck has shinned up the North Face of the
Eiger in world record time. When quizzed by
our news-hound as to whether his performance had been aided in any way by the
squadron of balloons and helicopters that dangled safety nets below him, the famed alpinist
replied with scorn that he had never used the
nets at any time, so how could they have
helped him? Collapse of impertinent newsman.
However his doughty rival, Sir Fotheringay Tidworthy, so far from reaching the summit, actually failed to get on to the escarpment at all. Scorning all artificial aids in his
bid to storm the Eiger, Sir Fotheringay insisted on walking and swimming the whole 500
miles from his home, stately Bucktooth
Abbey.. Wilts, to the foot of the dreaded
mountain, whereupon our exhausted hero
expired. As if in homage, the Pound Sterling
dipped another couple of points on foreign
exchange markets. His few remaining admirers subscribed for a plaque to mark the spot,
engraved with the family motto, a fitting epitaph to a most British gentleman - Nice Guys
Finish Last.
148
I have seen the future ... but I'm not sure it works
Getting worse.
I have seen the future ... but I'm not sure it works
these events, not to mention Henley, Ascot
and other grand occasions, all being scheduled in the few sunny days, every member of
the Royal Family would be helicoptering frantically from one place to another to fulfil their
engagements, so that Purple Airways would
scythe through the serried cumulus, rendering vast areas of lift unusable. The Tbwer of
London would be full of glider pilots whose
self-restraint had cracked - after all, any system of radar, satellites and computers that can
predict the weather perfectly would have no
difficulty trapping and putting wing-clamps
on errant soarers, would it? In the predicted
good spells roads would be jammed, caterers,
hoteliers and gliding clubs would have to
charge treble prices to compensate for the
dearth of bookings the rest of the year.
149
I have seen the future ... but I'm not sure it works
150
Open to almost deafening sounds of birdsong obviously a beautiful soaring day. A sign on the
club notice-board welcomes new members to the
LGC: it is tastefully decorated with a picture
which at first sight looks like an eagle soaring for
joy but on closer inspection is in fact a vulture
looking for lunch. At some point in the perform
ance it should be arranged for another notice that
is partially obscuring the welcome sign to drop
off, revealing that LGC stands for
Lift
Generates
Cash
A pilot is seen impatiently struggling to get
his parachute on, whilst staring ecstatically
out of the window.
Pilot: This is it - the day of a lifetime - could
be a thousand k's! Let's get launched!
Where's the manager?
An opulently dressed figure - white suit,
white shoes (or better still, spats), Panama
hat, loads of chunky jewellery, giant Havana
cigar - materialises at his side.
P:
I have seen the future ... but I'm not sure it works
P:
M:
P:
M:
P:
M:
P:
M:
P:
M:
P:
M:
P:
M:
P:
M:
P:
M:
P:
M:
P:
M:
P:
M:
P:
M:
P:
M:
151
152
I have seen the future ... but I'm not sure it works
P.
M.
I have seen the future ... but I'm not sure it works
refer to a way of levelling the odds between
competing horses. So we do not have to abandon this term to satisfy the busybodies. I
imagine that this lady (can't say lady any
more: that's offensively patronising. Ed.) er,
this person would have a great time with the
gliding term now in the EGA competitions
handbook, Windicapping - she would no doubt
intone that it cruelly mocked those suffering
from chronically irregular bowels.
Of course this Political Correctness lark
may still spread to our sport, the PC-ists' total
lack of any sense of humour rendering them
immune to ridicule. In a couple of years' time
we will find that it will simply not do to suggest that any pilot or glider is inferior to any
other. Consequently competition reports in
S&G will become even more unreadable by
those who did not take part. Slow pilots will
tactfully be described as having taken the scenic route. Pilots who land out will be said to
have chosen to commune with nature or to
have expressed their intense interest in farming by meeting the peasantry (No! Ed) sorry,
country-folk at close quarters. Pilots who get
lost will get the JJ Pewter Pot for creative navigation. Pilots who crash will get a European
Community Medal for giving employment to
the craftsmen of Membury or Poppenhausen,
depending on the severity of the accident and the prang itself will be termed a HighTicket Alternative Arrival Mode. Everyone
will be a winner.
153
154
I have seen the future ... but I'm not sure it works
Tb a departed friend
Farewell, O blazing fields of stubble!
You often rescued me from trouble;
we loved the scent of burning straw
as fifteen gliders - or a score swooped up in searing plumes of smoke
(no matter if we cough and choke.)
Lament! We've lost our heart's desire the English countryside on fire.
Tb a polluting pestilence
Good riddance to the man-made pall
that over hill and vale did fall!
I deplored the element of luck
that racers gained from acrid muck,
bursting through a low inversion
to make a contest a perversion.
Rejoice! Without the farmers' gift
we'll use our wits to find our lift.
Tailpiece
WHY DO WE DO IT?
Some years ago a woman writer, whom I've never met, before or since,
sent me a letter asking me to contribute a short chapter on gliding to a
book she was putting together about lots of different sports, to appeal
to the ordinary reader, whoever that is. The book never appeared,
which doesn't surprise me because people aren't interested in sport in
general. We all tend to specialise: people who love sea-angling don't
want to read about ice hockey.
Nevertheless I described for her a flight during what I believe was the
only one-class contest ever flown in this country, the Dart Competition
of 1968. It was a good day, and of course in my piece I threw in the usual
descriptive purple passages about the joys and beauties of soaring. We
whizzed round a 110km triangle in about 90 minutes, which was not
bad for the old Dart. Having landed, all the pilots said, "That was fan
tastic, let's do it again straight away!" There's one great advantage, inci
dentally, that gliding has over sex. The second time round, however, the
wind direction and cloudbase had changed, the thermals were working
differently, the sun had moved round - as it does - and the rolling coun
tryside began to look completely unfamiliar. Everything was so altered
that I got totally lost, in spite of having done the identical task only an
hour before. I got horribly low, and eventually struggled home, but with
a very poor time. In those days you could pick your best time, so I dis
carded the second flight with a shudder. It was expunged from the con
test statistics, though never from my memory.
The point I was making to her was that gliding is like Cleopatra, "full
of infinite variety." The same day, the same aircraft, the same task, but
two utterly different soaring experiences. A Greek philosopher once
said, "You never step in the same river twice." Well, you never fly in the
same air twice.
Faced with the usual question from non-aviators, "What is gliding
like?" or "Why do you glide, why don't you fly power?" I find myself
reciting this little anecdote because it really makes the point - for me
anyway. There's no reason why two identical cross-countries in a power
plane should not take exactly the same time and cover exactly the same
ground: indeed, you might be rebuked by your instructor if they did not.
But not even our world champions can make gliding uniform and pre
dictable. And they wouldn't want to either.
Index
Air Cadets, ATC 9, 40
Alice Springs, Australia 8, 99, 100, 101, 140
America 11, 20, 55, 71, 82, 86, 97, 111, 112
see also USA
American/Americans 6, 11, 14, 20, 22, 31,
34, 39, 47, 54, 58, 60, 64, 83, 86, 93, 100,
101, 107, 109, 113, 125, 126, 137, 146, 147
Angers 8, 39, 81, 97, 131
Appalachian Mountains 99, 127
Australia 8, 32, 39, 55, 91, 93, 95, 98, 105,
109, 112, 125, 127, 135, 140, 145
Austria 8, 19, 95
B
Bally, John 49
Barrett, R Q 8
Barritt, Marion 8, 97, 108, 111, 126, 127,
128, 136, 160
Beach, Mike 71
Bellew, Gwen 71
Bellew, Jim 73
Benalla, Australia 8, 29, 98, 102
Bicester 22, 133
Bickers, R A "Bob" 74, 83, 84
Bird, Alexander 8
Bird, Mike 6, 120
Bird, Sophie 8
Black Forest Gliderport 8
Bohli 26
Bolkow
Phoebus 58
Phoenix 58
Booker Gliding Club 75, 80, 141, 151
Bradbury, Tom 74, 140, 149
Bradney, Maurie 102
Britain 20, 28, 39, 42, 55, 58, 64, 78, 86, 87,
94, 95, 98, 111, 113, 115, 117, 119, 126, 130,
139, 147
British 7, 8, 11, 18, 20, 22, 27, 28, 30, 34, 37,
39, 41, 42, 43, 46, 50, 53, 54, 55, 56, 58, 59,
60, 62, 64, 74, 81, 83, 95, 97, 100, 102, 105,
108, 109, 112, 113, 114, 117, 118, 124, 128,
140, 142, 146, 147, 148, 153, 160
British Gliding Association (BGA) 9, 15, 18,
19, 23, 34, 42, 47, 51, 55, 59, 60, 65, 85, 87,
89, 90, 91, 95, 125, 126, 134,, 137, 138, 139,
142, 148, 149, 152
Broad, M 8
Bryce-Smith, Gillian 18
Burton, George 45
17, 18
D
Daily Telegraph 13
Davis, Andy 75
Deane-Drummond, Tony 33
de Havilland Tiger Moth 16, 22, 102
Delafield, John 8, 90, 151
Derby & Lanes Gliding Club 18, 42
DFS
Weihe 42, 66
Downham, Ed 8
Dunstable 8, 9, 10, 14, 15, 16, 17, 19, 20, 21,
22, 23, 26, 30, 32, 34, 44, 49, 52, 57, 62, 82,
88, 108, 109, 127, 132, 140, 141, 142, 143,
151, see also London Gliding Club
E
Edyvean, Jed 75
Edyvean, Suzy 74
England 32, 52, 56, 59, 74, 83, 98, 102, 105,
112, 113, 114, 120, 121, 122, 128, 145, 152
English/Englishman 11, 16, 29, 33, 34, 55,
72, 74, 84, 95, 96, 97, 106, 107, 108, 109,
111, 112, 117, 124, 125, 129, 152
Enstone 47, 93
EoN
Olympia 8, 17, 18, 23, 24, 57, 62, 87
Olympia463 17
Eppler, Prof R. 141
Estrada, Chicho 119
F
Fafnir 58
FAI 8, 23, 32, 33, 34, 42, 72, 121
Chapter title
Fairman, Mike 80, 103
Family Circle 8, 149
Fielden, John 42, 49
Fitchett, Bernard 37, 143
Fletcher, Peter 8
Florida 6, 86, 117, 118, 119, 121, 127, 131
France 34, 43, 49, 52, 68, 83, 88, 95, 99, 102,
107, 109, 110, 114, 126
French/Frenchmen 8, 14, 33, 34, 53, 60, 68,
69, 72, 82, 83, 84, 91, 95, 96, 97, 99, 100,
102, 107, 109, 110, 124, 126, 131, 132, 160
Fuller, Peter 6, 34, 82, 85
H
Hahnweide 8, 39, 61, 81
Hands, John 16
Harvey, Pete 109, 115
Harwood, Godfrey 15
Harwood, Rika 70
Hawes, Clive 8
Hayes, Murray 80
Hearne, Peter 8
Heide, Martin 112
High Country Soaring 8, 114, 160
Hikoki Publications Ltd 8
Hilton, Barren 116, 117, 122
Hilton 8, 116
Hiscox, Dudley 14
157
Irving, Frank 17
Italian/Italians 73, 107
James Bond 31
James, Dr Brennig 95, 139, 140, 141
Jeep 119, 126, 127, 128, 160
Jeffries, John "JJ" 17, 23, 26, 29, 129, 139,
140, 151, 153
Johnson, Dick 6
Johnson, Dr 70, 91
Jones, Ralph 25, 43, 46, 74, 81, 87, 94, 140,
143
K
Kahn, Wally 18, 83, 95
Kemp, Gary 115
Kerr, Geoff 8, 15
Ketley, Barry 8
King Edward's School, Birmingham
King, Bob 88
Kjensle, Ingrid 119
Kjensle, Knut 119
Knauff, Tom 127
Kreyche, Tom 124
Kronfeld, Robert 9, 104
158
Index
M
MacCready, Dr Paul 27, 28, 30, 56
Magdalen College, Oxford 8
Malpas, Bill 97, 129
Mansell, Keith 9
Marmol, Ladi 16
May, Robin 8, 127, 129, 132, 139, 140, 151,
160
McMullin, Terry 80
Minden 8, 108, 113, 114, 115, 119, 120, 121,
122, 123, 124, 125, 130, 131, 160
Moffat, George 6, 52, 79
Morane Saulnier Rallye 84
Motorgliding 147
N
NASA 118
National Championships 8, 12, 36, 39, 41,
42, 43, 44, 47, 48, 50, 57, 58, 59, 68, 80, 81,
106, 108, 115, 117, 120, 122, 124, 128, 129,
133, 140, 141, 142, 145, 148, 152, 153, 160
Nelson, Stan 118
Neumark, Walter 14
New Zealand 6, 8, 41, 95, 97, 99, 100, 104,
105, 106, 147, 160
Noel, Jacques 97, 105, 129
North American Sabre 66
Nurcombe, Keith 62
R
Rackham, Paul
127
159
Index
Gull 49
HP-14c 58
Kestrel 25, 41, 67, 68, 71, 80, 82, 94, 96
Kestrel 19 8, 24, 32, 58, 62, 69
Kite 1 8, 10, 11, 66, 67, 145
Prefect 8
Skylark 67
Skylark 2 62
Skylark 3 8, 10, 55, 58, 62, 103, 131
Skylark 4 89
TUtor 10, 11, 12, 15, 62, 63
T-21 10, 11, 15, 16, 40, 137, 145
Slingsby, Fred 9, 78, 103
Soar Minden 114, 122, 125
Soaring Society of America 107,131
Soria 97
South Africa 100
South Cerney 8, 58, 101
Spratt, Charlie 76, 118, 119, 129, 137
Spreckley, Brian 74, 97, 103, 129
Stafford-Alien, Ray 8
Stammell, Pete 127
Stephenson, Geoffrey 49, 145
Stieglitz, Alfred 12
Stowers, Torn 116
Strachan, lan 37
Striedieck, Karl 127
Supermarine Spitfire 66
Sutton Bank 48, 49
SZD
Jaskolka 16
PW5 131, 132
T
Texas 14, 56, 57, 81, 111, 112, 113, 124, 128,
160
Till, Mike 22
Timaru Creek 8, 106, 107
Time-Effective Manager 8
Tocumwal, New South Wales 8
U
USA 6, 8, 17, 20, 54, 63, 78, 86, 99, 101, 111,
113, 114, 115, 119, 120, 122, 124, 125, 126,
127, 128, 131, 152 see also America
Uvalde 8, 111, 112, 124, 128, 129
V
Vintage Glider Club
w
Waibel, Gerhard
Waikerie 102
62
15, 52
Zell-am-Zee
8, 95
126
Michael Bird
The
Platypus
Papers
Fifty years of powerless pilotage
1. With Robin May at the helm, Tbny Hutchings actuates the radio-operated
shutter on his Canon T90 to take one of gliding's most famous pictures.
Number 13 is owned by Robin May (four times UK Open Class
Champion in the same ASH-25), Steve Lynn and Platypus.
2. Mount Patterson, photographed by Marion Barritt from the ASH-25 en
route to the White Mountains of California in 1995, the standard 1,000kilometre milk run.
3. Joe Rise takes the starboard inner wing as Platypus pulls the pins, after an
outlanding near Issoudun 1992. A party of French farmers, celebrating a
friend's retirement at a vigorous age 60 (vive le Common Agricultural
Policy!) lend enthusiastic assistance. Photo by Marion Barritt.
4. In Leszno, Poland, at the British 1994 Overseas Nationals, Plat celebrates
his brand new winglets and a bit of extra span, for which there is no sub
stitute. Natty soaring jacket is Plat's own design, consisting almost entire
ly of pockets. Photo by Marion Barritt.
5. A green valley in the South Island of New Zealand, photographed by
Platypus from Justin Wills' ASW-17, 1999.
6. Veronica - Mrs Platypus - in 1977, the year she wrote "Advice to those
about to marry gliding enthusiasts - DON'T!"
7 Platypus reflecting - in the wing of the syndicate Janus C, which ventured
across Nevada, Utah and Arizona - on the 1998 High Country safari. In
the background a Nimbus 3d also on the safari. Photo by Marion Barritt.
8. Platypus photographed with Marion Barritt at the 1995 "Geezerglide* - the
Seniors Competition - at Seminole Lake Gliderport, Florida.
9. Platypus and his co-pilot in Janus C, Sam Whiteside, on Minden Safari in
1998. Photo taken at Ely, Nevada, by Marion Barritt.
10. Sunset in Monument Valley, Utah - the "Jeep from Hell" and Number 13
en route to Minden, Nevada, from the Texas Nationals, August 1995.
11. A curmudgeonly Platypus (the lowest form of mammalian life, according
to experts), about to wade back into his natural element - water, not air!
n~lhe writer of
1 the
Introduction to
this book, George
Moffat, was a
dinghy racer at
international
level in the
1950's before he
took up competition gliding.
He has been US
National Soaring
Champion in all
three classes, and
was World Open
Photo: Adrian Hobbs
Class Champion in
1970 and 1974.
He is currently coach of the US World Team.
George's book "Winning on the Wind" is still the
Bible for contest pilots.
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