The Playtypus Papers

Download as pdf or txt
Download as pdf or txt
You are on page 1of 166

I

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

A talent for drawZ-ViQg fighters and


bombers helped the
young Peter Fuller to
avoid being beaten
up by the other kids.
After three years at
art school, during a
long spell as a technical illustrator at
British Airways, he
discovered a love of gliding.
He went independent in 1970 and has been a freelance artist for 30 years.
Peter began illustrating articles by Platypus and
other contributors in Sailplane & Gliding in the
early 1960s and the artist is now chained to the
treadmill alongside the writer. The persona of
Platypus (vaiu. optimistic and occasionally sentimentally idealist! : , but also scheming, lecherous,
cynical and curmudgeonly) is now inescapably captured in Peter's cartoons.
19.95 UK
$29.95 USA


Vttom tfye iDTtdtnq
G^

<^^-

^|

fah.

(j

The Platypus Papers


Fifty years of powerless pilotage

Michael Bird

First Published in Great Britain in 2000 by


Platypus Publications
5 Glentham Gardens London SW13 9JN
2000 Platypus Publications
All rights reserved. Apart from any fair dealing for the purposes of private study, research,
criticism or review, as permitted under the Copyright, Design and Patents Act 1988, no part of
this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system or transmitted in any form or
by any means, electronic, electrical, chemical, mechanical, optical, photocopying, recording
or otherwise without prior written permission. All enquiries should be directed to the
Publisher.
ISBN 0953 8177 09

Edited by Michael Bird & Marion Barritt


Editorial consultancy by Barry Ketley
Design & layout by Sue Bushell
Illustrations by Peter Fuller
Cover design by Wendy Durham
Printed in Great Britain by
Hillman Printers (Frome) Ltd, Somerset
Distribution & Marketing (except in North America) by
Hikoki Publications Ltd
16 Newport Rd, Aldershot Surrey, GUI 2 4PB
tel: 01252 319 935
fax: 01252 655 593
e-mail: [email protected]
www.hikoki.dircon.co.uk/

Distribution & Marketing in North America by


Marion Barritt
1301 Windsor Court, Gardnerville, NV 89410, USA
tel: 1 775 782 7353
fax: 1 775 782 7353
e-mail: mbarritt(g)po wernet.net

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.

To Alexander and Sophie

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

LOW HOPS AND HIGH HOPES

............21

OVER THE HILLS AND FARAWAY


SURVIVAL OF THE FITTEST, FASTEST, MOST CUNNING,
DEVIOUS ETC

.....................................................

THOSE MAGNIFICENT FLYING MACHINES

..35

......................................57

PEOPLE, PARTNERSHIPS AND PASSIONS ............................

67

HECK, IT'S SUPPOSED TO BE DANGEROUS, ISN'T IT? .....................77


SOARING COSTS ..............................................................................86
TRAVEL BROADENS THE BEHIND: GLIDING IN EUROPE,
AUSTRALIA & NEW ZEALAND .........................................................95
UNDER WESTERN SKIES: GLIDING IN THE USA .................. .....Ill
FALLING APART GRACEFULLY ......................................
I HAVE SEEN THE FUTURE ... BUT I'M NOT SURE IT WORKS

.133
....139

TAILPIECE .......................................................................................155
INDEX.............................................................................................156
COVER PHOTOGRAPH CAPTIONS ...................................................160

Introduction by George Moffat


Lives there a reader of Sailplane & Gliding, arguably the world's finest gliding magazine, who
doesn't turn first to "Tailfeathers" - soaring according to Platypus, otherwise known as Mike
Bird? In his column, month after month, Plat manages to cover the entire spectrum of the
soaring world, always in forceful and satirically humorous terms. It's enough to make a fellow soaring writer green with envy.
I first met Mike several years ago at one of the huge American soaring conventions where
he turned out to be the superb main speaker, no mean feat when the after-dinner audience
has been benumbed by endless awards presentations. On knowing him better it gradually
turned out that he had another talent or two up has sleeve. Outstanding classical piano playing, for one. Not to mention a long and distinguished career in the publishing business. Titles
like Editor, Publisher, Managing Director and even Proprietor abound, though he insists the
last is on a very small scale. Oh yes, he does a bit of gliding, too. Some 4,000 hours' worth, with
two back-to-back 1,000 km Diploma flights and lots of successful contest and record flying on
several continents. Did I also mention vast depths of knowledge on a Renaissance man's
gamut of subjects?
Leafing through a stack of Sailplane & Gliding yields pieces showing the widest range of
interests:
The terror-inducing effects of Dick Johnson's flight tests on German glider designers.
"Please God, let him stick it to someone else..."
The stirring cry of "Let's hear it for the leeches!" on the grounds that competitions would
be down to five ships or less without them. Always the realist, our Plat.
The day he lost his virginity. I don't just mean aeronautically, either.
Wonderful and envy-making accounts of flying in exotic places, New Zealand, the USA,
the European Continent. "The rain in Spain sprays mainly on my plane. Again."
The need to buy fine wines, grand pianos and new gliders to combat inflation.
The lack of any very deep nostalgia for the Good Old days of Gliding.
All these flattering things having been said, I'm sad to have to report that old Platypus is
a bit of a fraud. You know his trademark cartoon alter ego, a bumbling, somewhat pot-bellied figure with a broad, innocent, duck-like bill, as drawn by Peter Fuller? Only the eyes are
a give-away, with a crafty look at some passing female or one of fiendish glee if there's a
chance to do the dirty on some competitor. Well, I happened to be flying with old Plat in a
contest in Florida in spring 1999, and I am able to report that once the starting-line is
crossed a Jekyll-Hyde transformation takes place. The broad bill narrows, the round eyes
glint with steel and Lo! we have Plat the barracuda, terror of the skies! And jolly hard to
get away from too.
What we have here is a man for all seasons who chronicles the soaring world with grace
and wit. We are lucky to have him, and luckier still to have this book, bringing together the
best of Plat.

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

Only day win in 40 years, in Open Class Nationals,


got delusions of adequacy, see next entry
Wrote off Kestrel in landing (20%) and road wreck
(80%) on last day of Nationals
Bought half share of Nimbus 2 (refurbished by John
Delafield) with Clive Hawes
Diamond height, Nimbus 2
Bought fifth share in Caproni Calif side-by-side twoseater with Tony Gibbs et al
Became Managing Director Thomson Consumer
Magazines (Family Circle etc)
Bought into ASW-20L syndicate: Carr Withall et al
Wrote first book: "The Time-Effective Manager"
Veronica (Mrs Platypus) died of cancer
Bought ASW-22 from Hans-Werner Grosse; became
big wings addict. More TINSFOS!
First trip to Australia: flew with Hans-Werner Grosse
in his ASH-25 Tbcumwal, New South Wales
Second trip to Australia: flew with Hans-Werner
Grosse in ASH-25, Alice Springs, Northern
Territories on record attempts
Bought new ASH-25.
Navigator in ASH-25 at Lasham, when Robin May
wins Open Class for second time (out of four wins
in total)
Entered semi-retired phase: began serious aviating
British two-seat triangle 500km record at 131 kph
(with Reg Gardner) in ASH-25 Benalla, Australia,
then 300 km out and return with G Dale
World Championships - P2 at Uvalde with Robin
May in ASH-25
Third in UK Open Nationals with Ed Downham as
co-pilot
UK 750km Diploma in ASW-22 (same day as Robin
May in ASH-25)
First contest in USA: Minden, DG-300
Fourth in Overseas Nationals at Leszno, Poland,
with Marion Barritt in ASH-25
John Good's "crew" at Hilton Ranch: flew Pegase,
LS4, Grob 103, DG-300
FAI 1,000km Diploma (twice in four days) from
Minden, Nevada in ASH-25
Fourth in (handicapped) Seniors Championships,
Seminole Lake, Florida, with Marion Barritt as copilot in ASH-25
First trip to New Zealand: flew Justin Wills's ASW-17
With Barry Ketley, launched Hikoki Publications
(military aviation history): 15 titles published up to
March 2000
Second trip to New Zealand: flew Justin Wills' ASW17 (see Timaru Creek story)
Bought "Zulu-Niner" Janus C, based Minden,
Nevada with Tim Hirst and partners
Safari: Nevada, Utah, Arizona in Z9 with Marion
Barritt and Sam Whiteside
Obtained Single-Engined power plane licence in
Cessna 152 at NIFTI, Minden
Ballast in Gavin Wills' Duo Discus in New Zealand
Nationals
For first time, Plat featured on front cover of
Sailplane & Gliding (Oct-Nov).
Second High Country Soaring safari from Minden:
Nevada, Utah in Z9

Low hops and high hopes


One very good reason for reading history is make us stop complaining about the
present I am fiercely against sentimentality and rose-tinted reminiscence about the
past. Our young days were great - in patches anyway - because we were young,
that's all. For instance, the stuff I have heard about the joys of solo glider training
and, indeed, its efficiency as a training tool, from people who should know better,
just leaves me speechless.

Boys in blue (1999)


I got my 'A. badge with solo training in the ATC
at Royal Air Force aerodrome Castle Bromwich
in 1949.1 only mention this very modest attainment in order to establish my right to talk
grandiosely on the cover of this book of my 50
years as a glider driver. Somewhat to my disappointment, I discovered we weren't going to be
bungied. I had devoured Robert Kronfeld's
Gliding & Soaring and Terence Horsley's Soaring
Flight ravenously since I was twelve. Castle
Bromwich was dead flat - it's now blocks of flats,
sad to say - and we were winched into the air. It
was not the Wasserkuppe or Dunstable, where I
was convinced they still did the real thing.
Another one of the gang was Keith Mansell,
who was in the same year as me at school, and
who is now the Treasurer of the British Gliding
Association. Keith heroically owned up last
year in Sailplane & Gliding, glittering organ of
the BGA (and henceforth to be referred to in
this volume as S&G), to having broken one
Cadet. I am sure someone else broke another
Cadet during that course. Not cadets; boys from
King Edward's School, Birmingham were more
resilient than anything that Fred Slingsby's
best craftsmen could put together.
You could say that already we were learning the useful lesson that gliding, especially
when taught this way, meant frustration and
lots of waiting around. The next year the

authorities banned children of our age from


solo gliding, and raised the age limit from 14
- which remains the qualifying age in most
other countries - to 16, so there must in that
year have been accidents at other fields that
damaged more than just airframes.
Yes, the ground-slides, low hops, high hops
and eventually free flight, were exhilarating
fun, but they didn't teach me to become a proper glider pilot, and it took a whole spring and
summer of training at Dunstable nine years
later to unpick the bad habits I'd acquired.
I sat on a massive sandbag which did double
duty, simultaneously raising the cockpit load
level with the minimum weight and raising my
nose level with the cockpit combing, so I could
see out. So far as I can recall there was nothing,
apart from the friction of brown sackcloth
against blue serge trousers, to prevent the sandbag sliding forward in a dive and jamming the
stick in the full elevator-down position. Maybe
I was saved by having built, trimmed, flown,
broken and rebuilt so many model gliders in
the previous five years that I knew what stalls
and dives did to flying machines, had great
respect for them, and managed to keep the
nose more or less in the right place.
It is significant, I think, that Philip Wills
did not learn to glide by doing groundslides,
but owned a Monospar twin and other powered aircraft before he saw the light and dispensed with engines. However I do think this

10

Low hops and high hopes

was not approved of at first, and he had to do


some spectacular soaring to gain forgiveness
for not having come up the hard way.
The groundslide and bungy method had
one enormous advantage in Germany of the
1930's. It kept thousands of unemployed
youngsters off the streets and out in derfrische
luft learning der flugdisciplin and all the other
things they were to put into practice so very
effectively a few years later. If our Prime
Minister starts sending us free rubber ropes
you'd better start digging that bunker.

Sheer bloody luxury (1986)


I'm sorry, but it's time for a limp down memory lane again. It was going to be a jog down
memory lane, but for the third occasion in a
row I've injured myself skiing and can barely
walk: the thought of putting myself out of
action for what could be a large chunk of the
gliding season is too appalling to contemplate,
so it's goodbye, snowy slopes, forever. (Did I
just hear an audible sigh of relief from the
snowy slopes and all who slide on them - and
the Norwich Union insurance company?) May
12, 1958, is the 30th anniversary of my arrival
as an anfanger at the London Gliding Club.
There is supposed to be a commemorative
plaque somewhere, but I've never seen it, so
it must be in the ladies' loo.
Like a lot of young members at that time and quite a few older ones - I first came up to
the club on Green Line buses that meandered
endlessly through leafy lanes to serve every
village between Muswell Hill in north London
and Dunstable. When the bus drivers went on
strike I hitch-hiked or begged lifts with rich
members who had wheels. The following year,
for 3 a week I shared a flat next door to
Harrods with a gliding crowd, one of whom
had a car, so we pooled petrol costs and went
up to the club every Friday evening regardless
of rain, hail, snow, earthquake or landslide, and
came back to London every Sunday evening.
This was a rigid routine, which was only broken if Christmas Day fell on a weekend.
In 1959 I bought a quarter share in a 1930's
Slingsby Kite 1 for 50; in 1960 a fifth of a
Schleicher K-7 two-seater for 200. The bank
manager lent me 100, cheerfully pocketing
my life insurance policy as collateral. Finally,

with Mike Riddell as my partner, I acquired


half of a brand new, state-of-the-art Slingsby
Skylark 3f in 1961 for 675. It was in that year
that I decided I could afford to learn to drive,
and eventually in summer of 1962, more than
four years after joining Dunstable, I got round
to buying my first car. This was a 1958
Volkswagen Beetle, purchased primarily, if
not exclusively, for towing gliders around the
field and retrieving. It was a matter of getting
one's priorities right, and no one thought it
the slightest bit eccentric to own a top-of-therange glider but no car. I can't imagine that
order of priorities being applied nowadays.
People turn up in shiny BMW's and complain
they can't afford to glide.

On every single weekend day in 1958 there


was ferocious early morning competition to
get on the list for the T-21, so as to have a
remote chance of getting more than the basic
ration of three launches and creep a mite closer to going solo. The same dawn battle, coming close to blows, took place amongst the
arrogant solo pilots on the Tutor - Mr Three
Hours despised or at least patronised Mr Two
Hours, just as snootily as Grunau pilots did
the TUtor pilots. My fingers typed Tbtur in a
Freudian slip just now. Torture well describes
the ordeal of trying to soar from a series of
500-ft winch launches in the hope of finally
getting 10 hours in one's logbook, so as to
escape on to the high-performance Grunau
Baby. To think about the appalling TUtor still
makes me angry today because of the frustration and high drop-out rate it produced.
In the squalor of the bunkhouse nobody
used an alarm clock, since that would have
alerted everyone else and started a stampede,
giving an advantage of two launches to the
chap nearest the exit. However even one pair
of eyelids cautiously opening would resound
like a pistol shot, and the doorway would sud-

Low hops and high hopes

11

kitchen with a vast superheated can of steak


and kidney pudding sitting on a red-hot stove
while I was oblivious at 3,000ft in the Kite,
will have to wait till another day. By way of
penance, I spent hours picking hundreds of
metal fragments and specks of rock-hard,
impacted steak out of the walls and ceiling
with a wire brush. Even now I am shocked
when I think somebody might easily have
walked in at the moment critique. Thinking of
nothing at all but gliding can be dangerous.
Did very basic repairs.

denly be jammed with bodies fighting to get


to the bar where the list was kept. It was a
Darwinian struggle for survival amongst a
group motivated to the point of mania. Most
people only got two weeks' holiday then, so
there was no hope of escaping from the weekend treadmill to speed the date of going solo.
It took a whole season and exactly 69 launches for me to go solo, and I wasn't a great deal
worse than the average trainee.
I'd like to say all this poverty-stricken struggle was character-forming for everyone who
joined, but I'm not at all sure about that. The
desertion rate was massive, especially as the
flying got worse, rather than better, after we
went solo, the Tutor being vastly inferior to the
T-21 as a soaring machine. (T-21s have done
100km triangles and height records; Tutors
haven't, so far as I know.) However the fact
that those that were prepared to stick it out
lived every leisure hour at the club, not being
able to afford time or money to be in any alternative place or indulge in any other pastimes,
created a quite different climate from that
which we have any right to expect today. We
uprooted hedges to enlarge the field, we drove
winches and did basic repairs on club gliders
and equipment. Very basic in my case: laminating skids was my high point, after which
they hurriedly removed the tools. When we
were pooped at the end of the day we went to
the members' kitchen and made our own
meals. On the strength of having lived some
months in North America I was voted the hamburger king, and my fellow members would
not allow even women to interfere when
Platypus was tackling the chopped steak.
The story of how I was formally stripped of
my chefs hat, after blowing up the member's

r/-"S fl O
e Wv O 0

Works and Bricks Committee dug holes.

The fact that the members' kitchen is no


more - not as a result of the pudding disaster
- reflects people's ability in 1988 to pay for professionals to do everything for them, whether
it is hamburgers or winch launches. And if you
want home cooking - or any other domestic
comforts - London today is only 45 minutes
away by a motorway that didn't exist in 1958.
We all have our own cars. The moment things
look a bit boring we can take off - not into the
air, but for the other pleasures that beckon.
A friend has pointed out to me that those
awful discomforts were tolerated in the 1950's
partly because all of the male recruits to the
club had done National Service for two years,
or had even fought in the War, and living in a
cold hut with damp blankets and other people's
smelly socks was something we were used to.
(They say the reason British officers seem to
have had such a whale of a time as prisoners in
Colditz1 is that the notorious prison was just
like a typical English private school, except that
Colditz had better food and nicer guards.)
The women's living conditions were even
worse than the men's, especially in wintertime. Because of the relatively small numbers
of female members, the women's blankets
1 A replica of "The Colditz Cock" two-man escape
glider actually flew in February 2000. If the prisoners
who built it had been American it would of course
have been called "The Colditz Rooster".

12

Low hops and high hopes

and beds might lie unused for weeks in a


freezing hut. One January morning I was sent
to knock up - sorry, arouse - sorry, awaken a
lady winch-driver. In the half-light I could just
discern a few sleeping forms in the women's
dormitory, all under a dense pile of damp
blankets. Above each form rose a cloud of
steam, a ghostly pillar of white vapour drifting
right up to the ceiling. It reminded me of
Alfred Stieglitz's famous photograph of sweating horses at a New York tramcar terminus in
the snow. Not what you can call a defining
erotic moment in a young lad's life.
So there is not a lot of use in bewailing the
loss of esprit de corps, sterling virtues, moral
qualities etc in the modern generation; such
considerations are irrelevant. The context in
which we live is simply different, that's all.
Leisure is a vast multi-national money-making industry, highly competitive and very professional. What was the alternative to gliding
courses in the 1950s? Bicycle tours or Butlins
holiday camp, not much else.
That the ten years after World War Two were austerity years is borne out by the account in Gliding
(which shortly afterwards merged with Sailplane
to give us our present magazine) of the 1951 UK
Nationals. Only ten pilots had enough money to
afford to fly a glider on their own: all the rest had
to share gliders. How many team efforts do we see
nowadays, even in Regionals? In terms of sheer
hardware, at any rate, we are far, far better off.
Tb pre-empt a hail of mail from Tutor owners,
I shall admit that if you can be aero-towed to
2,000ft then all sorts of possibilities open up. But
that was not an option to early solo pilots in 1958.

"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.

Awful cracking noises as the skid decides it


has just been turned into a ploughshare and
prefers to chew earth rather than remain part
of a rich man's toy. Daylight appears sudden-

The bringing down of Platypus


(1986)
It is the doomed attempt in 1950-something to
throw one more circle in the club Prefect
downwind of the site that leads Platypus to a
desperate, heart-pounding scramble back
through the Tradesman's Entrance. There are
no bad landings, only bad approaches. This
one is terrible: no plan, just a wretched slipping and drifting, with not enough speed to
round out parallel to the rough steep slope of
the first bit of London Gliding Club soil that
presents itself to the sweating tradesman.

There are no bad landings, only bad approaches.

Low hops and high hopes


ly through the cockpit floor. The other Prefect
pilots give vent to their feelings. Whatever
happened to the stiff upper lip? What sort of
people are they letting in these days? he asks
himself. He is grounded and dejectedly takes
the bus to London, bereft of ways to amuse
himself, so totally does soaring possess him.
Back in Chelsea he rings up girls with whom
he had shared innocent passion when an
undergraduate (what they now call a student).
The mother of the first tells Platypus, with evident satisfaction, that Katie is getting married

Platypus takes the bus to London.

tomorrow, so there. Plat's call must have made


her day. The next one is on the phone like a
shot, however, and Plat explains how busy he
has been with one thing and another. He has
been busy with just one thing, if he is truthful.
He asks her, despite the fact that she lives right
over the other side of London, if she will come
across. Which she does.
And that is how Platypus lost his virginity.
(Look that up in the dictionary, too, you young
people.) Mrs Platypus, whom sadly I did not
meet till many years later, has given me permission to write all this on the tolerant grounds
that I am no longer a serious hazard except as
a pilot, and this is pretty well ancient history.
So when in her splendid piece in S&G,
August 1976 (which he conceitedly and
absentmindedly keeps taking credit for) she
says to Platypus, "Gliding is a substitute for
sex" and he retorts, "Nonsense, sex is a substitute for Gliding!" he is not throwing off an
Oscar Wilde witticism. He is only stating
what every glider pilot's wife knows to be the
plain and sober truth.

13

Nostalgia and other diseases: an


address to the Vintage Glider
Club (1991)
Back in 1971 I worked for the world's greatest
advertising agency. One day the boss asked all
his bright young executives to write essays
about the social and marketing trends of the
future. I did not win the prize, though I felt
then that I should have done, modesty always
having been one of my weak points. I certainly feel now that I should have won it. I wrote
that since everyone believed that things were
steadily getting worse, the greatest trend of all
would be nostalgia. 'The past has a tremendous future/' I wrote. If only I'd had the
courage of my convictions and filled a barn
with 1960s cars and stuff that people were
paying the dustmen to cart away, like
Victorian fireplaces, I'd be a millionaire now.
Everyone is wild about classic bikes, old 78
rpm records - and who'd have predicted 20
years ago that in 1991 the citizens of
Leningrad would rename it St Petersburg?
The trouble is that the nostalgia boom has
encouraged pedants and authenticity bores;
nit-pickers who are forever writing letters like
this to the Daily Tblegraph:
Sir,
Was I the only television viewer to be dismayed by scenes in last night's play, set in the
year 1933, in which a naked couple make violent
love on a train to Penzance? Does the BBC not
realise that the Great Western Railway did not
use locomotives of the 4-6-2 wheel layout on the
Cornish peninsular? Moreover, the upholstery on
which the two young men were exercising themselves bore the GWR monogram in black, though
it is well known that it was woven in green until
1936, in which year it was changed to black as a
mark of respect for the late King George V. It is
this son of sloppiness that has brought this once
great country to the brink of decadence.
Yours Disgustedly,
Brig-Gen (retd) Q. Huffington-Bellows, QBE,
Tunbridge Wells
This craze for authenticity is spreading
everywhere. You can't perform Mozart on a
Steinway nowadays; it has to be a 200-year-old
fortepiano or a faithful copy, played in the
original hall. They should go the whole hog:

14

Low hops and high hopes

the performers ought to wear wigs infested


with lice, mice and other vermin, while expiring of tuberculosis, and the audience should
talk loudly, eat oranges, spit on the floor, ogle
the bosoms of each other's mistresses, and
duel with swords in the interval.
Across the water, enthusiasts of the
American Revolution make exact copies of
18th century muskets, and take special pride in
using the same tools and methods as the gunmakers of 200 years ago, as well as grinding
their own powder and casting their own shot.
If one of them, dressed in 1776 uniform, should
grind too vigorously or shoot himself in the
foot, I trust that the well-regulated militia will
not send for a helicopter full of paramedics, but
will summon the local barber, with a blunt saw
and a pint of gin - to anaesthetise himself, not
the patient - and a bucket of hot tar to dress the
stump. Accuracy in these matters of fine historical detail is all part of the fun.
Some years ago the legendary Walter
Neumark, one of the most creative minds in
our sport, made a meticulously exact copy of
the glider in which Percy Pilcher killed himself in 1899. No, don't laugh. Walter not only
adhered as faithfully as possible to the design,
he took his Hawk replica to the original location of Pilcher's last flight, and re-enacted the
method of winching himself up. The subsequent crash would therefore have been a totally authentic replay of Percy's fatal plunge,
except that with the help of the electric telephone and motorised ambulance Walter got to
the hospital quicker. And survived to fly again.
Some of the great cross-country flights done
in vintage gliders today are achieved with the
help of aerotows, and there is no doubt it
makes all the difference. Is that authentic? Of
course it is. There is a spectacular piece of film
taken by Dudley Hiscox in the 1930's showing
an Avro 504K towing a glider from the foot of
the hill straight at the camera, which was fixed
in the Dunstable clubhouse. What you can't
see but can only imagine is the members, in
their plus-fours and wing-collars, all diving
under the tables as the two aircraft fill the
screen and, in the last second, stagger over the
dining room. Any attempt to replicate that
today should take account of the 20ft or so of
1990's radio aerial on the 1936 roof.
The modern competition pilot is a totally different creature. What a contrast! The 1991

World Championships was an education to me,


as a backseat observer in an ASH-25. The
French team in particular - who conducted
themselves with great gravity in the air and
great levity on the ground - flew identical pairs
of gliders as if tied together with invisible string,
and talked incessantly to each other and their
manager, giving their respective positions accurate to ten metres. It went something like this:

"Ou etes-vous, Jean-Claude?"


"Pas de probleme, mon nez is right up votre
derriere, Pierre!"
"Formidable! Je thought je had a comfortable
feeling."
And so on all day. The general rejoicing
when, in spite of flying brilliantly in many
weeks of practice, the French failed to win anything at all, was quite unseemly but very
understandable. De la Rochefoucauld would
have had a maxim to describe it. There is a theory that someone from another team cut a hole
in the razor-wire that kept the Frenchmen in
(or the Texas women out, whichever way you
like to look at it) with a consequent loss of the
drive and focus that a winning team requires.
Competition pilots seem to suffer from the
four least attractive of the seven deadly sins envy, avarice, anger and pride. (They are very
intolerant of the more attractive deadly sins
like sloth and gluttony, and take a pretty dim
view of lust, at least during a contest, as being
a distraction.)
The true contest pilot's aesthetic sense is
zero. If you ask him as he hauls himself out of
the cockpit, after a 600-km triangle in eightknot thermals over dazzling scenery, "Did you
enjoy the flight?" he merely snarls, "How do I
know till I've seen the score-sheet?" Then he
comes back from the scoreboard with a seraphic smile on his face. His nearest rival has landed at a sewage farm near the first turnpoint. It
was indeed a beautiful day after all!
Whatever their other virtues, such as skill,
courage and endurance, competition pilots
don't display much love. They don't love the
task-setter or the Met man. They certainly
don't love each other. They don't love their
crew, not even their wives and children, they
just tolerate them for the duration of the contest. They don't love their gliders: the aircraft
are just something to be strapped on your
back, to be discarded as soon as something
better comes along. That's why they don't

Low hops and high hopes


give their gliders names any more than you
would give your trousers a name.
What I had not noticed until a few minutes
before speaking to the VGC was that it is
called the Vintage Glider Club, not Gliding
Club. They do love their aircraft. The most
important instruction in music is not allegro or
appassionato but con amove - with love. Only if
you can play con amore are you an artist. If
there are any artists left in gliding most of
them will be found in the vintage movement.
Long may they flourish!
/ know one is supposed to flatter one's audience,
but did I really say that? What a load of sentimental old codswallop! Everybody knows I much
prefer to zoom along a cloudstreet with a bunch of
other hooligans at 120 kts with the vario screaming its head off. (Yep, I've got every smarmy word
right here on tape. Ed.)

Never again! (1983)


Tb clubs thinking of ways to raise extra funds,
this speech at a club dinner comes as a warning:
It may just be old age seeping into my
bones, Mr Chairman, but I feel that life at
Dunstable was so much more eventful when I
was starting, 20-25 years ago. To give you an
idea of what I mean, I would like to take the
liberty of reading to you a confidential letter
purporting to be from the then CFI of the club
to the chairman around 1963. It was leaked to
me by a former member of the committee
who wishes to remain anonymous - not so
much a Mole as a, er, Platypus. Whether the
letter itself is authentic or not, the actual
events described certainly did happen, being
etched indelibly on the memories of many of
you here tonight. The writer was clearly
recovering from an end of season breakdown,
since the letter is addressed from - THE
UNSTABLE BEDS REST HOME FOR NERVOUS DISORDERS, Dunstable, Beds.
"Dear Chairman, Thank you for the grapes.
I shall soon be fit to return to work in good time
for the new season, but only on one condition
- that we do NOT have an air display next year.
I fully realise the urgent need, expressed
by the committee, for such essentials as a
heated indoor swimming pool, sauna, solarium cind a new girl behind the bar. I am also

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

Low hops and high hopes

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.

replica broke loose from its tether in an east


wind and, belching smoke and flame,
skimmed over the Tiger Moths which were
refuelling at the pumps: it crashed 20 yards
from the clubhouse amongst a mass of cars
and people. The crowd attacked the balloon as
though it was Moby Dick, and had to be beaten off by the balloon's distraught owners.
To lose one balloon is a misfortune. To lose
two, as Lady Bracknell might have said, was
bloody careless. But that is what happened. A
schoolmaster, who with the help of his class
had built a huge envelope out of clear plastic
bags and Sellotape, planned to do a brief flight
on a tether using a hand-held blow-lamp as a
heat source. Of course the lousy tether breaks
again, I suspect not without encouragement,
and off he goes - without his blow-lamp.
From the spectators' point of view (they were
getting real value for money) it was a brave sight:
the tiny figure crouched in an open steel tube
frame dangling under what looked like a gigantic
prophylactic drifting translucently across the setting sun towards Tbtternhoe. As he got low in the
valley and the sun finally set, someone said, 1
hope he knows about the power wires," though
what good that knowledge would have done him
is beyond me, since he had no rip panel, no trailrope, no burner, nothing. Anyway, hardly were
these words uttered when we saw a big blue flash
- and all the lights went out for miles around,
ruining a planned dinner at the Golf Club that
evening and endangering the tropical fish at
Whipsnade Zoo. The pilot - if that is the right
description for a completely passive piece of ballast - was unscathed. Indeed, in the whole display no one was maimed or killed, and our Club
fleet was intact. The end of a perfect day, we all
said. But please, Mr Chairman, Never Again!"

It's throwing up time again or,


hit & myth (1985)
Rhoda Partridge, in a recent Sailplane & Gliding,
'Wants to write about some of the crazy happenings that gliding throws up." I think she
really means she wants to write about some of
the crazy people that gliding throws up. (They
don't normally stay thrown up for long indeed the really crazy people get thrown out,
or even carried out.) However, it is splendid to
hear that Rhoda is active, though semi-retired

Low hops and high hopes


from gliding. It is a good idea to retire first
before writing about gliding's weirdos and crazies. Why didn't I think of that? I'd spend less
time examining the ship for sawn-through elevator cables and glue in the vario.
Anyway, Ms Partridge gives us an example
of the sort of thing she is looking for - an
Olympia 463 pilot flies from the Mynd to
Yarmouth and the crew arrives with trailer
ages later to find another Oly already in the
box. Well, when I heard it first the Oly 463
hadn't even been built (there's a snide
put-down for you!). It was an Olympia 2 or 2B
and the damn thing had just made it to the
bottom of the ridge at the Mynd, a million
miles away from the North Sea. It does go to
show, however, the way myths encrust and
embellish a good story - and why not indeed?
I've never known a good true story that couldn't do with a bit of improvement.
Someone else can rush in and correct me,
but I believe the intelligentsia on that retrieve
were from Cambridge University, the home of
lost gliders (as distinct from Oxford, the home
of lost causes) and the source of more crazy
stories than anywhere. All of them are true,
too, though again the fisherman's long arms
may have to stretch a bit to accommodate
them as time matures them (the stories, not
the pilots - they never mature). I believe that
the glider-already-in-the-box story, having over
the course of the years exhausted the scope of
our small island, went into the export business
and has now been expanded into an epic
retrieve across the entire continental USA.
Should Rhoda run out of myths (and it
could be interesting for a historian of her
stature to find when the original event
occurred - if ever - and how many different
forms it took on its long journey into legend)
then I'll promise to make up a dozen or so to
order, provided the price is right.
Talking of crazy people being thrown out,
there was this fellow at Dunstable who'd heard
chaps boasting about "hangar-flying" which I
take to be flying the glider back in the evening
to a point where it can be very conveniently
hauled into the hangar. It's an expression I
never use since I never ever attempt anything
like that. It's far too much like tempting providence. Anyhow, this bloke forgot which knob
was dive-brake and which was cable-release, so
flew the K-8 not up to, but into the hangar, with

17

the release-hook chattering away urgently but


uselessly. He was still more or less in full flight
as he hurtled into the dark interior. Mercifully
he caught his wing-tip on the bar - leaving a
vivid green paint-mark high enough up on the
building to prove he was airborne at the time and was twirled into the hangar sideways and

"The really crazy people get thrown out"

backwards. This slowed him down somewhat


and probably saved his neck, at least until JJ,
the Chief Flying Instructor, got to him...

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.

The wrong box: truth revealed


(1986)
Now there comes from the horse's mouth the
authoritative version of what happened when
an Olympia trailer set out on a retrieve from the
Long Mynd with another derigged Olympia
already in it. It was Charles Wingfield who was
the pilot in 1949 and who has written to me with
a full account. Having whistled up to 11,650ft in
a cu-nim, Charles got lost in cloud. //When I
eventually got my bearings, I was compelled to
land at the house of a friend, 1V3 miles short
and 700ft lower." And it was the Cambridge mob
who came on the chaotic retrieve, he says,
though Frank Irving's statement that an
Imperial College man was at the wheel does not
necessarily conflict. This was quite a party, not
one of today's Spartan one-man or one-woman

18

Low hops and high hopes

retrieves. "Cambridge University Gliding Club


arrived very quickly to collect, so we all had a
few drinks... Sometime later in the hay field
someone mentioned a key for the lock. 'What
lock?' They had to go back to the club (eight
miles by road each way) for the key, so it took
even longer than it should to discover the surplus Olympia in the trailer."

<*,>

The Cambridge mob on chaotic retrieve.

Thus the whole business was even more


disorganised than today's legend suggests,
apart from the small matter of distance. No
doubt it is from this event that we derive the
sacred principles a) check the trailer all over
and count the fittings before leaving the site
and b) no drinks for anyone till the whole
thing is derigged and stowed and safely on the
road behind the car, pointing towards home.
Incidentally Charles, now back in gliding
after nearly 30 years absence for medical reasons, landed in the same field again, about
three years ago. His last shot: The moral is
that there is no need to embroider a good
story, but if you insist Wally Kahn might
oblige/7 Come on, Wally, send us either some
embroidery or a writ.
Wally it was who drove the retrieve car.

Impressions of Doc (1979)


When the EGA celebrated their 50th anniversary
in 1979, I wrote this tribute to the man who had
edited our magazine as long as anyone could
remember and retired in 1971. Doc Slater was
coming up to his 85th birthday and was to live
another eight years. I seem to remember that his
rendition of Eine Kleine Nachstsmusik on a
penny whistle at his 90th birthday party was
slightly less crisp than at his 80th, but otherwise
he seemed ageless. Doc was so delighted with my
sincere offering. When he died in 1987 Gillian
Bryce-Smith used it again as an obituary.

In the summer of 1961, when cumulus still


seemed to bloom effortlessly all day and when
any worthwhile flight ended in moonlit
retrieves along winding roads before motorways were invented, we rumbled in through
the gates of the Derby & Lanes Club close to
midnight. In the little square of light which
was the courtyard of the farm, an impromptu
concert was in progress. A young Camphill
member, wrapped around a cello, was making
a brave and pretty successful attempt at sightreading a hand-written score. The bar piano
resounded and shook under the attack of ten
large outspread fingers. Light glinted on massively thick spectacles through disordered
strands of waving white hair. It is not my first
memory of Doc, but it is my most vivid.
I was delighted to discover that Doc's
enthusiasms were the same as my own - gliding, photography, model aeroplanes, astronomy and always music. What they have in
common is that they are all beautiful, but that
beauty can only be enjoyed as a reward for
concentration, continual practice and patient
analysis of one's mistakes. Only a fool says,
"But that's work!" I define work as wishing
you were somewhere else. Total absorption in
doing something which, if successful, is beautiful and satisfying is never work.
In a 16-millimetre film that is not merely a
magnificent piece of almost cinecamera work
but a priceless historical document, Dudley
Hiskox recorded the visits of early British gliding enthusiasts to German gliding sites in
1931. In addition to elegant new soaring
machines, we see a tall young man, serious
and light-hearted at one and the same time,
launching tiny paper gliders of unorthodox
aerodynamic form down the slopes of the
Wasserkuppe. Yes - across half a century one
recognises Doc Slater, and the audience gives
an affectionate cheer for the most loved figure
in our movement today.
Doc's Box Brownie - succeeded by a Leica
in 1935 (which I remember him using at least
25 years later) - took hundreds of irreplaceable pictures of every aspect of British gliding:
the pilots, the designers, the machines, the
workshops, the instruments, the wreckage, but
above all hills and clouds and great expanses
of ever-changing sky. People today have forgotten how to use a yellow filter and black and
white film. Doc's skies remind us what gliding

Low hops and high hopes


is about: the freedom and the mystery and the
never-being-the-same of the sky.
What makes Sailplane & Glider in the 1930's
an exceptional magazine still worth reading
today (and not just for nostalgia's sake) is Doc's
intense curiosity and truly scientific interest
in every aspect of gliding weather. The articles
"Queer soaring at Dunstable" (a title unlikely
to be used nowadays) are a classic of devoted
observation and analysis. Doc's articles make
it clear that it is simply not the case that standing waves were a mystery in the 1930s.
Predicting and using them was difficult, but
the principles were well understood.
Doc's easy-going and amiable temperament has not prevented him from expressing
furious scorn for a fair number of knaves or
fools. Leaving individuals aside - though
there are some whose names, long since forgotten, still provoke scathing references to
EGA battles of years ago - the categories who
felt the lash in the pages of Sailplane & Glider
in the 1930s would have to include:
- most power pilots, especially when they
leapt gaily into a glider and shortly afterwards
stepped or crawled ruefully out of the remains.
Doc would really make their ears burn.
- popular newspaper journalists, whose ignorant banalities and inept sensationalism on the
subject of gliding were pilloried with a mixture of
loathing and glee.
- people who wanted to exploit and misuse
gliding, whether as a "youth movement" or as a
source of notoriety, money or power.
Doc is a true Victorian: not one of the
stuffy, repressed 19th century figures which
the 20th century wrongly imagines the
Victorians to be, but lively, creative doers with
their strong belief in Reason, Science and
Progress, in the spirit of Brunei and Darwin.
He despises the pseudo-science of the pulp
writers of the UFO, Bermuda Triangle and
Visitors from Space school, and the astrology
and superstition into which so many of the
present generation have retreated.
The man who in the same day could compose a piece for piano, voice and any of 12 different wind instruments (all of which he
could play), perform a tracheotomy to save
the life of a child, design a flying wing that
would do aerobatics under and over the hospital beds of his young patients, edit a magazine, formulate a new meteorological theory,

19

Doc's favourite picture.

observe an occultation of the moon, has only


one serious deficiency - he doesn't know the
meaning of the expression too often heard
among today's young, "I'm bored."

Jack the Knife, or trailers that


went with a swing (1996)
Histories of sailplane design and soaring are
fairly common, but let me put it to you, has
anybody written a history of glider trailers and
the art of towing? You may think it an unworthy subject for serious interest. Trailer spotting
and the collecting of such memorabilia as vintage Austrian tow hitches sounds like a hobby
for pimply nerds in anoraks and geezers in
cardigans, I know. But I'm sure there's some
genuinely fascinating stuff to be mined here.
After all, when the top German pilots were
daily flying 500km and more from the
Wasserkuppe in the 1930s, the distances
trailed during the big contests would have run
into tens of thousands of kilometres. Of
course the roads would have had little traffic,
but with all-night dashes to get back to the
Wasserkuppe for the next day's task there
must have been some heroic driving. The
crews battled continuously against sleep
(despite training all winter on non-stop performances of Wagner's Ring) and coped with
temperamental road-holding, imperfect headlights and the mysteries of trailer stability

20

Low hops and high hopes

when hurtling through mountainous hairpins


in the dark; no doubt there were some epic
crashes. I wonder, is there a plaque, somewhere in the Schwabian Alps or the
Teutoberger Wald, commemorating the
world's first recorded jack-knife of a car and
glider trailer? Somebody must have done it
first, but who, and where?
Doubtless we imagine that German glider
crews all drove those spectacular open
Mercedes staff cars such as Rommel had. I
don't think a glider trailer would have dared to
fold up alongside one of those glossy vehicles.
But the early Volkswagen would have been
easier to take unawares.
What about America? No, I doubt it. In the
1930s American cars were steadily getting
huger, and the combined weight of a low wing
-loading glider and its (usually open) trailer
was probably quite small, so I doubt if history's first account of a car's front end trying
forcibly to mate with a glider trailer's rear end
comes from the western USA.
Of course the British in the 1930s had tiny,
feeble cars (exacerbated by stupid taxes that
rewarded the most inefficient engines) and
glider pilots naturally complemented such
inadequate tow vehicles with large, high sided
trailers of very low strength-to-weight ratio.
Furthermore our roads, though not alpine,
were undulating and winding and infested by
irresponsible cyclists and motor cyclists (see
the opening sequences of Lawrence of Arabia)
so maybe we can lay claim to the first glider
trailer jack-knife.
It's a matter of national pride to nail this
one down for Britain. We in this island have
pioneered notable engineering disasters way
ahead of the competition, from the Tay Bridge
and the Titanic to the R101, though the
Russians did beat us to it with Chernobyl, I
have to admit. We slipped up there. Another
indication that we are falling behind.
I went on my first retrieve in a Land Rover
in the 1950s, towing a Rice trailer with enormous wind-embracing sides - all the better for
advertising Ovaltine, I suppose. I don't know
who Mr Rice was, but if he is alive I hope his
lawyers do not see this book. This monstrosi-

Trailer waves a final goodbye.

ty, typical of the day, constructed from soft,


heavy fibreboard that got even softer and
heavier when it rained, had tongue and groove
flooring that offered no useful stiffness whatever. Horrible, horrible in every way - except
you could stand up in the damn things, if you
are looking for mitigating graces. The retrieve
was unendingly noisy as the hitch clinked and
clanked, being a simple bracket taking a crude
half inch steel pin, not a snug-fitting ball. I
suppose such pins rattled their way non-stop
across continents before World War II.
In the late 1950s; the light monocoque plywood trailer was pioneered (I claim this originated at Dunstable, but am not prepared to do
battle for the honour) and the first speeding
ticket for a Morris Minor and fully-laden glider trailer became a practical possibility without the accompanying near certainty of a catastrophic fold-up on the next bend.
I'd better not go on, but you can see the
amount of reminiscence this topic can evoke.
Please send in any solid archive data you may
have. What about the history of trailer suspensions, lights, stabilisers and override
brakes, and brakes that automatically operate
if the trailer waves a final goodbye to the car?
"Brakes, indeed!* mutters some grizzled
veteran into his whisky and soda. 'The damn
cars didn't have 'em, let alone the trailers!"
And the future of trailers - why can't we
have trailers which are also self-rigging
devices? In fact why isn't the trailer designed
integrally with the glider?
No, of course those wretched motor gliders
and their misguided enthusiasts will absolutely not make trailers redundant. They'll still
need something to cart the bits home in.

Over the hills and far away


It will be very sad if we ever lose the sense of wonder at the fact that we can go for
a stroll in the sky without an engine. The people who have that sense of disbelief
are ordinary members of the public who ask questions like, "If you're going to fly a
hundred miles in one go without a motor, how high do you have to be towed?" We
should not despise such incredulity but should share it. We are so lucky to have been
born into century when we had both the technical means and the freedom to do this
miraculous trick, which in any earlier age would have been considered pure magic.
Magic is just what it is.

Howididntdoit or foiled again


(1968)
I have longed for years to write a Philip-Willsstyle "howidunit" describing a brilliantly-organised 300-~km Diamond out-and-return. In fact the
prospect of writing this epic was far more
entrancing than the idea of the flight itself. I saw
myself painting a dazzling word-picture of heroic
struggle crowned with success when, from the last
exhausted thermal of the day, I slip across the
club boundary going downwind at nought feet, to
the cheers of amazed fellow members...
For me, however, literary success has been
easier to come by than the brilliantly-organised 300-kms. So I have written articles in
Sailplane & Gliding insolently telling real pundits how to write howidunits, and even a presumptuous article on planning the great feat,
called Howwe'regonnadoit. Now I sing of
heroic struggle crowned with absolutely nothing, except for a few salutary lessons, that is.)
The first task of the day is the battle of wits
with the weatherman. This goes best if he has
been on duty all night. 'Today's forecast?7' he
says blearily. "Well, same as yesterday really/'
Rapier-keen I shoot back, ''Same as yesterday's
forecast, or same as yesterday's weather?" A
pregnant pause at the other end of the line
while he ponders whether saying, "Carry oxygen and a map of Scotland" or, ''Rain all day"
would punish my sarcasm more effectively.
Finally he comes up with a real teaser
designed to maximise panic. A belt of rain
would move from east to west at about 10
knots reaching Dunstable at 3 o'clock - and it
would probably be 11.30 before I could get to
the club and organise myself into the air.
I decide on Dunstable to Ludlow and back,
about 308 km. A swift dash downwind to the
turning point and a battle upwind in the

strongest part of the day might bring me to the


edge of the murk, say 15 miles from home,
around tea time - then a bold glide-out. The
Dart 17R was capable of it even if I was not.
Downwind first is a good rule when flying
self-imposed tasks, particularly if the weather
is expected to deteriorate. You burn your boats
quickly instead of hanging about with one foot
in the club, and you can enjoy several hours'
good soaring before being washed out of the
sky. 4
Now all I have to do is simply:
Rig three other chaps' gliders.
Rig own glider - Hey, come back, you
three !
Smoke barograph.
Wind barograph.
Inscribe barograph baseline.
Seal barograph.
Start barograph ticking.
Load Camera.
Now, photograph the official observer by
the tail. First catch your observer by the tail;
have they gone into hiding or what?
Get barograph signed by official observer.
Find map.
Put barograph in the glider, idiot!
Inscribe line on map - blast! No
Chinagraph pencil for glossy Fablon-covered
map. Have to do without a line.
Declaration form! Heavens, any well
organised (ie Lasham) pundit has declaration
forms strapped to his knee and an official
observer on a chain. I use a scruffy bit of
paper with Ludlow Town scrawled in blood or
charcoal or something.
4 The idea of deliberately setting off downwind in a
wooden glider with little or no chance of getting
home, on a weekday and with no crew organised,
now makes me shudder. But it was the 1960's, and
getting home was so rare as to be positively eccentric.

22

Over the Hills and Far Away

Right, now, out to that far distant knoll at the


end of a bit of string. (I hate that long, slow towout to the north-east run.) Sorry, no. Help
another pilot out there first. Come back, all set.
Heck, where's my telephone money. Run and
get the money, then Ye Gods! The parachute!
Rush to the parachute rack - not there. Not in
glider or trailer. A process of ruthless deduction
establishes that it must be strapped to the
behind of a lady member who is - aaarghhh! as
they say in the strip cartoons - circling manfully so to speak, under fat cumulus. To add insult
to injury Mike Till flies past in the Tiger Moth
bellowing and circling his finger over his head,
meaning, "Come on, you idlers, the air's lovely!"
Exactly the same thing happened the last
time I got the Dart out. That time I brought
another lady down to earth with a bit of black
magic, now I repeat it - a sort of rain dance
with eyeballs rolling skywards and added curses. It works again and the dear girl winds
round and down only slightly later than the
tug. As she rolls to a halt the owner of the parachute flings himself upon her and a fierce tussle ensues. 'You might let me get out of the
glider first," she shrieks. She has a point there;
it makes it a lot easier to tear the parachute off
her back. An ugly episode, even if I was only
asserting my rights.
Three more gliders have now arrived in
front of me at the aero-tow point. Oh well,
now it's past 12 o'clock and the whole thing
looks daft, but eventually I rumble away and
up and forget all my worries as the thermals
bump me around on the tow.
After the earthbound drama the flying is
fairly prosaic. As the day builds up I discard
modest thermals; strong ones are gleefully
circled in to the accompaniment, as usual, of
raucous bathroom-style singing. A very noisy
regional competition is in progress. I turn the
radio off, better to hear the vario sweetly sing
top C to my C flat. Ludlow is lost, found again,
photographed and left behind.
Galloping back upwind I see high in the
eastern sky a grey line spreading. The forecaster was right. Calling Dunstable I learn that
it had clouded over at 3 o'clock and now at 4
o'clock it was raining there. About 5 o'clock I
meet the murk near Bicester, 25 miles out; a
smooth toboggan-ride in dead air brings me to
a large field with 600 ft. to burn, just outside
Aylesbury, about ten miles from home. Little

Getting it right (1999)


A British newspaper journalist friend of mine
once met an American who worked on a
magazine. Our hack asked what her exact job
was.
"I'm a Fact-checker."
"You're a WHAT?"
"A Fact-checker. I check factual statements
in our journal. I make sure that what we
say is true."
My Fleet Street friend came over all faint
and had to retire to the nearest bar to inject
a few shots of mind-stabilising fluid.
In books, which are here today and here
tomorrow and still around when we are all
dead, you do feel obliged not just to sound
off but to do some research and get it right.
And when you are waist-deep in antique
facts, that task means work, my leastfavourite four-letter word.
"You mean you have uttered things in our
organ that weren't true?" (Ed.)
"I have no idea, but the thought that I
might have done haunts me."
"Well, I think it's a bit late to start developing a conscience. Publish and be damned, I say"

do I know that around the car radio a debate


has been raging - should my partners let me
know that stretching the glide a mile or two
could give me Gold C distance? Sensibly the
temptation is not put in my way; I am blissfully unaware since with no line or distance
marks on the map I have no clue how far I
have gone. I land safely, but have I made it?
Drama once more, back on the ground.
There is just a chance I had done it! The beautiful barograph trace is carefully removed, carefully signed by an official observer, carefully
lowered into a dish of clear dope - and gently

Over the Hills and Far Away


floats off in a little sooty puddle, leaving the foil
clean as a whistle. My boggling eyes discern
the advertising message "Ilchester Cheese with
Beer" mocking at me through the fixing fluid. A
partner who shall be nameless has used
cheese-foil as an ersatz for proper barograph
foil, and I am the first to discover that the coating must have been soluble in cellulose dope. I
could cry; I do cry. Some wag suggests that the
trace should have been fixed in beer, like the
cheese; I decide to fix myself in beer instead.
Then I am told that Ludlow Town is not a
proper declaration anyway. Much too vague.
Should be a railway station, a public lavatory
or some other unique landmark.
I also learn that being off the line loses you
distance in a failed out-and-return attempt. If
you declare Hartlepool in a straight line and
land at Plymouth that's all right for your Gold,
but not on tasks with legs. Sorry, but there it
is. Oh yes, and I was one witness missing on
the landing certificate. Knowing me they
should he grateful for a landing certificate at
all, with or without signatures. I stumble off
and get fixed some more.
After all the fuss it was an immense relief to
be told, days later, that I had done just 299.5
km., so the whole gruesome business of the
mis-declared turning point, the vanishing barograph trace (the official observer's energetic
signature in ball-point is embossed on a shining roll of Ilchester Cheese foil, which I suppose I could frame or put in my log book), the
distance off the line that I hadn't drawn on the
map, and the missing witness did not have to
be explained in triplicate to the EGA, the FAI,
the CIA and the House of Lords. The Flying
Committee gave me a conditional discharge
with costs and I was bound over to be of good
behaviour for the rest of the season.

Happy ending: shortly after, while tilling the


weed-plagued Islington mulch at 11 o'clock on a
Sunday, I am called by my partners. Bloated
with hours, they generously offer to give up a perfect day and insist I fly. Everything - barograph,
camera, parachute, paperwork - will he taken
care of. After wrestling with my conscience she
agrees to let me go and my Beetle roars up the Ml
to arrive at the launch point at 12.IS for an
instant launch. I trickle up to Lincoln and back
and sure enough, "...from the last, exhausted
thermal of the day, etc, etc."

23

The moral here for the incurably incompetent


is - if a job's worth doing, someone else had better do it for you. But you may have to wait ten
years before they take sufficient pity on you.

The shorter the nastier (1983)


The disputes about who has inflicted the worst
retrieves on his friends are usually won by
Platypus, because the other disputants suddenly remember that they were the ones who
retrieved him. It occurs to me that my worst
retrieves have been within sight of the club,
while the smoothest have been those that
fetched up 200 miles away. The reason is obvious when you stop to think. You don't land 100
or more miles away without knowing in
advance that you are going on a long flight
(unless you are JJ) so like a Wise Virgin in the
Bible you get all the junk out of the trailer,
check that all the lights work, count the fittings,
fill the car up with petrol, entrust the keys to
someone who is willing to retrieve and tell
them where you are going, like well, north-ish.
Unscheduled outlandings are quite different.
It is early March 1960. While soaring the
Dunstable east wind wave I overestimate my
skill and the penetration of an Olympia 2. I
descend through a feeble lenticular and,
falling out of the bottom of it just 400ft above
ground, I ''choose" a field, which is to say the
field chooses me. No damage, no problem. But
it's winter-time, and it's dusk before anyone
arrives from the club - all of three miles away.
Never mind, I say, hot toddy in the bar for all
of the retrievers (one) when we get back in
half-an-hour. I speak too soon. Clearly

24

Over the Hills and Far Away

Certificate of Airworthiness time, eleven


months ago, was the last time the Olympia
was rigged. The damned main-pin just won't
shift. A desperate phone request from the
farmhouse to the club for a three-pound hammer eventually produces one large hammer,
accompanied by some more Olympia pilots
wondering what the hell Platypus is planning
to do to their favourite ship. (Their only ship.)
Eventually a mighty blow expels the main-pin
like a 37-millimetre cannon shell: it ricochets
off the fin and whistles away into the mud. It
is pitch dark by now and sleeting. It takes
some while to find the main-pin.
Eventually all the bits are back in the trailer. Now, off we go, chaps. Oh no, we don't.
The little A35's wheels spin in the mud, as it
sinks up to the axles. Unhitch the car. All lift
together and push the car out of the mud. But
that walking in and out of the trailer with
wing-roots etc has bogged the trailer down to
the axles, too. It doesn't budge. After an age
we give up. It is late Sunday night and there
is no one left at the clubhouse. So we sheepishly knock on the farmer's door. We get him
out of bed so that he can bring his tractor to
tow the trailer to the road. He is amazingly
restrained in his comments. Probably
because he is still asleep. There is no towhitch that fits the trailer, so the tractor drags
it along with great chains. We sit in the back
of the trailer with our feet dangling in the dirt
trying to stabilise it, though it still makes a
bow-wave through the mud.
Eventually we get back to the darkened
clubhouse, filthy and exhausted. It is a few
minutes to midnight, the bar has been closed
for hours and it is still sleeting.
When it comes to retrieves, small isn't
beautiful.

Coldest, wettest, muddiest &


most labour-intensive retrieve
(1975)
This next narrative also proves the point that
short retrieves are the worst. We are spoilt in
2000 by having mobile phones and practical
footwear. Nevertheless, horrific retrieves will continue to furnish stories for old glider pilots to
frighten their grand-children with so long as the
sport endures.
After being compelled, by a sudden Easter blizzard which was full of lift but also full of other
gliders, to escape into clear air but hearty sink,
I put my brand-new Kestrel 19 down in a nice
big cow-pasture only about two air miles from
the club. Fifteen minutes later, when I had
negotiated, in bare feet, the 200yds of
knee-deep mud (made by the cows on their
daily journey from the field to the farm buildings to be fed and milked) which represented
the only exit from the field, I telephoned for
the trailer, ten men and a pair of Wellington
boots. My wife and seven chaps arrived in no
time, but spare Wellington boots were simply
not to be had at the London Gliding Club, since
the site was also a quagmire.
I was barefoot because the suction of the
mud not only pulled each shoe off but effectively buried them under a foot of icy water
topped with a thick layer of slush. It was better to go barefoot, except the stones and
thorns and the snow were sheer torture, and
the shoes had to be replaced from time to time
in order to forestall frostbite. Imagine, it was
the very end of winter rather than the beginning of spring, and I was flying a glider in
ordinary city shoes that had once done reasonably smart duty at the office.

Over the Hills and Far Away


Towing the Kestrel to a relatively convenient
spot and derigging it was merely purgatory.
Hell consisted of carrying the separate pieces in
the approximate direction of the trailer. One
ingenious thought was to pass the wings across
a hawthorn hedge and a deep ditch full of freezing water and snow, into a less muddy field so
as to circumnavigate the cow track. Like most
cures it was as bad as the disease.
A dozen times I lost my shoes while carrying the bits and had to abandon them until a
place could be found to rest the precious
glass-fibre - then we would go back and poke
about in the water-filled holes that marked
our progress and retrieve the vanished
footwear. A vile, miserable affair; I can't think
why some of them thought it was funny. I can
only put it down to hysterics brought on by
physical and nervous exhaustion.
As the fuselage was hauled along the cow
track, the undercarriage bay filled up with
mud. The wheel became a gigantic ball.

25

Discussion as to whether it would be better to


slide the thing along on its belly with the
wheel up was now academic, since the fuselage was at this stage filled with so much mud
that it would soon occupy every crevice from
the cockpit to the fin. As the muscular team
heaved upwards, Isaac Newton (every action
producing an equal and opposite reaction)
forced them downwards into the mud so that,
at those rare moments when the fuselage was
momentarily clear of the quagmire, the crew
were even more firmly immobilised by it.
Wise virgins all, they at least had stout boots
which didn't come off. Laurie Ryan, however,
has a tin leg which was sucked into the mud;
this had to be retrieved and re-attached. An
interesting mixture of rain, hail and snow
blew horizontally across the grisly scene.
About two hours after arriving, the trailer
was eventually loaded and the grubby bits
stowed. The Kestrel had travelled the last 200
yards at roughly one yard every 30 seconds.

A royal retrieve (1982)


// / set aside the humiliation, disgrace, loss of
900 points, chagrin and fury at seeing the
cumulus blossoming the moment my wheel
kissed the stubble (a rather brutal kiss which
b.gg.r.d the wheel brake, as R. Jones Esq delicately observed) then my most enjoyable outlanding of recent years was on Charles and
Diana's Wedding Day.
The farmer showed the usual abysmal ignorance of gliding. "Those flat-topped cu can be
a bit deceptive early in the day, can't they? You
weren't very well-centred; the cores were obviously shifting upwind, etc. etc." You know, the
usual sort of thing.
I accepted a lift into the village, about ten
miles from Stonehenge. One pub, one church,
one telephone. A one-horse town, I guessed.
Between the church and the village green a
small group of people were waiting. Along a
wooded lane there eventually came a procession of children in fancy dress, all looking
dreadfully self-conscious, led by a bearded man
in a top hat and a white smock with bells tied
under his knees, banging a massive drum. And
the one horse, whose young rider promptly fell
off. After what seemed to a thirsty stranger
like an age, beer and cider barrels appeared,

cooks with a barbecue almost as hot as that


miraculous sun after the long wet summer,
Morris dancers, musicians and finally, in the
middle of it all, my crew and trailer. Its the
first time my son has crewed for me and he
now thinks crewing's terrific.
I have not yet explained to him that a real
retrieve entails arriving in a ploughed field at
midnight, in pouring rain, the pilot or glider
untraceable, all pubs and garages and restaurants closed (especially the type that advertises itself as 24 Hour Service. Some friends of
mine tried one such at Sam: Indignant, sleepy
face appears at window. "What the hell?!"
"Aren't you a 24 hour service?" "Yes we are,
but not at this bloody time of night!" Slam.)
No, I'm not going to get nostalgic about
old-style downwind ballooning - in which the
average achieved still-air speed of the glider
was about half the windspeed - or about the
all-night retrieves that ensued. I can only say
that in those days crewing was crewing, just
as being a merchant seaman today is a skilled
job but it doesn't quite compare with reefing
sails on a schooner in an icy force 8 gale. It's
just different now. Thank Heavens.

26

Over the Hills and Far Away

T)on't come in the bar in those filthy


shoes!" bellowed Jeffries (whose fault it all
was for throwing us into the air anyway).
Obligingly I stepped out of my shoes and
squelched across the parquet in bare feet with
the mud and ice water dribbling between my
toes, to collapse at the nearest beer-pump.

The thin red wobbly line (1984)


It's a long time since I happily soared the 300 ft
high ridge at Dunstable at well below hilltop
height all afternoon in the hope of the weather
perking up. Since then I have grown less bold
( = more sane) but the experience does come in
useful from time to time, even in contests. I certainly make a point of marking the wind-facing
slopes before any cross-country. In fact I have
more or less given up the use of rulers in
preparing my maps. Mainly it's because I've
mislaid the ruler anyway, but I genuinely pre-

Platypus's maps look as though drawn while drunk.

fer to draw a meandering line through, or near


to (a) areas of high, dry ground, (b) other gliding clubs, where either the thermals will be
well marked or the bar well stocked (I didn't
claim this was a method for winning contests)
and (c) unambiguous landmarks that will steer
me towards the turning point - rivers, railways
etc. Platypus's maps are easily recognisable,
therefore, appearing quite mistakenly to have
been drawn while drunk.

Wilbur was Wright (1988)


In the 1950s a wise old bird under the nom
de plume of Uncle Wilbur used to write a
column in the London Gliding Club Gazette,
giving digestible instructive titbits to the
fledglings. One of his simplest and best bits
of soaring advice, which has stuck in my
mind for 30 years (most things stick in my
mind for all of 30 seconds) was, "If you're
going to circle, then circle, dammit, don't
wander in vast arcs!"
"Why waste space", you snarl impatiently, "telling us what might have been
news to Lilienthal but is now obvious to
everyone?" Well, I see scores of beautiful
modern gliders, with crisp 1980's controls,
wandering in vast arcs all over the country
and failing to go up. The pilots clearly
expect to black out at 15 and to pull the
wings off at 20. You might just climb at
20 in the late afternoon near cloudbase,
but it won't get you out of trouble if you're
low down at high noon - the thermals then
are mean and narrow.
It occurs to me that many pilots have no
idea what angle of bank they are flying at.
If you can't afford a fancy swivelling compass like a Bohli, which you can line up with
the horizon after setting it for 30, 45 or
whatever you fancy, then try some bits of
cardboard or wire on top of the instrument
panel, or put wax pencil marks inside the
canopy. Let's get that wingtip down and
start moving the scenery round!
PS. Apologies for the Orville pun at the top
of this little piece. I believe Uncle Wilbur
was Godfrey Lee, sometime Chairman of
London Gliding Club and a senior aerodynamicist at Handley Page.

What you don't know can't hurt


you, can it? (1986)
I once had a share in a Capstan, and it was the
most enjoyable machine for friendly local
soaring ever invented. On a good day it could
do creditable cross-countries too, but only in

Most things stick in my mind for all


of 30 seconds.

Over the Hills and Far Away


light winds, since its penetration was pretty
miserable - about 8:1 at 70kt if you were daft
enough to push the stick forward and about
24:1 at best glide angle, I can safely say now
that I have sold my share.
The first flight a relation (a stepson-in-law,
if you can work that out) of mine ever did in
any glider was with me in this Capstan. I was
determined to give him a taste of cross-country soaring, and set out boldly eastwards for
the Cambridgeshire Fens. To cut a saga down
to manageable length, we were returning by
way of Bedford and ran under three plausible
clouds, each of them all talk and no action,
pretentious windbags which refused to suck. I
began to have doubts about my infallibility,
which doubts I concealed from my passenger
in light banter about the lovely, and progressively more detailed, scenery.
At 500ft over the Ml, about three miles
from the club, I ran into zero sink which
tempted me onwards, spurning the few
remaining safe landing fields. Outside the club

Outside the dub bar betting money was changing hands.

bar betting money was changing hands on our


chances of making it home. My passenger
chatted happily on, not noticing how his pilot
had suddenly gone very quiet. The only way to
cross the Tring Road telephone wires was to
dive sharply and pull up over them. Then, sustained by pure ground-effect, we chased our
shadow over the undulating contours of the
last two fields, and faced only the great boundary hedge, the last obstacle to our triumphant
arrival before a cheering throng.
But then for some unaccountable reason a
momentary spasm of common sense seized
me: I glanced at the airspeed indicator, which
read 38kt. My apparently high ground-speed
at nought feet was largely due to a tailwind:
we were clearly in no shape for anything better than a spectacular fully-stalled pancake on
the other side of the hedge or into the thicket
itself. So I rubbed the skid (lovely things for

27

stopping gliders, skids) into the harrowed soil


and slithered to a halt a few yards short of the
brambles. My passenger hopped lightly out,
said he had hugely enjoyed this typical glider
flight and hoped he would have many others
like it in future, then strolled off to the bar via
a hole in the hedge (doubtless made by a
more determined pilot than me). I staggered
after him, when 1 had got my breath back and
some strength in the knees.
Of course, I do sometimes wonder what
would have happened if it had been a competition...

MacCready's magic ring (1982)


If I read another solemn article about
speeds-to-fly and all the gadgetry and
trigonometry that is essential to the understanding and exploitation of that subject, I
swear I'll explode. Relief can only be obtained
by writing such an article and getting my own
back on the pundits of OSTIV (the official
technical body in world soaring).
The first thing that gets me about the
OSTIV papers on speeds-to-fly (with which
the walls of a whole asylum could easily be
papered) is not the mathematics; nor is it the
diagrams of plumbing and electronics. No, it is
the little drawings of what always look like a
row of perfect, creamy-white, flat-bottomed
meringues. These are meant to represent a
side view of the sky on a typical summer's
day. This should immediately arouse one's
suspicions if one is British, with a healthy distrust of all theorising: any such pictures can
only be drawn by foreigners. These foreign
geezers then put the edge of a newly sharpened saw (something I've never seen either)
under the meringues, thereby transporting
the British reader into the realms of utter fantasy, since this is meant to represent - wait for
it - a typical cross-country flight.
I'll let a minute or so pass for you to get
your breath back after rolling around on the
floor hurting yourself on the furniture...
If one is to anglicise MacCready, some radical changes to those meringues and saw-teeth
are needed. First of all the meringues should
be stomped on, melted, blackened, chewed by
the cat, and in some cases blown up to dangerous proportions. Next the saw-teeth must

Over the Hills and Far Away

28

be replaced by something looking like a skein


of wool after that cat has had it. In Britain, to
be fair, there is nearly always one perfect
cumulus - 25 miles away - but when you get
to it, it has invariably been stomped on, melted, blackened, chewed etc, etc. That's another
point: these foreign skies are always the same
in the OSTIV papers. The clouds never seem
to go through Shakespeare's Seven Ages of
Man from infancy to senility, but are always
mature and healthy. British cumuli usually go
from infancy to senility quite abruptly without any normal adulthood in between (a bit
like Platypus? Ed.)
Another gripe about the line of meringues is
that it misrepresents the choice before the pilot
who is assumed to be flying down some aerial
tram-lines diverting neither to left nor right.
The sideways-on treatment - the meringues
joined by tram-lines mounted on saw-teeth simplifies things splendidly because it assumes
that pilots x, y and z, who follow different
speeds-to-fly strategies (bold, timid, etc) will all
.... .

'

>c?!P
o
o

."

3
6
/.

:.,,

Jit*.

10

encounter the same thermals. But in practice


they don't go through the same air at all, the
timid diverting, the bold pressing straight on.
The theory assumes the air is two-dimensional
when it is three-dimensional. I am not saying
that the theories are invalidated because of
this, I am just deeply suspicious, that's all. I
also feel that in the three-dimensional real sky
the pilot has a lot more to worry about than the
setting of his MacCready ring. It is the least of
his problems.
Like Alexander the Great slashing through
the Gordian Knot at a stroke, I'll boil down the
Platypus theory of speeds-to-fly to a simple
statement of principle. You can call it the
Minimum Acceptable Instantaneous Rate of
Climb or MAIROC for short.
Always set your speed-to-fly ring to the
rate-of-climb that you would loe happy to accept
RIGHT NOW.

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,

Over the Hills and Far Away


ie for absolute Max glide. Ask yourself, if you
were crossing a big gap, under what conditions would you circle in zero sink? (That is,
under what conditions would MAIROC be
zero and the ring set to zero?) The only imaginable case would be if you were sure that you
could not reach lift at all in present conditions
and decided to hang around killing time, circling in any zero sink you could find, hoping
that conditions ahead might improve. In that
special case you have given up racing and are
simply hanging on, hoping to survive. If your
MAIROC was Ikt, however, then you should
set the ring to Ikt. You would fly about 15kt
faster than Max glide but with a glide angle
only about one or two per cent worse.
MAIROC also works if you are unwilling to
go into cloud and are flying straight and level
under a street, climbing at say 2kt. At 500ft
below cloudbase you probably would not
want to stop for anything less than 6kt. OK,
set the ring to six. At cloudbase itself
MAIROC might rise to lOkt. Just remember to
change it back later!
Remember: Don't calculate the past, don't
try to predict the future. Just ask WHAT
WOULD I ACCEPT RIGHT NOW? You know it
makes sense.

The lostness of the long-distance


pilot (1988)
Personally I feel that nobody under the age of 40
or with less than 50,000 /eras cross-country flying
in their logbook should be allowed to have a GPS.

29

Doubtless a previous generation of curmudgeons


would have said something similar about variometers. The ability to navigate in the air is fast
becoming a lost art, like the ocean-going skills of
the South Sea Island canoeists who years ago
travelled thousands of miles under the stars.
However some great pilots never had that ability.
I pay tribute to the navigationally-challenged JJ.
I have a very old friend (well, ancient, really)
who would have been National Champion
umpteen times if he had not got one small
flaw. He can't navigate. He just presses on, getting more and more lost, through rain and hail
and clamp and the occasional 1/2 kt thermal
under a 1,200ft cloudbase until he reaches the
sea - say, the Irish Sea or the English Channel
or the German Ocean - then he turns round
and comes back.
How he ever gets back, considering he
doesn't know where he's been in the first
place, is one of life's mysteries. I suppose
some places nearer to home, like Oxford or
Cambridge or Upper Heyford, trigger off some
vague recall in his brain, since he has been
over them a thousand times before. This does
not always work, though. Some of his biggest
so-called "flattened triangles'' are the result of
having overshot the club on the way back
from one coast and he doesn't realise till he
rebounds off the opposite coast and eventually rolls, like a snooker ball, into the right pocket more or less by chance.
If it were not for his photographs of what
turn out to be the Menai Bridge, the Portland
Bill lighthouse or Sir Walter Scott's Memorial

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

these lexicographical clowns, I ask? Then it


rejects winglets: "Try wingless." No, thanks!
Then "Benalla? - try banal or Bengal."
Apologies to John Willy - sorry, not allowed: I
can have Willie, or wild (not really) or wily
(that's better) - and to the Victorian soarers.
Worse is to come "Gliding" is replaced by
"Gelding." Ouch! For the "Kuppe" (as the
Wasserkuppe is affectionately known, they
suggest "Kipper", for "Brits" it suggests
"Brats" or "Brutes" (hard to choose, really),
instead of "Ovaltine" it prefers "Ovulating"
(Yecchh!) and worst of all, in place of "Plat"
recommends "Splat."

30

Over the Hills and Far Away


At first I tried to ignore this, believing that a
serious pilot had higher things to worry about.
But the aroma of bacon sandwiches in a
confined space is hard to resist. Has some one
been wiring up a waffle iron to those massive
batteries behind the back seat? No wonder the
artificial horizon has been toppling lately; if
we spin in at least the condemned men will
have had a hearty breakfast. Others specialise

The "sucker thermal" (1982)

one would suspect that he had made up the


whole thing, or at least had hazily imagined an
Odyssey that can't possibly have happened.
Even with a 1987 nav-computer which
should tell him pretty accurately how far he
has gone since his last fix, he manages to
come out with grandiose, vague statements
like, "Over the river Trent" or "Over the Ml
motorway", which cover a margin of error of a
good 100km. If you ask him for his position he
utters a tense, teeth-clenched, "Hang on..." as
if you have crassly interrupted his concentration when he is barely staying airborne at
500ft. He is in fact at 5,000ft, happy as a sandboy (whatever that is) but utterly lost - again.

Seven deadly sins: gluttony (1990)


This should be a nice short one, since glider
pilots are about as interested in gluttony as
they are in lust, which is to say not a lot.
For years I used never to eat or drink while
flying. On one nine hour flight in 1975 I lost
eight pounds without benefit of pee-bags.
Then I learnt that getting dehydrated was bad
for you, so I started taking pure Dunstable
Downs water, straight from the chalk, in a
plastic bottle, but no food.
Then I was corrupted.
It was the two-seatering that started the rot.
When you are on your own, the urge to eat or
drink is minimal. But company changes every
thing. One of my passengers insists on taking
vacuum flasks ("What d'you want? Hot coffee or
tea?"') and a variety of freshly cut sandwiches.

Some of my friends' grizzling about British


weather is really quite unwarranted: I usually
find, for example, that there are two good
thermals on any soaring day. That's two more
than you expected, I bet.
The first is the one you get shortly after
being launched. This one whisks you straight
up to 4,000ft at 5kt. No time to waste! Mightily
encouraged, you set your MacCready Ring to
5kt (fool) and hurtle away into the middle dis
tance, ignoring all the little two and three kt
thermals you pass through - until eventually
you are down to 700ft, quivering with a mix
ture of rage and anxiety, trying to centre on a
miserable half knot. If you survive this the best
you get for the rest of the day will be less than
half the strength of that first thermal of the
day, which I would call the "sucker thermal."
By the way, cloudbase also comes down to
2,500ft as you scratch and scrape down the
track. For other people cloudbase always goes
up as the day goes on; for me it just as often
tries to rub my nose on the deck.
There is, however, one more really good
thermal during the day. If you succeed in strug
gling around your triangle until eventually you
believe that you can just make it, and if you do
manage to get a little 1kt thermal that grudg
ingly lifts you to the height where, praying to
St Willy, you believe you can crawl in at a
sweaty 55kt with nothing to spare to cross the
finishing line - you can bet your boots that
when the finishing line is safely in sight a mile
ahead and you know, with immense relief,
that you will have a hundred extra feet to burn
off as you finish, that is when you get the sec
ond great thermal of the day, an incorrigible
five-knotter, quite useless at this point of the
proceedings to man, beast or glider pilot.
Well, if you can't take a joke, you should
n't have joined, as the sergeant said.

Over the Hills and Far Away


in Kit Kat, Twix bars and other sticky confections. In warm weather chocolate melts horribly and dribbles all over the maps, not to
mention the luxurious upholstery. One considerate co-pilot of mine used to wait till we
were at 5,000ft, then unwrap the Kit Kat very
carefully in the cool draught from the
ventilator. Then only after it was reasonably
solidified was it fit to be passed to the Pilot-inCharge. The co-pilot's reward for all this trouble was to get to fly the ASH-25 for a while.
After a minute or so a loud belch from the

31

eager subscribers clamoured to know. Well,


one of them clamoured to know, if we are precise. The rest just assumed the printer had
lost part of the copy as usual. I had no idea
what happened to Mr Bend. But it now occurs
to me that at 40,000ft or so a champagne cork,
bottled at 400ft, would come out with magnum force and destroy the canopy. Lighting
up a cigar in the presence of pure oxygen
would be even more dangerous. So the story
might well have ended with our somewhat
scorched adventurer swinging down on his
parachute, pondering whether it wasn't better
to stick to lust after all.

Forget lunch, launch! (1991)

front seat would signal that the senior pilot


was ready to take over once more.
Hunger is not the only reason for the compulsion to stuff one's face. A 17-stone Billy
Bunterish character that I flew down to
Cornwall in a K-7 sucked boiled sweets constantly, in between observing gloomily that we
always seemed to be getting lower. Nonsense,
I said, the ground is just getting higher, as we
slid over Dartmoor and watched the ground
drop away again. I think it was worry that
made him eat, and my flying simply accelerated an innate tendency towards pessimism.
Years ago (1963, when the Beatles first
came to power, and satire became the new
craze) I invented for the entertainment pages
of this organ a ruthless glider pilot called
James Bend, whose adventures were so popular that I was asked to give the readers more
in 1964. Sorry.. I said, but this whole 007
James Bond nonsense will be played out by
then, and satires on yesterday's cult always
fall quite flat. How wrong I was!
But I remember that our hero Bend celebrated a height record with champagne and a
Havana cigar while airborne: then I asked the
readers to turn to a far distant page, in the
infuriating way that American magazines
have. The page number in question did not
exist, of course. ''What happened?" a thousand

A few times I have got my act together just


about in time for an early launch, and I have
been continually astonished how soon in the
day the good soaring weather can start. On so
many days thermals are bubbling at 10 o'clock
(0900 GMT) and I realise I could already have
been 40km or more down the first leg of some
vast task. Some days are perfectly usable a
good three hours before the typical competition pilot crosses the start line.
Years ago I arrived overhead a famous club
more than 250km out from home in an ASW-20
on a Sunday lunch-time - about 1.30pm - and
people were saying on the radio that they'd just
discovered it was a rather nice day and maybe
they ought to aviate a bit. On the ground, high
performance gliders could be seen preparing
for their first, leisurely launch of the day. They
would have discovered that it had been fantastic since 9.30am if only they'd got off their
backsides. (To be fair, I'm sure the same
leisurely carry-on was taking place back
home.) It wouldn't matter so much if were not
the same people that whinge about the horrendous cost per hour of gliding, the rarity of good
days, the difficulty of getting utilisation etc, etc.
If you want a worthwhile resolution for the
New Year, it is this: get up early; get the
equipage and all the assorted junk out on the
launch point and get your behind, and all that
is strapped to it, into the empyrean at the earliest opportunity. If you are a slow pilot like me,
the only way you will ever cover the ground is
to use all the soaring hours that God sends. A
few more touches of the blindingly obvious:

32

Over the Hills and Far Away


It helps to pair-fly with friends; tiptoe along
at a little over max glide speed, and stay in
touch by radio and eyeball.
Remember that when cloudbase is low the
thermals are closer together, so it isn't so
difficult as it looks. The lift at breakfast
time is not strong but is almost continuous.
That is how Hans-Werner Grosse used to
do 1,000km flights in his ASW-17 years ago.
Try to set a task such that there is a friendly airfield on track in the first 20 or 30km;
then you can be reassured that if you do
burn your boats too early you can get a
relight and not waste the whole day in
some meadow glaring up at the clouds and
cursing Platypus. Take a good book along,
though, just in case.

field in range, before he got his first thermal.


That's the way to write a big flight not just into
the logbook, but into the record book.
You will note that the sailplanes referred to
in the foregoing piece are all available at reasonable prices these days, being to greater or
lesser degree obsolete, but capable of terrific
performance. So it is not a question of this
being advice for Nimbus 3 owners which all
others can ignore. It is a question of attitude.
Lastly, if flying for seven hours and more does
not appeal, then land at lunchtime and throw
your partners into the air.

In 1999 Plat started the Dunstable Big Distance


Group which uses the Internet to swap informa
tion about weatherf ideal tasks and pair-flying
opportunities.

Rules are like records: to be


broken (1994)

Killing retrieve time.

If you really have launched prematurely,


and the tug pulls you through dead air all
the way to 2,000ft, carry on to 3,200ft over
the site, announce Start in a clear, confident
voice and glide out on track, praying. You
are giving the thermals 20 minutes in
which to wake up. (You are also impressing
the hell out of your friends, who are listening to the radio still in their pyjamas and
eating toast and marmalade. The lower the
performance glider you do this in, the more
impressed they will be, especially if they
have shares in it.) If you get nothing by the
time you get down to 2,000ft, you either
press on or turn back as the mood takes
you. I take no responsibility from here on.
In the greatest flight ever done in this
country, 808km from Lasham to Durham and
back in that other wunder-jahrf 1976, Chris
Carton was 30km along track in his Kestrel 19
and down below 1,000ft, with no usable air-

On this freezing Saturday morning in January,


unable to afford the time to go to Australia,
there is nothing for me to do but fantasise
about forthcoming big flights in the northern
hemisphere in the spring of 1994. First I started browsing through the Times World Atlas,
with the help of carefully measured lengths of
string. Did you know, a straight distance
1,000km flight from the heart of England will
take you to the Czech Republic?
Then I dived eagerly into the FAI Sporting
Code, which I have never read before. I am of
course, as W C Fields said in his old age when
he was caught reading the Bible, looking for
loopholes. My, that volume is an absolute cornucopia of laughs - not the Bible, silly, the FAI
Sporting Code - a real bumper fun book. For
instance the definitions, of which there are
eight pages, are fascinating. Take this one:
1.3.1. A Glider Flight: A flight by a glider
starting at the take-off and terminating with
the landing."
Phew! I wonder how long they sweated
over that in smoke-filled rooms. Actually there
is some sort of method here. After all they
could easily have said, "...terminating with a
cartwheel into a pile of rocks, the pieces to be
distributed over at least three counties, states,
departements, provinces or other administrative districts." But in their calm deliberations

Over the Hills and Far Away


the committee refused to panic, and chose otherwise. A landing it has to be.
However, the way I read the small print, if
you insist on cartwheeling into a wilderness,
distributing bits over several local governmental regions, it still counts as a landing - BUT
you must survive 48 hours to collect your
badge, diploma, contest trophy or record. Well,
that's not quite accurate either. If you step out
of the wreckage with a huge sigh of relief and
tread on a rattlesnake (or more likely expire
from dehydration, if you forgot the wise advice
of Dr Walt Cannon) then your sad departure to
the everlasting gaggle within 48 hours does not
disqualify you from getting your badge etc. It
is the crash itself that has to do you in, not rattlers or thirst
Such a nasty word, crash. The FAI prefers
accident. Ah! If you deliberately fly the
machine into a spruce forest it doesn't count
as an accident, then. The FAI rule-makers forgot that. (Gosh, I missed my vocation. I
should have been a lawyer, haranguing juries
in my wig. What a pleader the world has lost!)
A flight also fails to count as properly completed if anybody bales out. I'm always having
to remind my passengers of that rule as they
fumble nervously for the canopy release. 'You
might want to live," I say sternly, *but I want
my record, so just stay put." If they continue
fumbling for the canopy release, I start wondering out loud about which of the two parachutes was involved in the great pee-bag disaster last month, and about its not having been
repacked yet.
Again, the FAI very fairly stipulates that a
flight is not complete if the glider is not complete - that is, if anything important falls off
or is jettisoned, like a wing or tail. This is to
discourage people from continuing as if nothing had happened after a collision, and a very

Continuing as if nothing had happened.

33

The 45-degree club (1994)


A chap I know once had a splendid day flying
out of a wave site in dead of winter. He cov
ered 500km over a glorious variety of coun
tryside with not a sniff of a vulgar thermal
from dawn to dusk. At the bar his flight was
discussed along with the others as pilots com
pared notes on the day. The phone rang: a
club member who had not flown that day was
calling from home to ask how good the flying
had been. The man who answered the phone,
who had just been talking to my acquain
tance, said, "Well, Mabel Higgs got to 15,000
and Basil Snooks got to 18,000, nothing much
else," and put the phone down. The 500km
was not interesting enough to mention
because it was carried out below 12,500ft.
It takes all sorts, I suppose.

good rule it is too. It is so humiliating when


other pilots fly better than you do with only
half a glider. I took a dim view of it in the
1960s when Tony Deane-Drummond climbed
past me in cloud and went miles further than
me with a vast chunk of one wing missing
after having collided with another high-ranking officer in an earlier cloud-climb.
Having enjoyed the simple definitions so
much I naturally anticipated pruriently the
trickier definitions: those applying to women
pilots, for instance. I was disappointed. The
committee utterly balked at defining a
woman. All they say is:
'3.2.1.3. Feminine Records. Records
obtained when all the persons aboard are of
the feminine gender may be classified separately as well as in the general classification."
That expression feminine gender means
female sex, but the committee doesn't like to
talk dirty. To this Platypedant, glider pilots
don't have gender, only words do. When trying
to speak foreign languages the bane of an
Englishman's life is gender. Thus we must
remember that in French a fuselage (coque) is
feminine and a rudder-bar masculine - don't
ask me why. And German nouns and adjectives have three genders: masculine, feminine
and neuter. In Russian even the wretched
verbs, as well as the nouns and adjectives,
have three genders. But to stop people babbling about gender when describing the sex of
human beings is a losing battle. I guess the

34

Over the Hills and Far Away

silly habit is here to stay. No doubt the job of a


chicken-sexer, mildly challenging and even
amusing for the first five minutes, will be
reclassified as a fowl-genderer, but it won't
make the chore any less tedious.
Many years ago a male glider pilot underwent a sex change and became a female glider
pilot, then started swiping records that had

recently been set by a British woman pilot.


When asked by the press what she felt about
this, our ex-record-holder was diplomatic and
just said, If it's all right by the FAI it's all right
by me." I suggested that she should have said,
'If it's all right by the British Medical
Association it's all right by me" or better still, 'It
couldn't happen to a nicer chap" but facetiousness was not her style.
I imagine, though the rules are lamentably
vague on this important issue, that the FAI
would prefer it if a male pilot did not complicate things by actually changing sex during
the flight, or, horrors! within 48 hours of distributing the glider over three counties. (Note
to Peter Fuller. We don't need a cartoon for
this bit, thanks. Ed.)

Out & return (1999)

Compromises have to be made.

"Sorry, I thought you asked me to


find a good place to LUNCH!" (1986)
For 1986 our old friend, the distinguished
ex-chairman of the BGA, has picked a site rea
sonably near the middle of the Hexagon. (This
is what French journalists like to call their
country. Rivalling Fleet Street in leaving no
metaphor unmixed, they blithely use expres
sions like, "all four corners of the Hexagon"
while Descartes and Fermat revolve in their
graves.) I'm afraid we will not be quite in the
Texas of France, as French pilots like to call
the area around Bourges. It turns out that my
friend did not pick the place as I would have
done, with the aid of a contour map (the
fewer contours the better) and a list of French
gliding records, but instead with the Guides
Michelin and Gault-Millau and a wine atlas.
When one member of the party is looking
for triple-Diamond country and the other for
triple-rosette country, compromises have got
to be made. I am reconciled. Apart from occa
sionally fighting for control of the menu, and
setting aside a few quibbles over how to pro
nounce basic words like corkscrew, room tem
perature, magnum, medium rare, cream and
truffle sauce, it is about as different from
mountain-flying as you can get Thank Heaven'

Saturday March 27 was one of those wonderful


but rare early days in the season, with unlimited
visibility, well-behaved thermals and cloudbase
nearly 5,000 ft. Even getting down to 900 ft - a
considerable feat of ineptitude in such easy conditions in an ASH-25 - caused no worry; there
were hundreds of excellent fields to choose from.
The ground had barely woken up to the fact that
real sunshine was tugging green shoots upwards.
On the last leg of our 312 km task, from East
Swindon to Dunstable, my partner said to me,
"That's Fairford, north of Swindon, where the
B-52's bombing Yugoslavia are based." I didn't
know this, because I have recently tried to give
up newspapers and television in favour of the
Times Literary Supplement, the Scientific
American and books of an improving nature.
A few minutes after my friend made this
observation two vast black shapes appeared to
the left of our track, trailing clouds of dirty
smoke from eight engines apiece. Their pilots
were gently letting down after unleashing
cruise missiles, or whatever was their ordnance that day, with what effects I don't know.
I don't suppose they know either.
Shadows falling across an otherwise flawless English spring afternoon. Some pilots fly
for money, some fly for fun; but there is a
third, compelling reason for taking to the air,
which we don't care to think about until we
absolutely have to. I wonder how often we
shall see them this summer.

Survival of the fittest, fastest, most cunning, devious etc


Younger readers start here: once upon a time, by which I mean about 30 years ago,
pilots in a competition could take off more or less any time they liked, and depart
on course whenever it suited them. The launch time was not held, nor was the start
of a race. In fact the only things that were held in those days were parties.
As the number of gliders in championships got bigger, congestion at the launch
point was eased by issuing each pilot with a numbered disk with a hole in it. The
pilot then placed the disc on one of hundreds of nails that had been hammered into
a large board, each nail representing a launch time like 1120, 7 722 and so on. The
order of choice was rotated every contest day, as take-off times are now. This was
supposed to make the system fair, or at least not quite so grossly unfair.
Continual gamesmanship around the board took place, since a disc could be
moved by the pilot at any time, any number of times. It is said that Nick Goodhart,
finding the lottery had left him with no launch time near the moment he desired,
gave the appearance of thinking long and hard; he then carefully placed his disk two
hours away from the time that the general consensus believed to be the best. The
lesser contestants began to wonder if they had not made a ghastly error, and a few
of them nervously took their disks out of prime time and shifted them close to Nick's.
A hole opened up and Nick pounced, taking the prime launch slot that he had cov
eted all along.
Playing with one's disc - touching anyone else's was taboo - could occupy the
entire afternoon, especially if the weather was grey and all the cumulus tantalisingly on the horizon. The system kept pilots too busy and out of mischief: every now
and again someone would launch and probably fail to soar, and whether we fol
lowed them into the air was our own decision, which we continuously pondered. We
had no opportunity, as have today's competitors, to stand around in mutinous
groups for hours whinging about the management until the day is scrubbed.
Once the task was set early in the morning, it could not be cancelled. This kept us
on our toes. Anybody, just some guy with no talent but a deal of persistence, might
rig a third time after two outlandings and two road retrieves (air retrieves were not
allowed) and sneak away after a six o'clock launch and scoop 1,000 points by drift
ing SOkms or so downwind in the dusk when everyone else had given up. I did it
myself once or twice and very satisfying it was too. The value of a day was not scaled
down, as it is today, according to the number of contestants failing to exceed a sub
stantial distance like WOkms.
In short it was a grossly arbitrary, chancy and unfair system, except that the same
pilots seemed to win the whole time. Maybe fairness is crucial to the second-raters they talk of nothing else - but is nothing special so far as the real champions are con
cerned. No matter how you fix the rules to eliminate luck, those same people will
get lucky again and again.

The art of coarse gliding (1964)


The best way to define Coarse Gliding is by
stating what it is not.
It is not as described in On Being a Bird or
in The Soaring Pilot or in films that start off
with seagulls and the usual pretentious voiceover droning on about, "Man's Age-long
Dream of Flight."

From reading such books or seeing such


films one realises that there exists a super-race
of real glider pilots, known in the trade as
Pundits. They own airworthy gliders, launched
by serviceable tugs, retrieved by roadworthy
cars containing tireless, devoted crews. They
have infallible radio with a sixty-mile range
which they use in brisk military style. They
have new batteries; they describe thermnls in

36

Survival of the Fittest, Fastest, Most Cunning, Devious, etc

knots, never in feet per second. They really


use the John Williamson Calculator.
They understand the UK Contest Pilot
Rating System. They are allowed to fly foreign
prototypes straight out of the box. Their crashes are forgiven, however serious. Their barograph traces look like shark's teeth. They have
swung their compasses. They come out of
clouds pointing the right way. They write brilliant accounts of their flights.
As I was saying, the Coarse Glider Pilot is
not one of these. The best-sellers of aviation
literature are written for, but not by or about,
Coarse Pilots. They are the submerged 99% of
whom no bard sings.
Coarse Pilots are easy to identify. They can
be seen feverishly doing their Certificate of
Airworthiness in July. They live always for
"the great day" and are never ready when it

and are never ready ...

comes. Their gliders, trailers and cars show


the ravages of time, brutal handling and
inspired improvisation. Coarse Pilots sneer at
the pompous phrase, "sound engineering practice." If the wing fittings begin to get sloppy,
bending the pins slightly will restore the feeling of a good push fit. They build trailers in
mid-air, so to speak, without plans or jigs.
Gap-filling glue was invented for Coarse Pilots.
Every coarse-built trailer is different and
will sometimes not take a glider of identical
make to the one around which it was built.
Coarse trailers are often finished on the first
day of a contest and may be coming apart on
the last. One basically sound trailer for which
I was 50% responsible had rather crude doors
which, for lack of time to construct anything
better, had to be nailed shut and opened with
a claw hammer or jemmy. This door fell off
repeatedly until one day it disappeared alto-

gether during a retrieve, which was a great


relief. The trailer in question had one
white-painted side, green mudguard and fourteen-inch wheel and one side painted in grey
undercoat and never finished, black mudguard - scrap-heaps rarely yield neatly matching items - and thirteen-inch wheel (the spare
from the A35 tow-car). If there had been any
accidents (which, incredible to relate, there
were not) it would have been interesting to
hear the witnesses contradicting each other.
Competitions bring out the worst in the
Coarse Pilot. He has no hope of winning but is
content to have a vicious feud with the pilot
who is a few points in front in 23rd place.
Simply to see this one rival flop to earth below
is pure nectar. It is one of the few occasions
on which the Coarse Pilot will break into song
as if intoxicated. The only other occasion is
when he is intoxicated. Asked what is the
greatest pleasure in gliding, he says, "Grinding
the other fella's face" with disarming honesty.
Pundits go to briefings and appear to
understand the weather even when the forecasters don't. The Coarse Pilot stays in bed till
eleven, preferring to keep his mind clear and
his body rested. He usually remembers to
enquire what the task is just as the canopy
closes. He'll find out about the weather when
he gets up there. As one of them says, "Give
him an old Esso road map and a packet of cigarettes and he's happy."
As a matter of fact, 1964 was a real Coarse
Pilot's Nationals. Pundits prefer not to mention 1964 at all, and I believe steps may be
taken to expunge the whole ghastly episode
from the records, like Russian history. The
Wrong Chap won.
The really damning case against the Coarse
Pilot is that he does not cultivate public opinion either in regard to himself or the gliding
movement. A recurring bad dream of a Senior
Pundit must surely be this...in the lounge of a
four-star hotel he is convincing a Cabinet
Minister what a fine, clean-limbed body of
men glider-pilots are, worthy of limitless government subsidy, when in shambles a gang of
scruffy, unshaven oicks, the sort of people
who steal locking-wire and never return
screwdrivers. Having no sense of occasion
they hail our Pundit loudly and ask him what
he was doing down in that silly little field.
Making ribald references to his last crash,

Survival of the Fittest, Fastest, Most Cunning, Devious, etc

37

they produce a pack of beer-stained cards and


insist that Pundit and Minister join them in a
game of five-card stud poker, pot limit 15.
Each big winning hand buys a round of hard
liquor. At every opportunity there are allusions to what the Actress said to somebody,
which evoke raucous guffaws without fail. An
hour later the Minister is cleaned out,
cuff-links and all. He declines a generous
offer of a lift home in the trailer and departs,
leaving our Pundit in tears. Collapse of
grandiose million-pound Government plan for
gliding, ruin of gliding's image, etc., etc. . .
Bad dream? Heavens, it really will happen
one day, and the rotters won't even be sorry.
After 36 years I am touched to see that the upper
limit of technical sophistication was to know how
to use a simple plastic circular slide-rule. Now a
contest glider contains more computing power
than the entire US Air Force possessed in 1964.
In 2000 AD if you turn up at a competition with
out a full-time Information Technology Manager
in your crew and your own IBM PC pre-loaded
with the turnpoint data and all the relevant pro
grams to take to briefings, you'll just flounder. I
was going to say They won't speak to you, but
that's not true. The scorers and competitions
management will speak to you at great length,
slowly and very patiently, but you won't under
stand a word they are saying.

How the sore people saved the


world (1971)
In 1971 the Royal Air Force base at Newton, near
Nottingham, was the venue for the British
National Championships,. The competition direc
tor was lan Strachan (pronounced Strawn, this
being a Scots name, I explain to our readers
abroad) who had in the mid-1960s strayed from
the True Path and taken what was considered an
eccentric interest in gliders that could launch
themselves with engines. The meteorologist was
Ron Cashmore. The competition was won in an
Open Cirrus by Bernard Fitchett, possibly the
most naturally talented and intuitive soaring pilot
ever. Platypus also flew in this competition, to no
special glory except that for once he did not break
anything. He does remember paying handsomely
for crops that he laid waste with his Dart 17. The
weather was awful, but contrary to galactic leg-

end we did actually leave the ground a few times.


I have the farmers' receipts to prove it.
The despot of Jupiter, known to his subjects as
the Frekon, sat enthroned in his palace, plotting his impending invasion of Earth. He summoned his chief intelligence agent, Pewkon.
"O Pewkon, how fare your enquiries into the
mind-ways of the Earthlings, that we may
know how best to subjugate these creatures?"
Pewkon delivered a snappy triple-clawed
salute. "O Frekon, the boys in SocioPsychological Intelligence (known to the monster in the street as SPI) have come up with
something pretty weird just when we guessed
we had the guys on Earth figured out OK."
Tray illuminate the Frekon's mind. Our
invasion cannot commence until all the
Earthlings' ways are known to us."
Well, a couple of days back we put Burpon
to work on the In-depth Video-scanner but
with a difference; instead of sweeping the
whole Earth continuously we focused on one
spot for 48 hours. And boy! I tell you what
Burpon saw was real spooky!" Pewkon whistled through his mandibles.
The Frekon's claw waved impatiently, bidding Pewkon to continue.
'As I said, little old B was zeroed in on Lat
53 degrees N, Long 1 degree W; he reports he
saw a hundred-and-fifty earthlings converge
on a morning-prayer meeting, after which
they rushed out and opened 40 boxes on
wheels (about 20 cubits5 long, give or take a
claw). They began to assemble enormous

38

Survival of the Fittest, Fastest, Most Cunning, Devious, etc

white birds, about 40 cubits in spread. Some


used little trolleys, trestles and very few earthlings, and were quickly assembled. Others
used many earthlings and no scientific equipment and were only assembled after much
blaspheming, cries for help and even the loss
of blood."
"Such urgency and suffering means one
thing," observed the Frekon. 'The birds are
machines of war and must be prevented from
taking the air against us."
"Well, hold on there," squeaked Pewkon,
"these guys are proud of the total uselessness
of their birds from any military standpoint."
Then surely they must be essential to the
support of their homes, the nurturing of their
young or the prosperity of the coming harvest?"
"Well, not even that," said Pewkon, "the
boys in Economic Warfare said that the great
white birds are a drain on the earthlings'
pockets, they don't see their kids for most of
the summer and the effect on the harvest, if
they ever get airborne, will chiefly be to reap
a lot of it before the farmers are ready."
Pewkon scratched his carapace thoughtfully and went on, "Psychological Warfare said
the suffering and expense would only be justified if the whole exercise was essential to er - the reproduction of the species."
The Frekon's eye lit up. (He only had one
eye.) "You mean sex?"
"Well yes, kinda. That was the idea anyway.
But they found that the birds hampered rather
than helped the mating process and many of
the great-white-bird-fanciers are quite celibate, all capacity for love, devotion and sacrifice being dedicated to 40 cubits of glass-fibre."
The Frekon interrupted the meeting
briefly to instruct his Air-Marshals to hold up
mobilisation for the invasion.
To get back to Burpon's report," continued
Pewkon, "the 50 birds were towed to the middle of a vast field and set out in rows pointed
towards the East." He paused to let the significance of this sink in.
Then what did the earthlings do?"
demanded the Frekon.
5 A cubit is about half a metre, being the length of a
human forearm. Owing to the massive gravity of
Jupiter, the inhabitants are only about a cubit tall, so
the size of Earthmen's sailplanes, useless though they
are, deeply impresses the Jovian rulers.

Shocking perils of competition


flying (1998)
/ felt particularly responsible after John
Glossop invented a novel form of electric
chair when he hit a farmer's power line with
a lot of volts - and a lot of amps, too, which I
believe is what really cooks people in SingSing. He was roasted by the metal in his para
chute harness and seat belt and by the coins
in his pockets, ending up in Stoke Mandeville
hospital, where I paid a tearful visit as the
brutal task-setter who had nearly sent him to
a fiery end. For months after that I went
around with no change in my pockets (like
royalty), for fear of scorching vital parts in
similar circumstances.

"Nothing. Absolutely not a thing," wailed


Pewkon. 'They just sat there all day. Then at
the end of the day they took the birds back,
dismantled them and put them back in their
boxes."
"And the next day?"
"Exactly the same. The whole rigmarole
repeated from start to finish. Burpon said he'd
have a nervous breakdown if we made him
watch for a third day so we switched him to
the World Series Baseball for a rest."
At this point Burpon entered, apparently
fully recovered, waving excited tentacles. I've
just been re-running those tapes. I've got it!
The earthlings are the unhappy slaves of
two priests, Strorn and Ronmet, generally
known as the Taskmasters. Those two control
the weather."
"Even we on Jupiter cannot achieve that,"
gravely intoned the Frekon. "How can you be
sure?"

Survival of the Fittest, Fastest, Most Cunning, Devious, etc


"By the abuse that the earthlings (who
because the word 'Sore' is one they use with
most frequency and reverence, I call the Sore
People) heap on the Taskmasters when the
weather is bad. No intelligent life-form would
blame their priests for bad weather unless the
priests controlled the elements."
'Very true," murmured the Frekon, "but
why do the priests tolerate such abuse from
their slaves if they are omnipotent?"
'It is a harmless safety-valve for the frustrations of the Sore People. Besides,
Taskmasters need not worry about popularity
when they have the satisfaction of knowing
that they can make the sun shine at will."
'If they can do that, why do they not make
the sun shine?"
"Because they know what the Sore People
do not, namely that it is impossible to fly
without propulsive power. Fine weather
would simply tempt the Sore People to
throw their great white birds into the air and
destroy them. You see, the birds are made of
glass!"
Even the Frekon could barely resist a smile
at the folly of the Sore People and the cunning
of their Taskmasters.
'The Sore People," continued Burpon,
"vainly hope that they might one day, like
angels, defy gravity and fly without power.
This manifest delusion is perpetuated by
superstitious ceremonies designed to placate
the God of Gravity, the field being named
after Isaac Newton himself."
'These Taskmasters, do they share the Sore
People's delusions?"
They certainly do not! Strorn has been
observed flying around in a white bird but
with a little engine. Thus while the great
white glass birds lie stranded on the ground,
he can humble the slaves with his mastery of
the heavens."
"Perhaps we should follow their example to
keep our own subjects under control," said the
Frekon. "Pewkon, I appoint you CFI and Archtaskmaster. Forget about the Earth Invasion
and set up a Jupiter Nationals immediately."
"Gee, boss, that's just swell!" exclaimed
Pewkon.
"Oh, and one other thing. I would be grateful if you would stop watching all those old
American movies on the Video-scanner. Peace
be with you."

39

Legendary lager lout (1974)


There are two types of pilot that enter competi
tions regularly: those that enter despite the evi
dent fact that contests bring out the worst in
human nature, and those that enter contests pre
cisely because they bring out the worst in human
nature. There is no obvious correlation between
bad behaviour and success: noble, selfless traits
can be found at every level from World
Champion down to the rookie. Aggressive, selfish,
cowardly and downright vicious traits are like
wise randomly distributed over the skill spec
trum. At this point I feel the laws of libel closing
in. However I am confident that the subject of
this next piece will not sue for defamation. Indeed
I think he is secretly rather proud of the charac
ter that this article reveals.
Whenever S&G prints an article by, for or
about top pilots, we are always inundated with
letters from peasan - sorry, from less experienced pilots who will never be champions and
who want to hear about the struggles and triumphs of ordinary chaps struggling at the bottom of the pile. This month our reporter 'Q'
interviews Platypus, a proudly self-confessed
peasant-pilot who, practically single-handed,
has made British coarse gliding what it is
today - a blood sport second only to rat-catching. A refrigerator full of free Australian beer
was the only inducement as our soaring skinhead bared all to the tape-recorder.
Platypus, in 1972 at Pissoire you came in
69th, but in 1974 at Bad Freidegg you came in
45th. What explains the difference?
I think I can confidently attribute that vast
improvement to the fact that at Pissoire there
were 69 pilots competing, whereas at Bad
Freidegg there were 45.
Oh.
Pass that tube of Foster's, there's a good lad.
Ta.
Do you think pilots of your calibre should be
recommended to fly at demanding international
contests such as Angers and Hahnweide?
Well, the people at Angers recommended
me to fly at Hahnweide, and the people at
Hahnweide said I should fly at Angers, and
everybody in Britain says the more I fly
abroad the better. So I guess you're right.
Tell me how your mind works when you're
really keyed up on a competition day.

40

Survival of the Fittest, Fastest, Most Cunning, Devious, etc

On the ground, I can say without fear of


contradiction (I smash their teeth in if they do
contradict) that my mind works faster than
anyone else's. Especially on the old
pilot-selection take-off times: when it comes
to switching those discs around the board,
my gamesmanship is designed to fox the competition completely - the disc is a blur in
my hands as I shift it from nail to nail. You
should see the others panicking to get to
the board!
Is this because the other pilots want to launch
the same time as you?
On the contrary, mate - pass me another
lager, I hate stretching - the chaos is due to
the other blokes all desperately switching
times so as not to take the air within half an
hour either side of me. That, and my skill in
asking trick questions at briefing, has been
known to cause other pilots to fly round triangles the wrong way and get disqualified.
Fantastic! But what I was really interested in
was how your mind worked in the air.
I can tell you, the moment that towline
goes taut an amazing transformation comes
over me.
Go on.
I will if you don't keep interrupting. (Pour
me a Foster's, lad. T&.) Yes, at that electrifying
moment - my adrenaline begins to flow with
the speed of frozen treacle and my brain
switches off totally. The old CFI noticed that
very early on in my training in the T-21. Sent
me solo in no time as a result. Well, he had a
wife and kids, I suppose. "Better just you than
us both" he used to say. What a card he was!
Longevity is the better pan of valour, I dare
say. But getting back to contest flying, don't you
find this inability to think once airborne some
thing of a handicap?
Not in the slightest. It accounts for my being
so relaxed and without a sign of strain. The
other pilots worry and make fresh decisions
constantly They get worn out, poor devils.
Quite amazing. Now, Platypus, on the finer
points of closed-circuit racing: what is your
inter-thermal speed-to-fly philosophy?
Very simple. I have two speeds: 50kts and
150kts. The transition between the two I make
on the spur of the moment. My mind may
work slowly but my arm muscles work fast.
Isn't that inefficient from the point of view of
optimising cross-country performance?

In theory, yes. But it means no other pilots


dare fly within a height band of 1,000ft above
or below me.
Are you a lonert or do you like gaggling?
Gaggles? I don't remember seeing one
ever, except occasionally at a distance. Why
they all leave such lovely thermals in so much
of a hurry I can't imagine, but I blame those
damn silly calculators.
You mean John Willy computers. You don't
use one?
Pah. If you can see it you can reach it, I
always say. (Hell, who's been keeping food in
the fridge? Panic over, lad - I found a six-pack
of Victoria Bitter.) If you can't see it, stay good
and high, then do a kamikaze on the place
when it comes into view.
isn't that, er, inefficient?
Yeah, theoretically - but I've seen other
competitors pull out their brakes and land
short in six-foot-high maize rather than cross
the line when I'm finishing.
One up to you Platypus: Now, what are your
views about water?
Never touch the stuff: you know what fish
do in it, don't you? Next question.
What do you see as the major obstacle to your
future as a competition pilot?
The insurance companies, definitely.
It says here that your gliding career started in
earnest after you went solo at Castle Bromwich
in 1949.
Yes, but my expulsion from the Air Cadets
put an end to that, regrettably. Really the
1950's around the various sites were the formative years of my pubescent life in all ways
except one, though I believe some clubs have
remedied that deficiency recently. Hey, you
know, I've heard....
Er, yes, fascinating, but what I was really
interested in was whether you feel age and expe
rience are more important than youth and vigour.
Well, that was what I was on about
In competition Riding, I mean.
Oh. Well, I am the only pilot I know who
was ever grounded for senility, but I think
that was just a dirty manoeuvre by the Flying
Committee.
What makes you say that?
I was only 24 at the time. However, when I
bought my own ship, it was as though I had
suddenly taken the elixir of youth: they said I
could fly as far from the site as I liked, prefer-

Survival of the Fittest, Fastest, Most Cunning, Devious, etc


ably downwind in a gale. That was real vote of
confidence, and I've never looked back since.
Platypus, where are you flying in 1975?
Oh, California, Uzbekistan, that sort of
thing. Hey, Q, where are you off to?
New Zealand - on the next jumbo!

That splendid body of men &


women (1984)
I've just been asked, by someone who should
know better, to set the tasks for a little competition this season. Naturally I accepted. But
how did they guess that I had sadistic tendencies? (Maybe they just read your column. Ed.)
I have always said, of course, that task-setters were a splendid body of men, sadly
maligned, misunderstood and under-appreciated. (You've never said anything of the kind!
Ed.) Well, if I haven't said it, I've always
thought it, particularly since That Day.
It was in a National Championships in the
1970s; a triangle not much short of 300km had
been set and no sooner had the task-board gone
up than the blue skies turned leaden grey, with
a solid base of 1,800ft, and stayed that way for
several hours. In no time at all a trade union
committee claiming to represent all fully-paidup contestants was convened, and was in continuous session all morning and right through
the lunch hour. Fraternal delegates drafted
manifestos. Bunched fists were silhouetted
against the unrelenting heavens as little knots
of malcontents pledged solidarity against The
Management. The chief trouble-stirrer amongst
these agitators suggested - nay, demanded that we should all sit on the ground and refuse
to take off till The Management made a better
offer such as 1) Smaller Task or 2) Immediate
Scrub and General Retirement to the Bar - the

41

latter Composite Resolution carrying the union


block vote by a landslide.
Management, however, was not merely stubborn, it was diabolically intransigent.
Near-mutinous pilots were straitjacketed
whinging into their cockpits and towed bellyaching into the grey flatness that still stretched
from horizon to horizon. There seemed no
option but to glide it out from release and
maybe flop down in a field ten miles or so down
track. Mutter, gripe, whine etc etc. At around
eight miles from base, however, the universal
grousing quieted down as variometers began to
speak up - a much happier noise. Tb cut a long
story short, it was a pretty good day by British
standards, with half a dozen finishers.
Natural modesty prevents me from saying
who got back first and took the Daily Prize. All
I will say is that since then task-setters have
been pretty OK by me and can do no wrong.

It was nothing!

That was indeed the only day I have ever won in


any National Championships. One brief hour of
glory, which did so much for my self-esteem that
I rammed the Kestrel into a hedge on the last com
petition day. "What do you mean, I'm going to
have to land soon? Let me remind you that you're
talking to the winner of Day Five!"

42

Survival of the Fittest, Fastest, Most Cunning, Devious, etc

Mrs Plat then wrote the glider off totally on the


motorway during the retrieve when the engine
blew up at 70 mph. Glider pilots really should
study Greek literature, especially the stuff about
Hubris and his close companion, Nemesis.

Don't blame the competition


reports, blame the competitions
(1984)
Wandering around the 1984 EGA Conference
exhibition, I bought an ancient copy of
Sailplane & Gliding, with the results of the
1950 National Championships, flown from
my favourite other site in Britain, Camphill,
home of the Derby & Lancashire Gliding
Club. It's a favourite site for reasons of ego:
that's where I won the only competition I've
ever won in my life.
Philip Wills knocked off the winner's prize
as easily as he penned a page of prose, and
gave me to think: why are competition reports
of those days - long before even I did my
Silver C - so fascinating to read years later,
and competition reports today so incredibly
tedious? Since I write many competition
reports myself, I am as much to blame as anyone - if the wretched reporters are to blame at
all. No, don't shoot the messenger. It is
because competitions themselves are now
becoming boring to anyone except the participants - and even to some of them, I suspect.
TINSFOS rethink (1996)
I've been wrong all these years.
There is a substitute for span.
It's called Talent.
But you can buy span.

When Philip Wills flew in his Weihe from


Camphill to Boston on the Lincolnshire coast,
and nearly made it back, landing with his big
wings and tiny airbrakes amongst the stone
walls in the little fields at the bottom of the
valley, out-and-returns were virtually
unheard of. It was something new, not just in
contest flying, but in British gliding altogether.
When Nick Goodhart declared Portmoak from
Lasham in 1959 and got there using streets,
cu-nims, ridges, wave, indeed every source of
lift except sea breeze, we all relived it vicariously - every club pilot learnt from it and was
inspired by it.
In 1964 John Fielden showed us what distances could be flown along sea-breeze fronts
on coasts east and west. He left the pundits
way behind to take the winner's cup, which
made them all grumble that it obviously cannot have been a proper championships. He
was not invited to join the World Tfeam. If it
was a freak, it was a wonderful freak which
made splendid copy in our magazine.
Competitions were where new parts of the
country were traversed, new sources of lift
explored and where we extended what was
possible in the sport. Hence the competition
reports were intrinsically interesting to all of
us, regardless of whether we were competitively-minded. Now nothing new happens in
the Championships - because the task-setters
and the organisers (people like me under my
other hat) work manfully to prevent anything
interesting from happening. If I stood up in
front of the Nationals pilots and said, "Ibday's
will be a really different and unusual task..."
there would be panic and rage and a lynching-bee would be rapidly organised before I'd
even finished. Tow ropes would be put to
novel uses, not to mention winch-axes.
Seven triangles all going through Husbands
Bosworth with 80% finishing is what they
want - and that is just what is served up to
them, God willing, by us, the craven contest
directors. But to say that a blow-by-blow
account of such a week will not make the
average reader's blood race is a very British
understatement.

The situation has since got worse. I doubt if speed


or distance records will ever again be broken in a
British competition. A regulation FAI triangle,
with no side bigger than 28% of the total distance,

Survival of the Fittest, Fastest, Most Cunning, Devious, etc

is almost impossible to set as a task now. With the


twin constraints of airspace and the pilots' aver
sion to going anywhere near the sea, a big task on
a good day looks like an exercise in advanced
origami. The route has so many folds in it that I
should now say, "Seven polygons (not triangles)
all going through Husbands Bosworth."
I might not of course be reckoning with the inge
nuity of the rule-makers: someday soon they may
allow a task with five or six turnpoints to count for
a record or a badge, and an aspirant for a 500km
diamond will be able to achieve it without getting
out of sight of the club, even in British visibility.

Brain surgeon wipes out memory


(1992)
In a recent competition at Issoudun in France
the famous transplant surgeon, Mike Thick,
and ASH-25 pilot took with him as navigator a
famous brain surgeon. (No, I'm not making
this up, honest.) One day the navigator managed inadvertently to delete the waypoints
from the GPS, and was seen spending the
afternoon - wet and windy and nothing else
to do anyway - sitting in the rear cockpit of
the glider in a far corner of the field, patiently re-entering all the latitudes and longitudes
one at a time. There can be as many as 250 of
the damn things, so the sooner the
input-process can be automated the better.
There will be at least one keen customer.

Of course we can do that just now in seconds.


Assuming of course that you have the connectors
and cables and the right software in your IBM,
and the computers are on speaking terms.
Otherwise you may still find yourself spending
hours sitting alone in a corner of some foreign
field.

Thoughts of Superchamp (1984)


Not many multi-millionaires have taken up glid
ing, most preferring the social cachet of oceanracing. Having observed at close quarters a rare,
flamboyant instance of such a man in our sport,
Platypus wondered how he himself might have
behaved if had been blessed with two gifts which
he has always longed for- soaring talent and the
ability to make quick and hugely lucrative deals.

43

Time is money. Don't know who first said


that/1 but it's my favourite cliche. The 64 million-dollar question (actually the 65.372 million dollar question, but let's not mess with
small change) is, how do I sew up the Qatar oil
deal, buy next year's coffee crop, lease that
place in Threadneedle Street and win the
Nationals at the same time? In spite of my
business pressures, yesterday's win was pretty
conclusive, though Jonesey was griping about
the navigational help I had all round the
course from my crew - Hands, Knees and
Bumpsadaisy - who were using a computer
linked to a satellite to track the transponder in
my Blunderbus 4. (Damn cheek; it was my
satellite.)
Naturally Day 6 is pretty tense, but as usual I
play it, very, very cool. It really psychs me up
and, better still, it psychs them down...
0925: Breakfast in bed. Croissants flown in
from Le Touquet, devilled kidneys, scrambled
eggs, etc. The Grauniad business section has a
piece about my triumphs in the city., but full
of typographical errors. Mental note: after the
Nationals I'll buy that rag and get some new
proof-readers. They can't even spell the
names of my racehorses, let alone my name.
0932: Accept call from contest director congratulating me on five daily prizes in a row
and regretting that I have not been able to
show up to accept any of them. I suggest with
a light laugh that he presents the daily prizes
to me in advance before I take off. He clearly
thinks this very droll; he says the pilots have
banded together to buy me a clock, so if I get
something ticking in the post, that's all it is.
0950: Leap out of bed. Good time for highly confidential telephone call in shower to Lee
Kwan Yew (standing in another shower in
Singapore) to fix supertanker deal. Exit feeling refreshed and richer.
0955: Am driven to City in the Bentley. H,
K and B call on car radio-telephone (the one
with the built in Met-map facsimile machine)
with details of task. Glider is rigged and
watered; maps fully marked up and onboard
microprocessor fully programmed. Not bad.
May not have to sack them after all. The servant problem is a real pain these days. I keep
them waiting while on the other line I buy a
football ground, a baseball team and put in a
6 I'

I've since been told that Benjamin Franklin first said it.

44

Survival of the Fittest, Fastest, Most Cunning, Devious, etc

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

bid for a gliding club where I can build an


exclusive private hangar.
1015: BBC Panorama and Money Programme
teams fighting to get into my office to interview
me. Double-booked. Don't know how it happened. Sack secretary.
1107i H, K and B call. First take-off due
1230. At current launch rate I'll be airborne at
between 1242 and 1244. I tell them I don't
care much for their lack of precision, they'd
better sharpen up. Spirit of Francis Drake.
Tlenty of time to make a small fortune and
beat the Spaniards/' he said, or words to that
effect. All right for him - the Armada was
hurtling up the Channel at all of three miles
an hour, so of course he had bags of time.
Damn good PR, all the same. Must cultivate
same studied nonchalance.
1130: Address audience of young executives
on the virtues of thrift, modesty, how to be a
good loser, humility etc, etc. They all applaud
like mad. Imbeciles. Wouldn't hire one of them
1225: Down to the helipad on the Thames.
Up and away. Hackenheimer rings me from
New York - from his helicopter, would you
believe? These Yanks really take the biscuit
when it comes to ostentation. Time for my
man-of-action-but-few-words act. 'Yes. No.
Fine. Maybe. No. Yes. OK. Done. Goodbye."
Sixty seconds later I am worth 400,000 smackers more.
1243: My pilot has some trouble getting any
sense out of Dunstable Control as he seeks
permission to land. It seems the airwaves are
entirely gummed up with pesky Nationals
pilots and the Startline yammering away. My
arrival is delayed by 75 seconds. I am helped,
still in natty Savile Row pinstripes, into the
old bus. (I say 'bid" for purely sentimental reasons; it cost 50,000 green ones. In fact it's so
new, when we opened the trailer door on the
morning of Day One, three gastarbeiter from
Schempp-Hirth fell out. They'd been fettling
and polishing away frantically to beat the
penalty clause I always insist on.) I close the
canopy with a bang on H's fingers as the
towrope goes taut. Do that again, young fella,
and I buy a new crew and you buy new fingers. Nevertheless, precision timing, I have to
admit, and you can see everyone around is
pretty impressed as we stagger off towards the
pig farm and the power wires.

Survival of the Fittest, Fastest, Most Cunning, Devious, etc


Now for the hard bit. "Hey, Bumpsadaisy,
what are all these bloody knobs for..?"

At the pharmacy (1985)


I have in the past mentioned the inadvisability of testing polarising specs at the chemist's
by wagging and revolving the head while staring up at the sky, on account of the imminent
arrival of the men in white coats. It occurs to
me that I am extremely lucky that my behaviour at the local pharmacy has not led to the
arrival of men in blue coats, or even the Plain
Clothes Branch from Scotland Yard.
I stroll into the small suburban emporium,
intent on the next competition and aware of
nothing except my usual pathetic state of
unreadiness for it.

WARD D

Deranged Pilots Dept

Be careful of the men in white coats.

"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

director and respectably married ratepayer of


this parish, but thinks better of it and just gives
me an odd look. I have not got the time to convince her that the only thing about me that is
bent is my metal Caproni two-seater, following
a ground-loop in a meadow last month.
The methylated spirits (for cleaning maps)
and clear plastic bags (for you know what) go
into the shopping-basket unremarked, as do
the aeromodelling requisites: old-fashioned
razor blades, please, not the new-fangled
sealed-in kind, and soda-siphon capsules for
carbon-dioxide motors. The demand for castor
oil is countered by her kind advice that more
palatable laxatives are now marketed; I say
that what goes for my chest also applies to my
bowels. I explain that I am about to take part
in a Rubber Event and that castor oil is a very
good lubricant, though a mixture of soft soap
and glycerine, carefully simmered for hours, is
preferred by the cognoscenti. Mrs Platypus
often tells me that my desire to explain things
in detail is a mistake; in this instance she is
spot on.
The last straw is when I ask for hypodermic
needles - to make tiny droplets of glue for the
construction of microfilm models to fly in
Cardington airship hangar. My eyeballs are
carefully scrutinised for signs of addiction
and/or criminality; the proprietor is hauled
out of his back room and I am interrogated at
great length.

I DISPEI

However I doubt if any of the foregoing


compares with the scene that must have taken
place years ago when George Burton discovered the ideally resilient material for massmanufacturing total energy diaphragms...

46

Survival of the Fittest, Fastest, Most Cunning, Devious, etc

Competition paranoia (1988)


There are days when for the first hour or so I
can't get my act together (let's forget the years
when for the first month or so I can't get it
together) and it seems the glider won't climb,
while every supposedly inferior ship whiffles
up past me, and in the glide I get lower and
further behind. There is no point whinging
about it on the radio; you just hear Ralph
Jones jeering, "Get a Nimbus!''
Unwilling to admit that my flying could be
at fault, I glare out along the wings and wonder whether I have bolted them on upside
down or left the dive-brakes out. I know what
it is, the flaps aren't connected. Wish I could
see the damn flaps from here; my neck is
hurting trying to crane round and under.
"Look out you idiot!" Oops, sorry. Another
15m Class goes past. What is wrong?
You know what it's like when you have a
tiny sore inside your mouth and it feels like a
golf ball? Well, one midge squashed on the
wing looks the size of an elephant when
you're in this self-pitying frame of mind. Wait,
this is galloping paranoia - haven't all the
other gliders got monster bugs, too? Yes, but
they've got smaller wings so they catch fewer
bugs. It's not fair.
Then I think I have left the wheel down,
and it has taken on the dimensions of the
wheel in the little diagram down by the
undercarriage lever, which makes the wheel
look the size of the front roller on a traction
engine. How can a fellow soar with a steamroller wheel dangling out in the breeze? No,
the wheel is up. It must be something else.

Galloping paranoia.

ta

Can't get my act together.

Yes, the instruments; they can always be


blamed, why didn't I think of it before? The
pipes are full of weevil's eggs; and they've
been hooked up wrongly by some fool, probably me; the terminals have been reversed by a
saboteur (probably me again); the batteries
are defunct and should have been scrapped
months ago; the solder joints must have crumbled after yesterday's landing, I know it. The
more good reasons I find for not being able to
soar, the worse my flying gets.
Then WHAM! Quite by chance I hit a corker; all the little gliders dwindle below and
behind, and I even begin to get some of the
big ones in my gun-sights. The steamroller
and the elephants vanish, the wings, flaps,
brakes, pipes and wires have suddenly been
reconnected the right way, the weevils hatch
out and fly off, the gelcoat sparkles and yesterday's landing was a baby's kiss after all.
What was all the fuss about...?

What a waste! (1989)


Time was, if you said to your CFI "Chiefy - ;/
(I'm assuming he was not the sort that would
an ground you instantly for calling him
Chiefy, though personally I would never have
dared to, not even when I was young and
bold) " - on my next gliding holiday I want to
put as many hours in my logbook as possible.
I want to fly as many miles as possible and to
see the widest variety of countryside and generally get the most out my glider, my talents
and the British weather, all of which are pretty limited. I'd also like to get a Gold badge or
even a Diamond. What do you advise?" then
the instant answer would have come winging
back, "Enter a competition, of course! Best of

Survival of the Fittest, Fastest, Most Cunning, Devious, etc


all, see if you can get into a National
Championships."
And of course a contest was indeed the
ideal way to achieve all those noble aims.
With expert weather briefings and aerotows
laid on; with a crew madly eager to drive thousands of miles from dawn to dusk, and from
dusk to dawn again; and finally with distance
tasks that started in the very first thermal of
the morning and ended in a long, floating
descent from the last thermal of the evening.
Many pilots, in gliders of lower performance
than those in which people now go solo, averaged seven hours a flight, seeing not just the
countryside but the coastline, often from
many miles out to sea, from Cornwall to
Scotland in the same week. From dawn to
dusk no thermal went unscathed. It wasn't
just worth 50 hours in the logbook, it was
beautiful and hard to forget.

Dreadful tales are told of the extermination


of the American bison in the 19th century;
people would shoot the poor beasts just to cut
out the tongue as a delicacy and leave the carcass to rot. That's what the unholy alliance of
competition pilots and organisers increasingly
do to magnificent, broad-shouldered soaring
days that could effortlessly carry hundreds of
gliders round this land for seven, eight hours
or more. They carve out a two or three hours
in the middle of the afternoon and discard the
really interesting bits at either end. Like a
dead buffalo, a great soaring day never, ever
comes back. It is lost for all eternity.

Rib-tickling fun (1984)


I have broken or cracked a rib three times in
three years and hope my little run of misfortune has now stopped. The first was while
walking down some ice-covered steps carry-

47

ing skis (No, I emphatically was not drunk. I


wish everyone wouldn't automatically assume
that.) The second was at an Enstone competition in 1982; I was bicycling energetically up
a hill coming back from the phone in the
nearby village - the sole phone at the club
being commandeered for Control - having
just reassured my wife, ironically as it turned
out, that I was in alive and well. 7
The folding bicycle, borrowed from a
revered ex-chairman of the EGA, collapsed
without warning just behind the hinge-point (a
dodgy weld proved unequal to my Reg Harris
musculature) and precipitated me brutally
onto the road in front of a car. The driver, who
proved to be the local churchwarden, kindly
gave me and the wreckage a lift to the club
while lecturing me on the topic of the foul
noise made by the Enstone microlights. "Sorry,
nowt to do with me," I groaned as I counted
my remaining sound bones. From previous
experience I knew that the rib would be at its
worst on the third day, by which time I was
being lifted into and out of the Nimbus cockpit
like a sack of potatoes. I flew it in much the
same way too. Outlandings were more than
the usual Hell, of course.
The revered ex-chairman of the EGA agreed
not to sue me for wrecking his bike if I agreed
not to sue him for lending me a bike without a
C of A, or at least at C of R. We both tried to sue
the bike company and got nowhere, as you
might expect.
The third time I broke a rib was on a
retrieve from a field which I had picked during a cloudburst during an Open Nationals. I
used to think cloudbursts were peasant inventions like air pockets, but I now hear that
under some circumstances it's not a bad
7 The sad reason for my having dashed to the village
public telephone on two wheels, which I did not mention in S&G at the time, was that two young pilots in
K-8s had collided at a services contest not many miles
away. Both had been killed. I heard the whole dreadful thing over the radio while I was airborne in the
Enstone competition, and by the time I landed I
expected the media to be full of it, as they usually are.
I wanted to get the message to my wife Veronica
before the news hit the television screens. We all
must have been in a similar state of concern at one
time or another, especially when the news given out
is unspecific as to names, and places and aircraft, or
worse still, when it is plain wrong.

48

Survival of the Fittest, Fastest, Most Cunning, Devious, etc

description of what clouds actually do. And


anyone who goes around sneering at air pockets is likely to find themselves in one, and
serve them right. The older I get the more I
believe in old wives' tales. Anyway, the steep,
narrow, soggy track offered no purchase to
the tyres of my swish new saloon car. Wait till
I win a million on Premium Bonds and can
afford a Range Rover. So the ASW-20 (change
of glider) wings had to be carried by me and
one female crew member (Marjorie Hobby)
in the gathering dark and stowed in the trailer while it was pointing up a 20-degree slope
and leaning over perilously. Pausing for
breath was fatal; the wing was determined to
push me back down the rain-soaked hill.
A last desperate heave while standing on
the angled, mud-covered ramp threw the
sweating, cursing pilot violently against the
trailer entrance and crunched his rib a third
time. Our notorious hostility to field landings
in competitions reached a new peak.
I can only say when it comes to rigging
and derigging with a cracked rib on the third
day, the ASW-20 demonstrated vast superiority over the Nimbus. I'm quite reconciled to
the little ship now.

Which kind are you? (1988)


Ask your partners - if you dare
When it comes to getting everything right,
from practice to pitots to paperwork, there
are four classes of competition pilot:
Superstars are totally organised at least a
week before the contest begins.
Pundits get their act together by the end
of the first day of the Competition.
Coarse pilots are sorted out by the end of
the last day of the Competition.
Peasants are totally disorganised before,
during and after the Competition, and usual
ly manage to roll the trailer over on the way
home, just to round things off.
The superstar partially achieves this prechamps perfection by hiding the glider where
nobody else can find it especially the peas
ants. No syndicate should have more than one
superstar in it, nor should it have more than
one peasant: the strain on the others is too
or eat.

And another lesson is that borrowing an


un-roadworthy bicycle to go and tell someone
you are in good physical condition is about as
good a definition of Tempting Providence as
you can get.

Enterprising competitors (1992)


Some years ago during one of those rainy
afternoons in the middle of a Nationals the
pilots were given their customary opportunity for a whinge-in as a substitute for flying.
Wearing my tasksetter's hat (What, you've
never seen a task-setter's hat? Well, it comes
only in Extra Large size, it's complete with
ear protectors to prevent pilots from trying to
bend your mind, built-in orange shades that
make the sky look a lot better than it really
is, and most importantly it's really thick to
protect against very hard, or very wet,
objects accidentally dropped from a great
height) I asked them how they would like
tasks that enabled them to get the best out of
the day, but with a possibility that luck or
unfairness might creep in. To a man they
declared passionately that if there was the
slightest risk of unfairness they would rather
not fly at all, thank you very much. I found
that rather depressing at the time, but it still
took years for me to see the light and send in
my entry for a contest in which there is no
nonsense about fairness, in which held startlines don't exist and in which protests are
outlawed.

A task-setter's hat

What a splendid event Competition


Enterprise is, what a splendid site Sutton
Bank is, and what a splendid combination
the two make! But you have to get used to the
fact that Enterprise is like no other
Competition. My first day in an Enterprise

Survival of the Fittest, Fastest, Most Cunning, Devious, etc


was a disaster owing to a failure to engage
the brain. I landed back at 5.30, having fumbled the wave after a derisory little out and
return, muttered, "Oh well, that's that," put
the glider to bed and headed for the bar. It
simply hadn't occurred to me that I could
immediately re-launch into the east wind
wave, which was visibly full of gliders up to
10,000ft. These were to roam around for
another three or four hours, covering as
much as 400km before darkness herded
them home. By the time I realised my mistake I'd grounded myself with a pint of
Yorkshire's best bitter beer.
Blast.
Conventional competition tasks aren't like
that. They're usually over by bar-opening
time. Better still, you don't have to think
about where to go, when to go, what to do or
anything. That's why they are so popular.
ooo

The commonest illusion about Enterprise is


that it is anti-competitive in spirit, and that
contestants are too gentlemanly to trample
their opponents into the dirt if the chance
presents itself. Au contraire. The variations
awarded for kilometres flown in different
directions are so arbitrary and so large (a few
degrees more to the west and your bonus can
be 100%) as to encourage devilish ingenuity in
designing your itinerary. It is only when the
less cunning pilots struggle back at dusk, quietly pleased with their efforts, that they discover they have been stitched up by some
chap who spent an extra 15 minutes devising
his point-maximisation strategy. This sort of
scheming appeals to me enormously, and next
year I will go into Richard-the-Third mode
from sun up on day one.
ooo

At Enterprise the possibility of soaring the


Channel is always in one's mind, John Fielden
having prepared the way with the airspace
bureaucrats. Many Enterprisers have in readiness passports, foreign currency and maps of
France and even the Low Countries and
Germany - so there is much earnest discussion
and head-scratching in anticipation of The
Great Day. The whole business is meteorologically trickier than I thought, leaving aside airspace problems. If you want to cover any distance on the other side you have to get to Kent

49

by one o'clock, and then you might find that


sea air compels you to start the crossing not at
the coast but several miles inland. There will
be sea breeze effects for even further on the
other side, so you need enough altitude to
cover twice the 20 miles of the Channel itself
in order to arrive at the first usable thermals
sufficiently high to work them.
Well, with a 20kt tail wind and a modern
glider, no problem, you say? Not exactly. In the
1985 Enterprise John Bally, starting from
Sutton Bank, just scraped in with 700ft clearance over Cap Gris Nez, having discovered that
if the wind is more northerly than 300 degrees
when you depart from the White Cliffs it can
change to a north-easterly half way across.
Something to do with the wind being deflected
by the landmass of the Kent peninsula. That
margin works out at less than one per cent of
the width of La Manche measured at its narrowest point. To any one who has watched a J.
Bally final glide, it was nothing special.
The more we discussed the problems of the
crossing, the more astonishing seemed
Geoffrey Stephenson's 1939 cross-Channel
flight in the Gull from Dunstable to le Wast,
with a glide angle of about 20 at a best speed
of 30kt.

What's the flap all about? (1986)


I wonder if anyone will offer the latest
Standard machines with optional tips to produce the unflapped 17 metre of the 1980s, as
the Dart and SHK were to the 1960s? Without
the extravagance of flappery it could be the
best performance-for-money package in town.
Come on, you guys!
Well, 12 years later the LS8 came out with tips
that stretch to 18 metres, and a great success it is,
too. I do occasionally get it right.

Bloody competitions (1993)


(Originally written for the World
Championships Newsletter, Sweden
1993.)
Competition flying does not bother me, but
competitions do bother me. What I mean is, the
flying from A to B and back again is the easiest

50

Survival of the Fittest, Fastest, Most Cunning, Devious, etc

part. The most stressful part of the contest is


coping with the mountain of detail under which
the sadistic organisers and other bureaucrats
bury you:
Panic two days before the Championships
in Patagonia when you find that your insurance cover specifically excludes Patagonia,
and the insurance agent has gone on holiday
and is unreachable.

Excludes Patagonia.

Hysteria when you notice that your ground


radio licence has been mislaid, so you can talk
to your crew but they can't reply.
Apoplexy when the Transylvanian border
guards tell you that you are very naughty trying
to import a glider into Transylvania illegally and
they are going to impound it for two weeks.
(The fact that it was made in Transylvania and
you have a written personal invitation from the
Transylvanian president to take part in their
Nationals makes no impression.)
Then the contest proper starts - if you ever
get there and if your documentation is accepted. However, your misery is only just beginning. Indeed the chief reason for the vast popularity of two-seaters is the need for a private secretary/lawyer to carry - and ideally to memorise - all the rule-books. The list is endless.
Photographs must be the biggest cause of
grief in competition flying, in the same way
that rum used to be the biggest source of trouble in the British Navy. All of the following
have been done by the very best pilots:
1. Taking photos of the right TP from the
wrong angle. I have donated far more
points to my fellow-contestants by out-ofsector pictures than by my flying errors.
2. Being in the right sector but somehow
failing to get the TP itself onto that little
36mm by 24mm rectangle.

3. Failing to photograph the clock after you


have landed. After a hard day's work a
pilot should be allowed to roll out of his
cockpit and stagger off to the bar without
having to remember such nonsense.
4. Forgetting to put any film in either camera.
5. Finding out after processing that
although the time appears correctly on
the camera back, the processed film is
not registering the time.
6. Having a camera that switches from hours/
minutes to date without your noticing it.
7. Mounting the cameras on the wrong side.
8. Having your cameras stolen after a field
landing.
9. Taking the film out of the camera before
an official has witnessed this solemn
event.
10. Forgetting which start sector to photograph.
11. Running out of film, especially on a post
task.
(Forgetting which way to circle before the
start is not much of a problem, since the other
competitors will gently remind you with the
politeness for which contest pilots are famed,
even in moments of imminent danger.)
000

Barographs are another source of pain:


1. You find that a barograph acceptable for
contests in one country is not accepted in
another country.
2. If it is clockwork, you have the opportunity variously to forget to ink it, smoke it,
wind it, seal it or get it witnessed.
3. You can put a clockwork barograph in the
wrong way up, so that the stylus is hanging under the foil and not touching it.
4. If it is electronic, its battery dies or its
memory gets indigestion, so it stops
recording half an hour after it has been
switched on.
5. In either case, you can forget to switch
the barograph on, or can do all the above
things correctly but for one small error you simply forget to put the barograph in
the glider before take off.
ooo

You are going to say the GPS will put an end


to all that stress, worry and opportunity for

Survival of the Fittest, Fastest, Most Cunning, Devious, etc


mistakes that cameras and barographs have
caused up till now.
Good heavens, when were you born?
000

Having an aversion to water, possibly after


being bitten by a rabid dog, I personally have
never got into trouble for having too much of
the horrible stuff sloshing about in my glider,
but some people do. (When I use ballast I have
trouble with the electrics or the pipes and
most of it ends up in the cockpit, so I do not
usually bother with it in temperate latitudes.
In hot countries it is different: a soaking wet
cockpit is rather pleasant.) But the fuss everyone makes about it! The time wasted at the
1991 World Championships in committees
arguing about small quantities of this supposedly magic fluid amazed me. We all know that
it takes 100 litres to make any measurable difference to sailplane performance, but the
amounts that are the subject of heated debate
by distinguished panels of arbitrators could be
drunk by a baby camel in ten seconds.
Thank God it's over; we've only lost 500 penalty points, a personal best, and our plastic
bomber is still in one piece. Now we can drive
home without a care in the world. Goodbye,
dreary EGA Rulebook! Adieu, nitpicking officials and pedantic scorers!
Hold on, what's that car with the flashing blue
light on top, and can that siren possibly be wail
ing for us?
"Good evening, sir. Yes, it is a beautiful
evening for the time of year, really lovely. Did
you know - just a second while I get my big
notebook out, this is going to be a rather
lengthy chat - that your trailer (a) has a malfunctioning brake-light? (b) has a number plate

Cartoon by Enzo Cento/ante

51

Finishes are the end (1993)


Finish lines give me a lot of trouble, especial
ly if I arrive before everyone else, or, more
likely, after everyone else. What I like about a
sailplane with nearly 60:1 glide ratio is that it
gives me plenty of options when I fail to cross
the correct finish line at the correct height
from the correct direction. If I do not hear
those sweet words, "Platyplaneur, good fin
ish!" I can do a dozen leisurely figure-eights
around different parts of the field in the hope
that one of them intersects the finish line
before the ground comes up and hits me. On
the other hand this does not go down well
with the business jets, helicopters and para
chutists that are trying to use the same aero
drome. In ordinary day-to-day gliding, if the
manner of your flying indicates evident men
tal confusion, the people in charge on the
ground are only too eager to tell you where
to go and what to do with your big toy in the
interests of safety. In contests, however, the
officials are sworn to silence, apart from
telling you tersely that you have not done a
proper finish. My crew are now briefed to sta
tion themselves next to the finish line
observers with a transmitter (the licence hav
ing been found in the cat basket at the last
moment) ready to prevent me doing some
thing truly stupid.
Of course, all the necessary information is
usually printed out and given to the pilots, so
you can end up with a sheaf of paper - make
sure you have shredded yesterday's sheaf of
paper - which I now bind together in a folder.
Then after launching I find that the folder has
slid irretrievably down behind the seat. Hence
the popularity of doppel-sitzers with secre
taries, as I said.

52

Survival of the Fittest, Fastest, Most Cunning, Devious, etc

different from the one on the car? (c) was being


towed at 30% over the speed limit for trailers?
(d) appears to be overweight for the size of car?
(e) is being driven by someone who appears to
have been celebrating recently...?"

The sky's the limit, if we stop


being stupid (1996)
A classic is a work that does not age. George
Moffat's 'Winning on the Wind" is 22 years old,
but most of it - leave aside the reviews of
sailplanes now applying for membership of
the Vintage Glider Club, such as the Capstan is fresh, relevant and required reading still. A
true classic. One of the most memorable chapters is Low-Loss Flying, better remembered
for its subtitle "Winning By Not Losing."
This deals with the little cumulative gains
that you make when you pay attention to
details like efficient starts and finishes, entering thermals cleanly, then leaving them
before the lift falls off and so on. Having flown
in innumerable contests and having helped to
manage quite a few, I have concluded that if
George brings out a new edition of the book to
take young glider pilots into the 21st century,
then 'Winning By Not Losing" requires an
extension, which he might call "Winning by
Not Screwing Up." The greatest and the humblest of competition pilots alike would benefit.
The points gains George offers in "Winning
by not Losing" are small but important.
However "Winning By Not Screwing Up"
(WBNSU, pronounced Woobensoo) offers
absolutely gigantic increases in points, as I
shall demonstrate with a number of some
real-life examples. The names are concealed
to protect the guilty.
In the era before GPS one of our finest
international pilots, on a day in the World
Champs, increased his score by QOOpts over
the previous day. "Unbelievable!"you will say.
Not really. He did indeed fly well on the second day, but his real WBNSU triumph was to
remember to put film in his cameras for a
change.
In the Dunstable Regionals in 1992, the
club chairman similarly made a vast improvement in score from one day to the next. He
managed to go round all the correct turnpoints as specified by the contest director, and

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

Survival of the Fittest, Fastest, Most Cunning, Devious, etc


the slow SOsec setting will often fail to show
your presence in the sector.
Using fresh batteries in the logger, remembering to clear its memory before take-off,
studying the map for prohibited airspace,
knowing where the Finish line is, reading the
Rule Book - oh, there's a host of ways in
which you can quietly accumulate points that
your rivals are spilling all over the place, like
a drunk with a tray of beer.
I think we should encourage pilots to Win
By Not Screwing Up by giving an award to the
Administratively Most Improved Contestant
(AMIC) during the competition. This would

53

be the competitor who, regardless of soaring


performance, shows the biggest reduction in
penalty points between the first and last contest days. But exactly what should this much
prized, avidly contested WBNSU trophy which I could have won myself countless
times - consist of?
Do write in and make suggestions. But for
the moment I suggest a wooden spoon.
Since I wrote this I learn that a French former
World Champion lost 1,000 points in a GPS-regulated World Championships by missing a startline entirely. In the 1999 World Championships

Platypus takes on an even


bigger list (1983)
While we are making lists (I love
making lists, particularly those
intended to remind me to do use
ful things. However, I usually lose
or forget the list unless I put on
a second list a reminder not to
lose the first list, and so on ad
infinitum...), here is my little list
of loves and hates:

LOVE

HATE

The sight of my nearest rival struggling at


500ft while I'm at cloudbase.

The sight of my nearest rival at cloudbase


while I'm struggling at 500ft.

Emerging from the top of a cloud the right


way up, pointing in the right direction.

Emerging from the bottom of a cloud the


wrong way up and pointing in all directions
in quick succession.

Swooping in on finals to see that none of


the other contestants has arrived.

Finding one has swooped in on the wrong


airfield.

A thermal smack over the turnpoint.

!@*7 Where is the *!?@ turn point?

The first thermal of the season.

The first landing of the season.

The first cross-country of the season.

The first field landing of the season.

The yawstring on my canopy.

All other instruments.

Gin-clear visibility.

Standard British murk.

Gin-clear gin.

Water, except as ballast.

Task setting.

Meteorologists.

Tasks.

Task setters.

Final glides.

Final glides.

54

Survival of the Fittest, Fastest, Most Cunning, Devious, etc

an American Open Class champion entered a


slightly wrong name from the turnpoint database
into his computer and lost most of his points for
the day. The very best pilots foul up as easily as
raw beginners, and GPS, as I predicted, has not
repealed Murphy's Law.

Big wings, small whinge (1996)


More about span. And more about contests.
Last week I finished a Regionals with a position smack in the middle ranks, right on the
median. Boring, boring. On the previous five
occasions that I had flown big gliders in

British handicapped competitions I got a 4th


place, a 3rd and three 2nds.
Why not first, you ask? Indeed, why not? I
must lack the killer instinct. It was the same
when I played table tennis in my youth: I
would get to 19 pts to the other guy's 12, then
I would lose concentration and start thinking
about something else like girls, or when the
bar was going to open, or maybe it was just
nerves at the relentless pressure of being in
front. Anyway the ball would start flying
erratically all over the room and the other
player invariably stormed past me. I didn't
mind them winning as long as they didn't
gloat too much.

Halleluya, I'm a glider-pilot! (1981)


You have surely all read the priceless anec
dote from the 1960 World Championships
about the American pilot who had the stan
dard pre-printed sign written in German say
ing, "I am a glider pilot please help me,"
which he showed to a passing Frau after an
outlanding. That good citizen rummaged in
her handbag, produced a Deutschmark, gave
it to him and went on her way.
Whether the dear woman knew he want
ed a retrieve is neither here nor there. What
the story proves is that the German public,
who are vastly better informed about gliding
than our own (hardly difficult, I admit, since
the British public's knowledge of gliding is a
minus quantity - that is, most of what they
know ain't so) immediately bracket the words
"Glider pilot" with pauper, vagrant or itiner
ant bum. In short, a beggar, liable to rattle a
tin cup at any passing bourgeois with a
whinging, "Give a poor fellow the price of an
aerotow, guv!" Try that on a British passer-by
and you'd get nowhere unless you'd persuad
ed her that a glider was a nearly extinct spec
imen of bird, the prevention of cruelty to
which was your sole vocation in life.

If you want to win you really have to hate


losing. My friends should have done me a
favour by gloating more so as to make losing
less palatable. They failed me, they really let
me down. If this was the USA I should sue
somebody.
The reason for my distinctly lacklustre performance in 1996 was chiefly the unusually
good weather and short tasks on most of the
days. Pilots do like getting back, so I don't
blame the organisers at all for the small tasks. I
do blame the weather, though. The weather let
me down badly. (Difficult to sue the weather.
So far, that is. I bet the lawyers are working on
it. When government or business start tinkering with the weather, it will be a feast for litigators.)
In the five previous competitions there
was so much rain, wind and overdeveloped
cloud that the airwaves were constantly rent
by plaintive cries from little gliders plummeting into pastures. As I sat drinking ice-cold
lager after yet another finish, the loudspeakers would regularly boom out the delicious
message, "Crew of number XYZ to control!"

Survival of the Fittest, Fastest, Most Cunning, Devious, etc


soon followed by another sweet sound, the
hollow rumble of somebody else's trailer
heading for the open road.
However, global warming is wrecking all
this happiness. There is too much sunshine
and the little blighters are getting back too
often. I don't ask for continuous foul weather,
just a band of stratus about 20 miles across,
preferably in the last stages of the task so that
everyone passes Y to make it a 1,000 point day.
Here comes an undisguised, self-interested
plea for a change in the handicapping system to
restore things to their proper order.
The handicapping system was initially
based on the glider's polar curve (hah!)
applied to the British Standard Thermal (hah!
again). When I was first introduced to him or her - The British Standard Thermal delivered a climb of 2.4kts to a Skylark 3 (ask
Granddad what that is) climbing at 35 degrees
of bank.
Years of recording all-day climb rates from
the Peschges for our syndicate ASH-25 shows
an average of 2.0kts8, though that includes
hundreds of hours flying around when nothing
else is staying up at all, not even Skylark 3s. So
the British Standard Thermal has probably
been a reasonable estimate of the lift you get
typically between noon and the Happy Hour.
The trouble is, averages are clumsy tools,
which frequently fail to describe the real
world. For instance, my favourite statistic is
the fact that the average Englishman spends
14 days of his life in jail.
So it is with average thermals on which
handicapping is based. Very simply, if the
rates of climb average 3.0kts or better, the big
gliders have to achieve record-breaking
speeds to overcome their handicaps, which
are in the region of 125-130. If the lift is only
half as strong, big wings triumph. So if you
mix 15 metre and 25 metre gliders, the contest
result is almost entirely decided by the weather and we are reduced to vapid untruths like,
'Well, we are only flying for fun here, anyway/' The needle, the urge to match yourself
against rivals, disappears.
It is perfectly feasible to compensate for
strong days and weak days by taking the
speeds of the fastest pilots and comparing
8 In Australia over the season 1990-1991 it averaged
exactly 4.0kts, precisely twice as strong as Britain.

55

those with the speeds they should have


achieved in standard British thermal. Where
the speeds are lower than theory predicts, the
handicaps should be spread further apart,
penalising the big wings. Where the speeds
are higher than theory predicts, the handicaps
should come closer together, reducing the
penalty on big wings. I know how I would do
the mathematics, but the BGA might think I
had a vested interest.

Scales of justice (1997)


One terror that faces all pilots in international
competitions, and in national championships
in which I have flown in America and
Australia, is having your glider randomly
weighed before launch on any day to make
sure it doesn't exceed the all up weight limit for
the contest. This weight limit may well be less
than the safe limit stipulated by the manufacturer or the airworthiness authorities, so the
rule is a matter of fairness as much as safety.
However there's one country where I have
never seen that solemn ritual - the finger
pointing at the chosen glider, somewhat like
the National Lottery; the tedious measuring
process under a relentless noonday sun; the
red-faced shame when a few kilos of excess
weight are discovered by the high priest; the
pilot's face turning pale and stricken as points
are deducted far beyond any advantage
gained - and that country is Britain.

Massive amounts of waterballast

56

Survival of the Fittest, Fastest, Most Cunning, Devious, etc

So we find that, in the home of the one


knot thermal, contest ships stagger around
the course weighing 200lbs more than would
be allowed in Tfexas, home of the lOkt thermal.
When I pointed this paradox out to a fellow
contestant, while waiting on the grid at nearly 4pm for the third re-brief of the day (you
can tell it was England) a few weeks ago, he
said, "So what? It can't do them any good!"
Possibly not, but clearly many pilots believe it
can do them good. And maybe it does, especially if the task is short and the final glide is
a large proportion of the total distance.

One day I started a final glide 500ft higher


than one of these airborne reservoirs, thinking, I've got you cold, mate!" only to see it
streak away from me at a good lOkt faster
than my MacCready speed, despite my height
advantage. When I was calling, "Finish line,
one minute!" I could see the four great plumes
of water streaming from its tanks as it pulled
up to win the day
Food - or drink, anyway - for thought.
With global warming we might soon see an
alien ritual become as British as, say, Burger
King and Foster's.

Those magnificent flying machines


There are other sports that use machines to exploit human muscle or nature's forces:
rowing, sailing and cycling come to mind. But in none of these activities has the tech
nology, or the resultant performance, changed so much as it has in gliding. Rowing
boats, yachts & racing bicycles are not much different in design or speeds achieved
from 40 years ago when I first entered a gliding competition in 1960. That was in the
London Gliding Club Regionals: I landed the club Olympia in some pasture or crop
every day, sometimes twice in an afternoon after a retrieve that was even more perilous than the flying itself.
The impetus to greater performance comes from a simple fact. A boat that goes
slower than another boat does not sink to the bottom of the ocean; it just crosses the
finish line somewhat later. A bicycle that is a bit sluggish does not roll into a ditch,
unable to move again, requiring a friend to come with a car to get you home. Gliders
are quite different. A glider that cannot reach the next thermal, or that cannot climb
in a thermal, actually does sink to the bottom of its ocean, namely the ocean of air in
which we strive to stay afloat. On most days of the year in northern Europe it is still
difficult for average pilots in average gliders to stay airborne for long enough to do
a cross-country and get back safely to the site. People who work Monday to Friday
and who share a glider with friends can go for months without a decent flight.
The frustration of being unable to soar, or having to be retrieved from a ploughed
field and taken in haste to the nearest repair shop, is a great spur to the designers
and builders of sailplanes. Thank heaven most of these wonderful engineers live,
work, and attempt to soar in northern Europe, and not in Spain or Texas!

A material difference (1989)


Long before designer stubble had been invented, there was a potterer-to-end-all-potterers to
be seen around Dunstable every weekend with
what looked like a perpetual two-day-old beard,
his moustache and fingers stained, not yellow
but dark brown, from the chain-smoking which
eventually killed him. Ron Watson was untiringly helpful with any job you wanted done,
from a variometer calibration to a Cornish
retrieve. He was also untiringly dogmatic, as
when during one of the great downwind-dash
Nationals (1961) he refused to stop his vintage
Bentley to let his fellow crew members telephone Control to see if their man had landed,
^ook at those cloudstreets, nobody could get
sunk in those conditions'' he snorted, and
swept past the hapless pilot and onwards,
another hundred miles down the peninsular,
before the blunder (the pilot's blunder, not
Ron's, of course) was discovered.
To look at him in his dirty beret, messing
around with bits of wire in the Ottley
Building, you would hardly have guessed that
he was a distinguished scientific civil servant
in one of the aviation ministries. When I
asked him why government-financed aircraft

always cost about ten times what they were


originally budgeted to cost, he said cheerfully,
"Well, if we went and told Members of
Parliament what we thought the wretched
things would really cost, none of the projects
would ever get off the ground, would they?"
He would have been a marvellous character
in Yes, Prime Minister foxing both the bureaucrats and the politicians with his technical
knowledge, his pawky wit and his total lack of
respect for rank.
I asked him (this was more than 25 years
ago) whether tailless gliders had a future, and
he said, 'There is nothing wrong with a tailless
glider that can't be put right by adding a tail."
Which firmly ended that topic of debate.

Swept past.

58

Those Magnificent Flying Machines

Then I asked what he thought the biggest


strides forward in glider design would come
from, and out of the portion of his mouth that
was not engaged in gripping a cigarette he
said simply, "Materials" and went on bashing
out the most recent ding in the 1930s fourwheeled ashtray that served as his car.
He was right. Exotic designs like the
Horten flying wings have got nowhere.
Neither did the metal variable geometry
Sigma - too complicated by far. And though a
plastic variable-geometry SB-1 won the 1978
15 Metre World Championship in the hands of
Helmut Reichmann, that monstrously expensive prototype never entered series production. But materials - glass, then carbon, then
Kevlar - have successfully made possible
higher aspect ratios, stiffer and more perfect
wingsections, more effective controls, wider
ranges of wing loadings from dry to fully ballasted - all of which have helped, along with
better aerofoils, to double performances of the
wooden gliders of which we were so proud a
generation ago.
Perhaps it should have been a matter for
lamentation rather than celebration when a
British Skylark 3 won the World Championships
in 1960, since it helped to reinforce our insular
attitude to new materials. One of the gliders on
display on that occasion was the still very new
glass reinforced plastic Phoenix, which was described by a distinguished British aerodynamicist in his famous drawl (not Ron but another
scientist, still very much with us) as, "A schoolboy's idea of what a glider should look like,"
which was true but perhaps missing the point.
The Phoenix was the direct forerunner of the
Phoebus and the inspiration to all modern GRP
gliders. Apparently all of the eight 1950s
Phoenixes were still flying well into the 1980s
and for all I know are still flying today; I only
hope the latest plastics last as long.
When Slingsby's finally decided that wooden gliders had hit the buffers, they plunged in
1968 for an American design in metal that had
not been meant for series production. No
American glider of World Championship calibre has ever been mass-produced, the main
reason being the horrendous US government
bureaucracy which put certification of commercially produced gliders on a par with that
of Boeing 747s. Their best gliders were always
brilliant one-offs with EXPERIMENTAL sten-

cilled on the side. So the British HP-14c


flopped. It seemed that Slingsby's wanted to
do anything rather than touch the dreaded
glass-fibre technology. Eventually the first
British GRP glider, the Kestrel 19, based on the
Glasflugel Kestrel 17, flew in the UK Nationals
in 1971 and became generally available in the
1972 season. (I loved the Kestrel, and had
three of them between 1973 and 1979; don't
let's go into why I had so many...) But Britain
had lost its lead in designing gliders and, after
the Vega, dropped out of the world market
altogether.
This whole story of decline and fall was a
microcosm of British industry in general over
the same years.
I often wonder what dry comment Ron,
had some miracle of medical science saved
him, would have uttered about this sad tale. It
could have been one of his hour long dissertations, brooking no interruption or disagreement; on the other hand it might have been
extremely short and pithy.
Apropos the above, gliders have changed
incredibly little in planform since the late 1920s.
What kind of performance, I wonder, could you get
from a modern carbon-fibre replica of the 1930
Fafnir. if you cheated with a 1980s aerofoil, flaps,
brakes etc? Now there really was a schoolboy's
idea of what a glider should look like. Mike Russell
would doubtless throttle me for the blasphemous
suggestion that we should build fake plastic repli
cas of old gliders with modern wing sections. But
my point is simply that the best designers had
basically got it right 60 years ago, and if there has
not been any fundamental change in glider shapes
over the past 60 years, there is unlikely to be much
in the next 20. But I would love to be wrong.

The judgment of Solomon (1984)


At the World Championships in South Cerney
in 1965 the prime, and very simply applied,
qualification for a Standard Class glider was
for it to be wheeled between two poles (no,
not two Poles; they were another story altogether) stuck in the ground 15 metres apart.
Well, this spanking new ship arrives,
straight off the drawing board, and promptly
gets wedged between the two, er, posts. It is
manifestly too big. A brilliant legal defence of
this oversized prototype ensues. "M'lud,"

Those Magnificent Flying Machines


intones the designer/builder/pilot, "this glider is indeed exactly 15 metres in span in its
natural state, ie, viz, namely, to wit; when it is
aviating. Which it isn't right now, being quite
evidently in an unnatural state of earthboundness." All the jurors weep at the plight
of this grounded little bird just longing to get
into its proper element and assume its rightful wingspan. "Thusly, its poor wings droop,
denied of their inherent dihedral, which was
built into the design and which it possesses in
full flight. Ergo../'but he had no need to perorate and throw himself on the mercy of the
court since this forensic display had already
prompted a standing ovation amongst the
spectators. Come to think of it, they are
already standing, so it was just an ovation,
I suppose.
The judge is unmoved. Nay, I tell a lie; he
is deeply moved, but being British he concealed this with iron self-control. For a while
he balances in his mind the eloquence of the
little pleader standing before him with the
obvious chaos that would follow if the argument i allowed to stand (Hell, what is a natural airspeed - 140kt?) then delivers the judgment that is an example of true wisdom and
an object lesson to law-givers. "OK, you win"
he says, "on one condition. I'll let you in the
Standard Class when I see you fly that thing
between those two posts/'
Collapse of articulate pleader. Case dismissed.
The only thing wrong with that true story
(apart from the fact that I made most of it up) is
that the judge may have been not a he but a she.
I actually believe that this rule has indeed been
changed since 1965 and bendiness of wings is
taken into account.

59

In a sailplane made for two (1981)


How nice to have a new share in a really fizzy
high performance two-seater, a side-by-side
Caproni Calif! A terrific fun-machine.
The received wisdom is that top pilots
don't like flying two up because they require
single-minded concentration to give of their
best. Speaking for myself, I need all the intellectual, moral and physical help I can get; two
brains, twenty fingers and four eyes is the
minimum I require to get any aircraft safely
from A to B.
On one occasion, flying solo on a free-distance day, I unexpectedly found myself flying
off the map and had to find and refold a North
of England map. I spent an alarming twenty
minutes wrapped in intractable fablon-covered paper which seriously impaired vision,
control and language. Eventually the map was
not refolded but had been pummelled into the
approximate shape of a football, across which
crumpled globe I managed to navigate up to
Ilkley Moor, (which does actually exist,
worms, ducks and all, in Yorkshire). A fulltime co-pilot would have dealt smoothly with
that problem and conserved the mental and
physical energies of the pilot-in-command.
In the first two-seater I had, a Schleicher
K-7, the best navigator was a young chap with
a Clark Gable moustache who eventually
became Chairman of the BGA and navigated
that very well too. It was in the days before
audio variometers and he used to sing, the
pitch going up and down as the vario rose and
fell, so that the PI could keep a good look-out.
One moment it was Caruso, the next it was
Chaliapin. His voice has never been the same
since - nor after a couple of heavy landings (ie
crashes) has his coccyx (for the ignoramuses
amongst you, that means the lower vertebrae). The trouble with navigators is they can
get ideas above their station. During one epic
struggle in the 1961 Nationals, this dialogue
took place:
Future Chairman, BGA: You're not making
much progress.
Platypus (snootily): Will the co-pilot kindly
confine his observations to those of a purely
navigational nature?
Long Pause.
Future Chairman, BGA: Navigator's Report
coming up. The little Cotswold village we are

60

Those Magnificent Flying Machines


to think - had been taken out of the spiral plastic microphone cord, right through the covering, wires and all. It was practically severed.
Why Jaws, or whatever his name is, gave up at
this point I don't know. I'm only glad that it
isn't a wooden glider ...

A great number of functions.

over now is the same little Cotswold village we


were over half an hour ago.
Shortly after, we ran into a solid wall of sea
breeze mist drifting inland from the Bristol
Channel and, though thermals continued
miraculously to bloom in this dense miasma,
nearly every solo pilot got lost. In the K-7, however, our division of labour into thermalling
and navigating brought us to an almost deserted Nympsfield - the first contest race that I
(sorry, we) had ever completed. Happy days!

Of mice and Platypi (1982)


Last Saturday, during the haphazard poking
about that I call doing a C of A, I found a mouse
in the all-metal Caproni. (Waiter, there's a mouse
in my Caproni, call the manager!) That's nonsense for starters, of course. First, I saw no
mouse, just a wee nest made from chewed-up
quarter-mill maps and Opal Fruit wrappers.
Second, it's well known that there's no such
thing as a mouse in the house - if there's one
there are at least a dozen. A whole tribe, scampering from tip to root, from rudder-post to rudder-pedals. Breeding all over the place. Not only
parturating, but masticating. Not to mention
micturating and all the rest. It's the masticating
that really bothers me at present. (Though I'm
not too keen on the thought that a small
amount of zero g while I am dolphining might
be all that is required to suspend a troupe of
furry creatures weightless and slowly revolving
in front of my unbelieving eyes, not to mention
the effects on any female passengers.)
No, as I say, it's the masticating. Having
succeeded in getting the radio to receive for
the first time in years, by a process of trial and
error using an electrician's multimeter (he's
just not a pretty face, you know) I could not
get the thing to transmit. Then I noticed that a
great bite - or hundreds of little bites, I prefer

Furry creatures in front of my eyes.

Talking about radios, you all know of course


that Platypus's first law of radio warfare states:
The length of a radio message is inversely propor
tionate to its importance. Thus a revered late
chairman of the BGA (I'm using late, in the
British sense to mean ex-, not in the American
sense which is rather more final) wished to convey this message last year while soaring - or in
the case in question failing to soar - in the Alps.
"I am in a spin or spiral dive from which I cannot recover, I have lost 4,000ft, the aircraft
appears to be breaking up, I cannot bale out
because of the g forces and I am in rather pressing need of some practical advice on what to do
next/'All he said, with commendable economy,
was, "HELP!!" which brought advisers sprinting
to the groundset, especially his partners - or as
the French call them, co-proprietaires, which
rather better expresses their material interest.
By extreme contrast, this is the sort of
thing you hear, usually in the middle of a very
busy competition:
Cabbage White Base from Cabbage White, do
you receive?
Silence. Well not silence, there's a competition on. But silence from Cabbage White Base.
Cabbage White Base from Cabbage White etc,
etc, repeatedly. The fool goes on like this for
ages, without thinking of transmitting his vital
message - if he has one - blind. It hasn't
occurred to him that either (a) CWB isn't listening or can't receive (in which case why say
anything at all?) or (b) CWB is receiving OK
but has poor transmission on his groundset so

Those Magnificent Flying Machines


the pilot can't hear the reply. But the silly
berk still goes on trying to get a response from
CWB before sending his message.
Ah, at last - CWB has come back from the
bar. Now civilised conversation, intellectual
intercourse and wit, badinage and repartee can
coruscate across the ether to the edification of
all the rest of us - whether we want it or not.
That you, Ron?
Where've you been?
I've been fixing the trailer (liar). It's got a duff
bearing, I think.
(Long description of this real or imagined cri
sis.)
Well, I'm over a little village with a church
with a spire, can you find it on the map? It's got
a pond to the south-east, no sorry, the
south-west, etc, etc.
This description of precisely where Cabbage
White is goes on for ages, and since his finger
hardly ever comes off the button he can't hear
people bellowing: "Shaddup! Can it! Pipe
Down! Belt up! Can't you hear there's a competition on? etc, etc." (CW isn't in the contest,
of course. Competition pilots aren't gods, but
they do deserve a small share of the radio
action. The better they are the smaller the
share they want.) Even if he heard them he'd
only think what a selfish, uncouth and callous
crowd, with him lost and no one to assist him
with the navigation. The punchline is when
you hear, willy-nilly, as the cut and thrust of
CW and CWB's dialogue crackles merrily along,
that CW is at 4,000ft and is only local soaring
anyway. Our collective fury knows no bounds.
When I was flying at Hahnweide in 1975
someone made a joke on the radio (at least I
think it was a joke, my German not being up
to much, but there was a lot of Hoch-Hoching
and general bierkeller bonhomie) and instantly there boomed out from the contest direktor,
"Achtung! Funkdisciplin!" which nipped all that
Bavarian jollity right in the bud. Quite correct
too. What we need is some FUNKDISCIPLIN
in this crowded little Isle.
ooo

To those who heed not, I pronounce with bell,


book and candle: May a pox, a murrain and a
hundred assorted other plagues smite your
rotten radio. May mice devour your microphone and rats your co-ax. May the Lord flatten your battery. May foul growths form on

61

your terminals. May you always receive


"Rigoletto* on Radio 3 when you want your
crew in an emergency. May you get laryngitis,
streptococcal throat and inflamed tonsils. May
you be compelled to write out a thousand
times - nay, a million times - SILENCE IS
GOLDEN.

TINSFOS again or History as it


should have been writ (1993)
In ancient times, a great warrior was the
scourge of the Hebrews. He was a Philistine,
which I think means that when he was bored
with breaking heads he liked nothing better
than to watch Match of the Day with a
six-pack at his elbow. One day a brave young
fellow came forth, took up his sling and
hurled a pebble at Goliath, for that was the big
fellow's name. The pebble whistled past G's
ear. G stepped forward with a snort of contempt, and '/Whap! // the poor boy was laid
stone dead. This carnage went on for months.
Finally, whether by dint of assiduous practice
or sheer luck, a youth named David confronted Goliath, and "Ziiing-Whap!" - the giant fell
on his face. At this, all the scribes and chroniclers leapt to their feet, seized their clay
tablets and papyri and crowed with one voice,
"Now at last we have something worth putting
in that great book we are writing!*
Thus it comes about, children, that people
the world over believe that the little guy will
always beat the big guy., just as from reading
another ancient book they discover that a tortoise will beat a hare any time. So people who

My favourite (& cheapest)


instrument (1984)
Oh for a return to the open cockpit and the
fresh breeze on one's brow! Or on one's ear, if
you flew like me. The instrument I'm still
addicted to is the yawstring which is the next
best thing to a faceful, or earful of wind.
However, my partner hates yawstrings; they
don't have them on 737s for some reason, so
he rips it off every time he flies and I stick it
back on again every time I fly. You can easily
tell who flew the glider last - as if you couldn't
already guess from the leaves, rooftiles etc
wedged in the undercarriage doors ...

62

Those Magnificent Flying Machines

Better to be a Philistine

read too much are deluded into thinking that


little gliders are better than big gliders, and
are indeed prepared to spend more on a new
glider of 30 cubits than a slightly worn glider
of 50 cubits, though the latter will slay the little glider stone dead today, tomorrow and
unto the end of the millennium after next.
Maybe there are times when it's better to
be a Philistine, what don't read much, y'know,
like, than someone who reads too much and
draws all the wrong conclusions .

A mere coincidence (1993)


There is a bizarre group of people who find mystic significance in numbers, and twist and
manipulate them to prove anything they like.
I'm not thinking of politicians, nor of mathematicians or scientists (though Isaac Newton
was obsessed with weird necromantic ideas that
seem to us a million miles away from the age of
enlightenment that he ushered in) but of pure
cranks, who will add the Queen's birthday to the
square root of the height of St Paul's Cathedral
and derive the date of the end of the World.
I am not one of those kinds of crank,
though I may well be any other kind. But I am
intrigued by something that dawned on me
only last night, after finishing a six-pack.
When I was 151 got my A badge in a Cadet,
glide angle 15:1. When age 25 was reached I
was allowed to fly the club Olympia, with an
L/D of 25. Then at 27, the K-7 with an L/D of
27. At 31 the Skylark 3 at around 31:1. 9 When
I was 36 I was flying Dart 17 at 36:1. At 44 I
was flying the Kestrel 19 at - you guessed it.
At 47 the Nimbus 2. At 57 the ASH-25 - and
just before the day I turn 59 next spring, a
lovely pair of winglets promises to add anoth-

er couple of points to the 57, threatening to


send the whole thing gently into earth-orbit.
All sorts of strange ideas might now seize
the numerologists (I looked the word up in
the Shorter Oxford Dictionary, and it doesn't
exist, so I had better copyright it) who will see
a clear case of cause and effect: Think of the
amazing performances we could get in the
21st century if Plat goes on till he's 100!" I can
see myself being kidnapped from my rocking-chair by a gang of aged alumni of the
akafliegs, bearing duelling scars, cropped hair
and heavy accents, "Put der olt geezer on der
life-support machine, Gerhard. Maybe ve can
sqveeze anuzzer five points out of him!*
Rational-minded people will rebut the theory with an elegant reductio ad absurdum.
When Platypus was born in 1934, gliders
should have plummeted straight into the
ground the moment they were launched.
Well, lots of them did. But one would have to
admit that a few of them were covering the
countryside pretty effectively. So much for
the pseudo-science of numerology. All the
same, if I celebrate my 80th birthday with a
new glider capable of, yes, 80 to 1, I shall start
looking over my shoulder...
I have been invited to fly in eta, the 31-metre glid
er mentioned elsewhere in this chapter, in yar
2000, sometime between my 66th and my 67th
birthday. Perhaps the older I get the more such
invitations I shall receive from the akafliegs.

Don't look down (1992)


I was enormously impressed by Keith
Nurcombe's recent cross-countries in the
TUtor in, a 1930's machine of hideous handling and pathetic penetration inflicted on us
beginners in the 1950's. How we hated it! How
9 The 36:1 claimed at one time for the 18m Skylark 3
was an optimistic revision, quite unjustified, of the
original much lower manufacturer's estimate. The
same goes for the 30:1 claimed for the 15m Skylark 2
at the same time. When the Skylark 2 was rigorously
tested at Dunstable in the late 1950s the figure was
nearer 25 than the 30 claimed for it. The news was
never disseminated, in the best British tradition of
least said, soonest mended. The Skylark 2's big sister
was probably over-hyped to the same extent.

Those Magnificent Flying Machines


we yearned for real performance - unaware
that at our fingertips we had a ship that could
leap effortlessly cross hill and vale.
Hell, I shall always yearn for performance.
The moment a brochure arrives guaranteeing
that an extra 2.5ft of carbon-fibre on each tip
- every foot costing more than I earned in the
year that I joined the club, 50 weeks of miserable pen-pushing toil that I shudder to
recall - will reduce my minimum sink by
9/16ths of an inch per second, which in turn
will improve my glide angle by 3.3%, I'm
pleading for them to dispatch the merchandise by Federal Express, adding 75p for nails
and glue and string to fix them on, and a
pathetic PS: please fax and say, "When you
are going to stick vertical winglets on to the
horizontal tiplets to shave another 3/16ths off
the sink? Here's my signed blank cheque
ready for you to fill in the first number that
enters your head." I must be daft. I need
counselling by an aged, wise aviator, begoggled and with long streaming hair, on the
benefits of wood, canvas and open cockpits to
the health and pocketbook, not to mention
the National Ladder.
Anyway, back in 1958 one of our group, an
attractive female Tutor pilot (who went off
and married a chap with more experience
than me, by which I mean he had 50hrs in his
logbook against my five) used to end all
debate about better glide angles by flatly stating, "Performance is irrelevant: you either get
the next thermal or you don't." Despite having
wrestled with formal logic at our most ancient
university.. I could not figure out why that was
supposed to be such a knock-down argument.
I think it was just the confident way it was
stated; it would have floored Wittgenstein.
Now, 34 years later, I see that she was right;
if you have the right mental approach, you

Yearn for performance.

63

Getting The Willies (1985)


In my car boot there is this large hypodermic
syringe (minus the needle) and assorted
pieces of tubing in a plastic bag. I'm worried
lest the police should stop me and suspect me
of strange practices. Is it a drug-injecting or
glue-sniffing outfit? A veterinarian's artificial
insemination kit? No, it's a John Williamson
"diagnose -your-variometer-leaks" device. Try
explaining that to the cops, though. I think I'd
sooner say I was an Al vet except they might
ask me to prove it, which could be embarrass
ing or even downright dangerous.

They could suspect me of strange practices.

can ignore performance. It is rather like those


cartoon films where Tom and Jerry race out
over a cliff and don't drop until they look
down. Top TUtor Pilots Don't Look Down,
that's all.

There's no Segelflugzeugbau like


home (1993)
Home-building is like motherhood: no gentleman knocks it or mocks it. Not being a gentleman, however, I shall take a dig or two at
this sacred institution, though with caution.
In the USA home-building is a religion: in that
expansive land a man feels a pang of shame if
he cannot boast of having been born in a log
cabin that he constructed with his own hands.
(When I next go to the USA I shall wear heavy
disguise and deny I have even a nodding
acquaintance with such a cur as Platypus.)
Home-builders are more rare in this country than in the USA, so I am a bit safer. Most
of us in this island have taken to heart Belloc's
sad tale of Lord Finchley, who tried to mend
the electric light
'It struck him dead, and serve him right.
It is the duty of the wealthy man
to give employment to the artisan"

64

Those Magnificent Flying Machines


ooo

We British are clearly much more sensitive


to the need of the artisan to be kept in work.
'If a job's worth doing, someone else had better do it," is my father's guiding principle, and
I have followed it. If I am elevated to the peerage - and I know some very idle people who
have achieved that eminence - I shall have
that motto inscribed on the family shield in
Latin, surmounted by heraldic Platypuses
(Platypi? Platypodes? Platypussies?) some
rampant, but most of them recumbent, or
even dormant.
I only know of about three people in
Britain who have made a modern glider with
their own hands. However there are quite a
few more, masochists one and all, who have
put thousands of hours of painstaking,
immaculate workmanship into building exact
copies of gliders that were terrible fliers even
when they were first designed 60, 80 and even
100 years ago. Such is their fidelity to the original, they still fly abominably, to the absolute
delight of their creators.
The most bone-headed argument given in
favour of amateurs building their own gliders
is that it offers the economic path to happy
soaring. Baldercock and poppydash. As one
greyheaded American said to me, in a low
whisper for fear of being overheard by a lynch
mob of crazed do-it-yourselfers, 'It's cheaper
to get a job in a gas station at a dollar an hour
and buy your glider with your earnings than
to build your own, but they don't want to
know that/ Only if you value your time below
that of convict labour can it be more profitable
for the amateur to build a sailplane rather
than scrape an honest living and buy a good
second-hand one with the proceeds.

The problem about building one's own glider


is that the job always takes far longer than
anticipated, so the constructors never get
into the air. While the cumulus blossom overhead against cerulean skies, these toilers
shut themselves away in a shed, sawing and
banging, drilling and polishing. Years go by,
and finally they emerge, pale and blinking,
into the unaccustomed sunlight. The splendid - or is it hideous? - moment of truth has
arrived. Their first flight in the new toy is a
traumatic initiation not merely for the glider
but for the pilot, since the truth is that by
now he has practically forgotten how to aviate. It is said that some home-builders fly
their creation just once, and if they survive
they put the machine in its box, where it
stays unflown forever. That story is manifestly a gross libel on a fine body of men. All
the same, a comparison of the utilisation of
those gliders specially designed for home
construction with the utilisation of
Schleicher or Schempp gliders would make
an interesting statistical study. Especially
after 15 years or so have elapsed since the
date of construction.
ooo

Did I not praise such devoted, hardworking


people in an earlier Tail Feathers? Yes! Am I
a turncoat, therefore? No! To build gliders for
love makes all the sense in the world, as
it does to do anything for love. But to pretend
it is economic is silly. That's all I'm trying
to say.

More TINSFOS 10 (1983)


A little while ago I kissed a tearful goodbye to
my lovely 21 metres Nimbus 2 and acquired a
share in a dinky little glider, an ASW-20. After
landing short at Totternoe a few times, I have
two thoughts on this change:
Little gliders are ideal for doing the short
safe outlandings that you don't have to do if
you have a big glider.
Little gliders are ideal for doing the de-rig
ging and re-rigging that you don't have to do
if you have a big glider.
10 There is no substitute for span.

Those Magnificent Flying Machines

Instruments of torture, or.


Assault and battery (1994)
I am invariably sunny and benign with people
(Say again? Ed) but inanimate objects get the
full force of my irritability, especially if, like
cars, computers, radios and other gadgets,
they are supposed to be animate on demand
but instead just lie insolently doggo, feigning
death. My particular hate these days is nickel-cadmium batteries, or Ni-Cads as they are
called by people who feel on speaking terms
with them. I am certainly not on speaking
terms with the blasted things, and am not
going to call them by pet names.
I have scores of these wretched nickel-cadmium batteries littering the house and car
and glider, and none of them works with any
reliability. After hours of charging, the
hand-held 720 channel radio gives a brief hiss
and all 720 channels expire after a minute or
so. And the same goes for the two expensive
batteries I bought as backups for the same
radio.
Then there's my computer which dares to
call itself portable and independent (Hah!) but,
after the lapse of a tenth of its advertised duration away from the comfort of mains electricity,
what happens but its batteries threaten to
destroy my work and send it to the great databank in the sky unless I plug it in again NOW?
"Be reasonable," I plead. This is the Gobi
Desert, and mains sockets are not in evidence/'
I get a total ignoral. Burp. Clunk. Whirr. It blinks
twice and goes belly up.
"Ah well," murmur the technically wise, or
those who know it is perfectly safe to pretend
to be technically wise in my presence, since
they will never be rumbled, meanwhile giving
the 720 a technically sophisticated wallop with
the side of a fist, "What you've done is run the
little thing down and charged it up again the
wrong way. As a result of your ill-treatment
the poor Ni-Cad has developed a memory, and
so is continually imprinting itself, so to speak,
with a pathetic level of charge."
"A blinking memory?!?" At this point I am
running up the clubhouse wall and across the
ceiling in a frothing paroxysm of indignation.
"What the heck right has a miserable lump
of nickel and cadmium to go round giving itself
airs and having a memory? I suppose the nasty
little creep is writing its ruddy memoirs?"

65

Dear Diary, I gave my master the most splen


did seizure this afternoon when I arranged for
his GPS to die just as he was attempting to locate
one of the BGA's best loved turnpoints, the roadbridge over the river Kennet at Marlborough, the road, the bridge and the river all being quite
unfindable when the trees arc in full leaf. A fine
January turnpoint, they all aver, but May to
August, forget it. Ah, where was I? Oh, yes, hop
ping mad he would have been, except you can't
hop much when you're lying on your back at
600ft. Serves him right, he didn't exercise me
properly. I like to be taken for walkies. After all,
I'm only human.
It's high time these expensive little monsters and their arrogant reminiscences were
put firmly in their place. Why isn't there a
device that, especially throughout the winter
months, shows the precise state of all my batteries on some display that even I can understand, or better still arranges for them to be
automatically discharged or recharged from
the mains and, while we're about it, lobotomises their naughty little memories whenever they
show signs of behaving like Samuel Pepys?
They can do it. I know and love these
designers of gadgets for glider pilots; they are
crazed rocket scientists and loopy nuclear
physicists, every one. One of them 17 years
ago built a trailer with the clear intention of
getting himself and Platypus into the
Guinness Book of Records for shoe-horning
the World's Biggest Glider into the World's
Smallest Trailer. These boffins will invent a
brilliant battery-monitoring device which
does everything I ask. BUT they will have
made the nursing of all 30 of my nickel-cadmiums depend - you've guessed it! - on one
nickel-cadmium battery, which I will find
next March to have given up on its guardianship duties shortly after Christmas and since
then to have been writing its autobiography...

If it looks right it'll fly right, or


will it? (1994)
For 21 years, from my third-storey eyrie - and
it's an airy, eerie eyrie - overlooking the
Thames, I have been able to watch the Oxford
and Cambridge boats flash by in their historic
annual bout. Well, I do so if the weather does
not suit gliding, and very frequently in March

66

Those Magnificent Flying Machines

it does not suit anything better than sitting in


comfort with a hot whisky while two brave
crews catch pneumonia. But what's this I see?
Following countless computer simulations
and tests in water tanks, both eights have now
put the most hideous modern oblong or trapezoidal paddles on the ends of their oars, so
much at variance with the elegance of the traditional oars and of the boats themselves.
I was just about to write to the Times - I
am always on the point of posting furious or
witty letters to the Times but never get
around to it - when I thought, "Hang on, what
about those lumps that you have just stuck on
the wingtips of your ship? Not only are the
sticking-up bits not very pretty, but the leading edge of the new flat bit on to which the
new sticking-up bits are stuck comes back at
an angle instead of a curve as before. Can you
convince yourself that the whole ensemble is
pretty? Come on, be honest!" Then the letter
to the Times about the ugly oars on the
Thames goes in the bin.
So whatever happened to the old aviation
proverb, If it looks right it'll fly right"? Was it

ever true? Well, the Spitfire looked right, and


so did the Sabre jet fighter, and so does
Concorde.
Obviously technology changes and tastes
change with it; there is no resemblance
between those three famous aircraft, but they
were all three right for their time. The Kite 1
and the Weihe and the ASW-12 looked right
too, and for the same reason. But in each case
that was before the computer took over our

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."

A more beautiful sight...

People, partnerships and passions


Syndicates, like marriages, are
made in Heaven (1988)
I have had shares in 14 gliders since 1958, and
on average have had 2.9 partners per glider.
The two could just about stand me, but the
point-nine was driven wild. No, I get my sums
wrong; the continual swapping of shares
means that the total number of people I've
been partners with must be over 60, and,
amazingly, many of them shared a glider with
me for a second or third time as we struggled
up from Kite 1 and Cadet (singular) through
Skylarks and Kestrels (plural). I shall always
feel grateful for their long-suffering tolerance
and good nature. Or maybe they were just
desperate for someone to share the financial
burden, and at least my vices are a known
quantity. There are worse partners than me,
incredible dictu. Better the devil you know...
Someday, somewhere, someone will write a
sociological treatise for his PhD at a modern,
concrete university on the nature of glider
syndicates and how, like marriages, they
come together - and how they come apart.
Take syndicate wives - by which I do not
mean a form of polyandry or polygamy but
simply the respective wives or spouses
(spice?) of the partners. One famous syndicate wife, who deserved a gold medal for
devotion above and beyond the call of duty,
would run her finger under the leading edge
and lower her lovely eyebrows fiercely not at
the chap who was about to fly but at his wife,
for neglecting her duties. (What women's libbers still don't realise is that it's not the men
who create the shackles of slavery but those
women who don't believe in women's lib,
having found other, time-honoured, means of
getting their own way.) There are a number
of techniques whereby the less dedicated
wives (ie all other wives in the whole world)
can avoid a clash in this situation, which we
donate free in case it arises again. One is to
stay at home. Another is to come equipped
with a typewriter and reams of paper and
hammer away at the keys while smoking
furiously. (No one interrupts a woman
author at her work, for fear of being put in
her next novel. You'll be in it anyway, but
with luck and good behaviour you won't be
too recognisable.) Another ploy is to turn up
wearing stiletto heels and fingernails two

inches long, obviously on the point of going


to a cocktail party or a Buckingham Palace
reception. Fake plaster casts, bandages,
wheelchairs and white sticks are another
method, though smacking of cowardice and
hardly a technique that can be kept up for
years at a time.
Some syndicates have contracts drawn up
by lawyers, and rotas of whose-day-to-fly
drawn up by drill sergeants. Some have none
of these. The first is like being back in the
Army. The second like a (doomed) hippy commune. If you have to choose, Army is better.

A real stinker Can you beat it? (1984)


A friend of mine was in the bar of a golf dub
in Rye some weeks ago, when he overheard
an old chap exclaim, "Fellow's an absolute
boundah - shot a swan during the
Two-Minute Silence!" Apart from one's
delight at hearing the antique expression
bounder being dusted off and given an air
ing, there is the true astonishment - one
nearly said admiration -at a rotter who could
do two socially and morally unacceptable
things at one and the same time: a
double-barrelled cadf so to speak.
Mrs Platypus thinks the only comparable
action in gliding would be, "a partner who
ran off with a pilot's wife while he was away
on a cross-country - "
" - and forgets to leave the trailer keys
behind!" adds Platypus.
I would welcome any (printable) sugges
tions from readers as to what other villainy
would qualify a glider pilot to be called a
bounder - I mean, a boundah - in the same
league as the Armistice-Day swan-killer.

Forgets the trailer keys.

68

People, Partnerships and Passions

A Tribute to Veronica (1986)


Being married to Veronica was the greatest bless
ing of my life. She was kind, warm, intelligent,
humorous, hospitable and lovely in every possi
ble way. Scores of friends and colleagues have
written to me to underline those marvellous traits
in her character.
She knew for 40 days that she had inoperable
cancer. She died as she lived, bravely, lucidly,
without a trace of sentimentality or self-pity,
seeking only to comfort those who loved her.
Believe it or not we had quite a few laughs in
those final weeks: that was her special gift.
Her rare excursions into writing for S&G were
so good that I would occasionally forget their true
authorship and take credit for them myself. Only
then might she look just a little stern.

Mrs Platypus's advice to those


about to marry gliding enthusi
asts - DON'T! (1976)
When Platypus proposed, he made his priorities perfectly plain.
^We could get married at the end of May, "he
suggested at breakfast one morning (all the
best proposals take place at breakfast),
^because that's when the Nationals are on. One
of my syndicate partners will be flying the
Kestrel so I shouldn't be able to glide for a week
anyway and could take you on honeymoon."
Arrived at the Registrar, Platypus patted his
pockets, found the 2p he keeps for retrieve
phone calls, and not much else. Like Royalty,
Platypus rarely carries cash, and while I don't
usually mind too much being his purse-bearer, I
felt it unseemly for a bride to ferret in her handbag. So I waited demurely while Platypus asked
the Registrar (a Mr Peacock) if he would accept
Barclaycard or a cheque. Mr Peacock, with a guffaw, declined; and Platypus was just contemplating a whip-round among the witnesses
when he came upon the fivers he keeps for
retrieve dinners and the situation was saved.
Our honeymoon, on which Platypus pointed out several gliding sites into which I
declined to be inveigled, ended up at the
Nationals, which by an amazing coincidence
lay directly on our homeward path.
I knew that the first flush of romance had
really worn off by an incident some six weeks

later. I accompanied my new husband to a


competition in France - the first gliding competition with which I had ever been involved.
On the first day, on the launch point,
French tug pilots were whipping the gliders
into the air with ferocious speed and efficiency. I was standing dreamily by the trailing
edge of the wing, watching the glider piloted
by Platypus being attached to the tow rope,
when I noticed all about me had scattered and
were bellowing urgently. I drifted off and it
was explained to me severely that I could
have been decapitated by the tailplane.
Recounting the incident to my bridegroom
in bed that night I was touched when he sat
up in alarm,
'You must never ever do that again," he said.
'You could have severely damaged the
tailplane."
All this was some years in the past. Now as
a gliding wife of some years' experience, who
has been blooded by a retrieve which earned
Platypus a trophy for the worst retrieve of the
year (why did Platypus collect the trophy, I
ask myself, and not the crew?) I feel qualified
to pass on some words of advice to those
about to marry gliding enthusiasts.
First, unless you have to, don't.
(I didn't have to. I just loved Platypus.)
If you do, you will have to accept that gliding is going to come first with your husband.
For instance, your sex life will to some extent
depend on the weather.

"Your sex life will


depend on the
weather."

'You wouldn't DARE write that!", said


Platypus in bed this morning.
I would and I will.
ooo

On weekend mornings, Platypus springs from


bed and tweaks open the curtains. If the sun
is shining, I know I've got to get my clothes on
fast if I want to accompany him to the club. If

People, Partnerships and Passions


on the other hand he returns to bed, I know
it's a poor gliding day....
1 think gliding is a substitute for sex/' I
once remarked, when considering the
Freudian aspects of the sport - the phallic
symbolism of high-performance gliders
thrusting into thermals and waggling their
wings in uncoupling rituals with tow planes.
"Nonsense, sex is a substitute for gliding/'
said Platypus briskly, and there are times
when I think he wasn't joking.
The second thing you have to decide is
whether you intend to be a gliding widow or a
gliding wife. You can either opt for widowhood, waving him off to the club each weekend and taking up golf - or a lover; or you can
accompany him to the club and take the consequences.
If you opt for the second alternative, and
you don't terribly care for hard work and
being shouted at, the line to take is that one
simply could never aspire to be a second Kitty
Wills or Beryl Stephenson, and it would be
sheer presumption to try. Regrettably, one
simply isn't of the calibre required to drive a
trailer 400 miles through the night, nor has
one the physique to throw together a Kestrel
19 with effortless ease and good grace. I do
occasionally hold Platypus's wing tip (though
dropping it from time to time ensures that it is
only occasionally) and last season I did
retrieve him from the field next to the club. Of
course, you will have to cultivate some alternative skills instead - provide syndicate noshes willingly, feed crews, map-read intelligently, listen wholeheartedly and generally offer
moral if not physical support.
The most endearing thing about Platypus
is his absentmindedness. At a very early
stage, his friends warned me that I should
have to watch him like a hawk to make sure
that he didn't get airborne while still in possession of the car keys. I also try to prevent
him from taking-off while he is sitting on his
maps, and try to find the things he loses keys, maps, sunglasses, tools, shoes - last
week it was the inspection panel.
By a man's friends you shall know him,
they say, and Platypus's friends are a particularly Stout Bunch (speaking purely metaphorically). Not many people would endure conditions rather worse than trenches in World War
One to retrieve him in a snow storm, nor

69

"200 miles in the wrong direction.

;*** ^
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.

70

People, Partnerships and Passions

Putting into effect the mandatory mod, of


course, takes its toll of Platypus's time and temper as well. As does trailer painting/maintaining. Fortunately the weather is nearly always
too wet or too dry. If it's pouring clearly he
can't be fettling, and if it's fine he's flying.
ODD

One thing you don't have to worry about if you


marry a gliding enthusiast (well, not much,
anyway) is the Other Woman. His glider is his
mistress, and takes up so much of his time,
energy - and money - that he hasn't really any
to spare for anyone else. You have the advantage of knowing the enemy intimately and
being able literally to take her apart any time
you choose. The ultimate sanction, of course,
is that you can leave her stranded if he takes
off with her and doesn't return to you - you
can refuse to retrieve him if he's paying her
too much attention - but he'll never abandon
her for you, so if you want to see your husband
regularly you'd better just accept her. You
don't have to overdo it, of course; Platypus
often invites me to join him in rubbing her

Anyway with all said and done, life with


Platypus is never dull, and I wouldn't have it
any different for the world.
He has viewed the prospect of this article
with some trepidation, and at one time I
offered to suppress it.
"Not at all,"he said generously. 'As a matter
of fact, I think I'm quite flattered at the
thought of you being a kind of Boswell to me.
I'll give you a Johnsonian quote if you like,"
he offered.
So as I pinched the title from Dr Johnson,
I'll pinch the last line, too.
'/When a man is tired of gliding," says
Platypus, 'lie is tired of life."
Postscript from Plat: It was in fact not Dr
Johnson but Punch about 150 years ago that gave
the negative advice to people on the brink of mat
rimony. But I was never in the habit of correct
ing Mrs P's copy.

Mrs Platypus's Bedtime Reading


(1978)
"We can't go on meeting like this."

down or touching her up, but I don't consider


this to be my scene at all. I do have to lend my
hairdryer to dry out the water in her wings and
my hairspray for her barograph (not to mention bits of my carpet to pad her trailer more
comfortably) but that's as far as it goes.
I've just had a thought. How about an
"AUNTIE" Platypus column in S&G, with
advice to worried gliding brides, etc?
*My husband is spending longer and longer
at the club, and keeps mentioning Libelle in
his sleep. Should I worry?* Only if he lands
out in her.
"My boyfriend spends hours in his trailer
with a girl he says is a member of his syndicate. He says they're weatherproofing it.
Could this be true?" Probably.
How about it, Editor? (We've got enough prob
lems without inviting any from readers. Ed.)

Platypus was reading S&G in bed. Ever


thoughtful of my comfort and well-being, he
handed me something with which to occupy
myself until he had digested S&G down to the
last small ad. In this case, what he handed me
was the Index to Volume XXVIII 1977, compiled by our old friend Rika Harwood. The
Index had fallen out of S&G when Platypus
picked it up.
Now you might not think that the Index to
Volume XXVIII is the most riveting bedtime
reading around. However, as clearly nothing
more interesting was going to present itself
before Platypus had read every last syllable of
S&G, I decided to fritter away an idle hour
with it. And I have to report that the Index to
Volume XXVIII is a quite amazing document.
For instance, did you notice a letter in S&G
in 1977 entitled "The Aim is for Maximum
Enjoyment"? Or a feature by A D Purnell enti-

People, Partnerships and Passions


tied "Try the Tiny Triangle"? (As the actress
said to the bishop, presumably.) Mr A Wills
apparently asked "How Could You Fail?"
whereas Mike Beach confidently maintained
"We Can Do It" and Gren Seibels noticed a
"Disconcerting Phenomenon."
Was it just, I wondered, my overheated
imagination? Or were all the Indexes (Indices?)
as full of delightful double entendres as dear
XXVIII? I rustled up XXVII, Index to Volume,
1976, to check. I was not disappointed.
There was J. Wills, declaring "Behold the
Dreamer Cometh." Ann Welch wrote about
'Too Much or Too Little" and Ruth Tkit complained "Only 270 Minutes More." Under
"Record Breakers" we were advised "See Also
Bigger and Better."
Among the more bizarre entries was
"Rodwell, R R, Amid the Vultures and the Kites,
164; The Press can be Very Helpful (letter)."
The entry "A Task Week for the Over 65s"
reminded me of a story about the Family
Planning Journal, which announced in 1969
that in a forthcoming issue they would be publishing an article on "Sex and Contraception in
the Seventies." They were besieged by anxious
correspondents who wanted to know, was
contraception really necessary at that age?
Back to XXVIII, however, I felt that
"Angela's Antics" might not be out of place in
Penthouse, while bondage fetishists were
catered for with "And a Lot of Rope." A Mr
Harris gave it as his opinion that there is "No
Substitute for Experience."
"What are you doing?" Platypus demanded,
as I giggled to myself over some of the choicer
items.
"Reading about A Plea for Regional Activity,"
I quoted to him. "I know all about the
Avoidance of Arrival Accidents."
But Platypus was fast asleep.

Mrs Platypus: Platypus and the


little people (1981)
Mrs Platypus reveals that the male of the
species doesn't hibernate during the winter
but takes up a scaled-down flying interest
Platypus has recently revived a dormant interest in aeromodelling and I
have wholeheartedly encouraged him in
this. As my friend Gwen Bellew says (her

71

husband Jim is an aeromodeller too) the


retrieves are so much easier.
I have to confess that I haven't excelled
myself as aeromodelling crew any more than
I have at crewing for the full scale versions of
Platypus's models. In both cases, I'm afraid, I
have managed more or less to write off something dear to Platypus's heart. A psychologist
might assert that there is no such thing as a
true accident and that the incidents are evidence of a subconscious desire to eliminate
my rivals for Platypus's affections. I do freely
admit that I do regard almost anything with
wings as a rival.
However in the case of the Kestrel trailer
which I overturned on the Ml, I was exonerated by the insurers who said that the accident was caused by a fault in the car engine,
though I have never felt able wholly to exonerate myself. In the case of the little rubber
model to which I set fire in Richmond Park, it
is even more difficult to free myself from
guilt.
Platypus was holding the aircraft, lovingly
constructed over a period of months from
balsa specially imported from America, and
being test flown prior to an important competition. I was lighting the de-thermaliser fuse.
Suddenly - whoosh! the whole thing was in
flames and Platypus was jumping up and
down stamping vigorously on his model, looking rather like Rumpelstiltskin. I was helpless
with hysterical laughter - largely nerves, as
apart from anything else it was one of the few
dry spells we had that summer, Richmond
Park was like a tinderbrush and I thought that
I had probably started a forest fire.
Within seconds all that was left was a
charred patch of turf, a propeller, and a disconsolate Platypus who maintains to this day
that it was the best model he had ever built.
We repaired for consolation to the house of
a fellow aeromodeller who poured whisky
into Platypus and, looking on the bright side,

Prop salvaged.

72

People, Partnerships and Passions

said how splendid it was that the prop had


been salvaged in such excellent condition.
Aeromodellers are very supportive of each
other, I've noticed. At a recent competition for
microfilm models (I wasn't invited to crew,
Platypus evidently feeling that his chances
were better without me) he reported afterwards that his model hadn't flown very well,
and one of his fellow competitors had
breathed on it. Things got rather confused
because I misunderstood and became very
indignant at this unsportsmanlike behaviour
and suggested that the perpetrator should
be reported to the FAI, until it was explained
to me that breathing on the model had
enhanced its performance and had been an
act of unselfishness enabling Platypus to
come sixth.
Anyway I did feel truly sorry about my first
and last act of arson, and as a penance I
betook myself to Henry's Models and bought
Platypus hundreds of pieces of balsa. The
advantage of accidents to Little Gliders is that
there are no hassles with The Insurers, of
course. I also bought Platypus his very own
stripper, which cheered him up no end.
The disadvantage of being involved with
Little Gliders and Little People is the Little
Shavings - all over the house. However I
know that in big gliding, wives are not
immune to this kind of problem. A friend of
mine had to leave her car out in the cold all
one winter because a full scale trailer was
being constructed in her garage. She rang me,

Platypus's little trailer.

complaining about the bits that were trodden


into her hall carpet as the men came in and
out for cups of tea not to mention, she said,
having to vacuum the carpet in the garage all
the time: her garage is carpeted. I won't say
that her standards of housekeeping are higher

than mine, though they undoubtedly are, but


they are certainly different.
At least her trailer couldn't get lost which
is what happened to Platypus's Little Trailer a
couple of weeks back. It's a large cardboard
box, like the one I bring groceries in each
week, but special, and it simply vanished. I
was suspected of having thrown it away and
the children were interrogated in case they
had converted it to a puppet theatre or something. Finally it came to light in the loft, a bit
squashed but still competition-worthy.
The bonus of being married to an aeromodeller is the fascinating literature which
comes into the house. Platypus subscribes to
magazines from all over the world. I was leafing through some French ones in bed the
other weekend, waiting for Platypus to decide
whether it was gliding weather or aeromodelling weather or neither, when I came upon
this amazing guide to aviation vocabulary in
French, German and English.
"Angle = wirikel = angle" it began. Having
thereby captured the reader's interest in the
first few words, as all good journalists are
trained to do, it continued:
"Epais = dick = thickness." No, I am not
making it up. It is absolutely true.
It was, of course, a very selective vocabulary. It was preoccupied with thrust. There
was traction = thrust, cabreur = upthrust, vireur
= side thrust, piquer en plane = downthrust and
butel a billes = thrust ball bearing. After all that
I wasn't at all surprised to come upon helice =
airscrew. I loved bracelet caoutchouc, and in
case you can't guess what it is, it's gummiband
in German and rubber band in English. Balsa
tendre sounds like a French endearment. It's
soft balsa. Enduit de tension is dope. Chrono is a
timekeeper. GC (whatever that is) is CG, but
PLM is mysteriously H LG. U A tube is a tube, it
said, and a canard is a canard.
"What are you laughing at?" Platypus asked
me. In the ten years that I have lived with
him, I told him, I have laughed more than in
all the preceding years of my life. Ah, he said
suspiciously, but was it because he was being
intentionally or unintentionally funny?

11 CG, of course, is Centre of Gravity. HLG, less obvi


ously, is Hand Launched Glider, and its French equiva
lent is PLM, or Flaneur Lance a Main. (Plat)

People, Partnerships and Passions


"Does it matter?" I asked. "Probably not,"he
said graciously.
It was two nineteenth-century philosophers, Julius Charles Hare and Augustus
William Hare who said, "Few men are much
worth loving in whom there is not something
well worth laughing at."
Or perhaps, to end on a slightly less lofty
note, it's just that little things please little
minds.
It is not strictly true to say that retrieves are easi
er with model aircraft. On one occasion in
Richmond Park Jim Bellew (The Lord Bellew to
give him his proper moniker) insisted on climbing
a big tree to get my glider down. As he teetered
way out on a high branch I had awful visions of
the Fleet Street press, being obsessed with titled
people, having a great time with headlines like,
"Peer Tries to Grab Model in Tree, Breaks Neck." I
myself would have been publicly excoriated for
my cowardice in letting a nobleman 16 years
older than me risk his life for my bit of balsa.
On another occasion I was apprehended by
the police in the same park, because a woman
had reported me for "being in possession of an
offensive weapon." I had been trying to get my
model down with the aid of a fishing-line
attached to lead weights thrown up by a catapult,
which I'd made on the spot from twigs and a
length of Pirelli rubber-motor cannibalised from
another model. The poor woman had thought I
was trying to slaughter squirrels or birds, I sup
pose. By the time I had pacified the police and got
back to the tree to retrieve the model, I found that
a young chap had climbed up and stolen it. The
guardians of the Law had gone by then. And
they say full-sized gliding is frustrating.

Soaring voices: Platypus writes


an opera (1995)
Gliding people have a pretty relaxed attitude
towards culture. They don't go quite so far as
Goring, who said that when he heard anyone
mention culture he took the safety catch off
his revolver, but most of my mates can take it
or leave it alone, shall we say.
(What you mean is they're a right bunch of
Philistines? Ed. You said it, not me. Plat.)
Nevertheless, art in nearly all its forms has
put itself at the service of our great sport.

73

Poetry, songs, novels, oil paintings, sculpture,


etchings and graffiti have celebrated the
whole gamut of gliding experiences: competitions, cloud flying, crashes and the deflowering of farmers' daughters. I have (he coughs
modestly) even written a trilogy of short
plays, humorous in style, but deadly serious
in their moral message. But there is one
supreme art which has failed, so far as I know,
to take gliding as its theme. Yes, I mean opera.
Grand opera. What an ambition it would be, to
celebrate the start of the new millennium, to
hear Pavarotti sing, Tour tiny pitot is frozen"
before a royal audience (assuming we have
any royals left by the start of the new millennium, January first 2001) enthralled by a simple, but magical and moving, tale of noble
gliding folk and their ungovernable passions.
"What's he talking about, Fred?"
'The ungovernable passions of us noble
glider pilots, Bert."
"You could've fooled me. Another pint of
Theakstons, Mabel. As I was saying, Fred, the
trouble with grommet-knurdling rings is..."
Well, you can't please them all. This project will go ahead.
First, I want to make it clear that I shall not
sneakily borrow tunes from famous and popular operas: I shall steal them wholesale.
Composing is not my forte, but any idiot can
write a libretto (that's Italian for a little book).
All you need for a plot is an assortment of
Babylonian kings, inquisitors, sorcerers, assassins, bands of brigands, gods, ghosts, torturers,
gypsy temptresses, dungeons, secret trapdoors, magic bullets, love potions and firebreathing serpents - the sort of thing you can
easily find around any gliding site on a damp
Sunday afternoon. You stir up this brew,
mixed together with the six deadly sins, some
incredible coincidences and some utterly selfdefeating behaviour, and there you have your
little book. I shall become a librettist (that's
Italian for a little bookie).
The more alert among you, or at least those
who know a thing or two about sin, will have
observed that I seem to be one deadly sin
short. Well, I have never considered sloth a sin,
especially not a deadly one. If it had been a
deadly sin, somebody would certainly have
attempted an opera about sloth. If somebody
did, then he was too idle to get around to finishing it. It's Lust, Gluttony (which includes

74

People, Partnerships and Passions

excessive drinking), Pride, Avarice, Envy and


Rage that I shall depict.
What a gliding opera needs is some good
choruses. Well, let's not be too fussy. I mean
large choruses, masses of bodies all bellowing
forth on the stage. I'm talking quantity, not
quality Why? Because for every person
appearing on the stage half a dozen friends
and relations will buy tickets. Choruses mean
solvency, so long as the stage doesn't give way
in the over-zealous pursuit of profit.
In act one the Anvil chorus from II
Trovatore, for example, will be belted out by
Ralph Jones's team performing a delicate
fuselage repair with seven pound sledgehammers. Pilots below World team standard will
be rounded up as an amorphous mob for mystical, religious get-togethers such as briefings
and prizegivings. Crews get specially brutal
treatment, but also the best choruses.
I only have space here to describe the last
three scenes in rough outline.
Lucy (I suggest Suzy Edyvean) is a strapping, ambitious, newly-joined member of the
Lammermoor gliding club. She has today
been given a wizard forecast by the High
Priest Zarastro (played by Tom Bradbury).
Zarastro, being a top Freemason, has had a hot
tip from God (played by Barry Rolfe, if we can
get him to stop dyeing his whiskers black and
let them revert to their natural, distinguished,
snowy white) that the morrow will be her
1,000km day. Lucy only has to get airborne
before 10 o'clock and the diploma is guaranteed by sorcery - but for that one day only. Let
slip that chance and she will never get another. This opportunity, says Zarastro, is her
divine reward for guarding her virtue for 15
years and still being intacta, though none of
the two dozen gliders she has flown is intacta.
(There's not a huge amount of room for
humour in opera, but knowledgeable members of the audience will get a chuckle out of
the subtle way in which I hint at the name of
the club in the south of England where she
spent the previous 15 years. The cognocscenti
will know that she was in no danger whatever
on that site, and that Zarastro, for all he is a
fount of spiritual wisdom, is, on the worldly
plane, a pretty naive guy.)
The dawn breaks. A sweating, toiling mob
ot Soaring Crew Union Members (SCUM) sing
the Chorus of Hebrew Slaves from Nabucco

while rigging their masters' and mistresses'


sailplanes, as the ferociously mustachioed
slave driver (British team manager Bob
Bickers) lashes their naked backs to encourage them.
At Zarastro's briefing the other pilots are
amazed at Lucy's calm, Mona-Lisa-like half
smile, as if she knows something the others do
not. She seems positively nonchalant, while
they are possessed and made frantic by all the
five deadly sins. (Just five? When it's a possible 1,000km day, they have no time for lust,
so the remaining five passions boil over in a
tremendous scene in which most pilots call
upon God, but another, played by Brian
Spreckley - in a Faustian subplot which I have
no time to describe here - privately sells his
soul to the Devil, played by Derek Piggott.)
At only half past nine Lucy strolls across to
her trailer. Nothing like this has been seen
since Sir Francis Drake played bowls as the
Spanish Armada swept up the English Channel
at all of two knots. But a restless, shimmering
undercurrent of violins in a minor key suggests
trouble. The stuff is about to hit the fan.
Suddenly, Lucy spots a note nailed to the
trailer door. The reading out of a letter is a
great dramatic device in grand opera.
Everything else is sung: even such banalities
as "Be so good as to pass the peebags" and
'Where the hell are my quarter-mill maps?"
will have to be sung recitativo, but letters are
read out straight, which makes a gripping contrast. She goes ghastly pale as she declaims
the hideous contents: "Darling Lucy, You will
be so pleased to know that I have decided to
fix that little chip in the gel coat on the starboard wing. I have taken the outer panel back
to my castle and it will be back in 24 hours.
Your adoring partner, Edgar." The ensuing
shriek cuts through the Hebrew Slaves'
Chorus with stunning effect.
Lucy departs precipitately, or at least as
quickly as convention allows. This being opera,
she is compelled to reiterate the line, "I must
haste away, for my thousand-K" about 20 times,
while the mixed emotions of a whole quintet
interweave other lines such as, "Edgar is a nice
chap, his heart's in the right place" (sings Justin
Wills) and "it won't be when she gets to him"
(replies Martyn Wells) and more of a similar
kind appertaining to the folly of being a member of a syndicate of more than one.

People, Partnerships and Passions


Finally, at the climax of the quintet, Lucy
gallops off to the castle. (She hasn't got a
horse, she just moves like that naturally.)
Andy Davis sings That woman sure does
move" (La Donna e mobile) as a furious cloud
of dust heads towards the battlements which
dominate the horizon.
More dramatic and tragic irony will be
wrung out of the mistaken belief on the part of
Edgar (Jed Edyvean) that Lucy has rushed to
his workroom high in the castle solely in order
to reciprocate his passionate love for her. All
she wants is the starboard outer panel, and he
teasingly keeps getting between her and it in
the hope of catching a kiss, or maybe a bit
more. And so he does. Donizetti does not show
this particular scene at all, only its terrible
aftermath, and maybe Donizetti was right. He
knew about women, though not a lot about
gliding syndicates.
What follows, of course, is the inevitable
Mad Scene. Lucy slowly descends the wide,
curving staircase before a horrified crowd.
Under her left arm a white wing panel spattered with blood, in the other hand a SchemppHirth main wingpin. (With respect to Suzy, I
believe that only someone with the power of
Joan Sutherland could carry off this part. I
don't mean the role of Lucy, I mean the lOOlb
wing panel.) From a gothic window a shaft of
sunlight fails on her face. In that very instant
she calculates, without benefit of any clock,
from the azimuth of the staircase and right
declension of the window and the latitude and
longitude of the castle (I hadn't mentioned she
was a mathematical genius, had I? Just another little surprise in the plot) that it is 10 o'clock.
She has blown it. The pianissimo way that she
launches into her simple, almost childlike, aria
(Due Cappucini Per Favore) indicates that she
has totally flipped. A chorus of men in white
coats move forward and gently lead Lucy off to
the funny farm (Booker GC).
The drama has yet another climax, however.
The last act is a trial, presided over by the
imposing figure of the Grand Inquisitor
(played by Bill Scull). He asks Lucy if she has
anyone to defend her on a charge of premeditated murder: her aria an route to the castle,
'I'll do him in, I'll do him in" (Offenbach's
"We'll run them in, we'll run them in" will do
nicely here) had been cited convincingly as
evidence of premeditation.

75

A mystery figure swathed in black - it's like


Verdi's Masked Ball, except that every part of
him is masked - steps forward as the lawyer for
the defence. After a moving address in which
he extols Lucy's virtue and beauty to a packed
jury (I don't mean rigged or corrupt, I just
mean the jury box is crammed with pilots and
peasants and glider repairers to help the opera
break even) he is at the climax revealed to be
none other than Edgar himself! His head
wound had indeed bled profusely from a glancing blow with the wing pin, but he had only
been momentarily concussed.
The GI (Grand Inquisitor) forgives Lucy,
on condition that she marries Edgar that afternoon and promises to retrieve for him
uncomplainingly for 100 successive soaring
days. She begins wistfully to eye the wing pin
again, but it is removed from her reach, and
with a sigh she eventually submits.
The jurors all dance with the slaves and the
men in white coats, and the final drinking
song by members of the RAFGSA led by Mick
Boyden, energetically swinging great foaming
tankards of ale, serves to remind the audience
that there is something more to life than gliding and sex.

The seven deadly sins: lust (1990)


For male pilots it is well established that sex is
a substitute for gliding, not the other way round
as supposed by Freudian psychologists. The
reason is fairly straightforward. Male pilots
assume that their womenfolk (I'm talking about
those men that have womenfolk; large numbers
of gliding men don't want anything to do with
women) are available for their pleasurable company at any time, whereas the combination of
an available glider and good soaring conditions
is so rare an moment that it must be seized Carpe Diem - and everything else can wait. But
I wonder if the men don't assume too much.
There must be huge opportunities for a
ruthless seducer at gliding clubs. Think of all
those bored, neglected women, their men
miles away, in mind if not in body. Now I
myself have never stooped to take advantage.
I have to say it is mainly cowardice rather
than conscience. Think, for a moment, of the
consequences if you actually stirred a fellow
member to a fit of jealous passion. (Hard to

76

People, Partnerships and Passions

imagine at my club; about the only thing that


would stir a fellow member to any kind of
jealous passion would be if you sneaked your
glider into his place on the aerotow queue.)
Then, imagine, halfway through the take-off
run you discover you have 200 Ibs of waterballast in one wing and none in the other; or
the elevator is disconnected; or you go into
cloud and the terminals on the turn & slip
have mysteriously been reversed. You are
playing with fire. That is why at gliding sites,
in comparison with what I'm told goes on at
golf clubs or fox-hunting circles, I hear so little scandal. Or maybe I've just got cloth ears.
There is one small exception. Well, it is a
pretty big exception really, and it's called
*****. I am told it is rampant at ******. Rife.
Long before those terrible gales it was a rule
at ***** that the caravans had to be tethered
firmly at both ends with steel hawsers - they
didn't worry about the gliders or trailers, so
they blew all over the place in the last hurricane, but the caravans have to be secure. I
think the committee were more concerned
about noise pollution rather than about the
caravans getting loose and bouncing their way
down the perimeter track in broad daylight.
Besides secure tying-down, a well-greased suspension reduces unwanted squeaks, if you are
concerned about attracting undue attention.
At least, so I'm told. I wouldn't know myself.
I've often thought, since for the reasons I
have mentioned it's not a good idea to do it on
one's own doorstep, that it might be fun, on a
day when my partner has the glider, to nip
down to******* and make a few low passes, so
to speak. But I know that with my luck and my
character, at the end of the day it would be an
emotional disaster of guilt, remorse and selfrecrimination. Because, when the tom-cat
crawls home at the end of that day of debauchery he will switch on the answering machine
and hear his partner's voice: "Hello Plat, this is
Fred at 9.00am. I have been re-rostered and
have to fly a 737 to Frankfurt this afternoon, so
the glider's all yours, rigged and ready to go.
Looks like a 600km record day. Happy soaring!"
Aaaaarrrgghhh! What have I done? What a
stupid, mindless waste! (Bangs head against
door.) Miserable, lascivious wretch! This is
your punishment; the Day of Days, thrown
away in a caravan with the blinds drawn!
Where's the gin bottle? etc, etc.

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.

It's a snip! (1984)


I've seen some intriguing advertisements in
S&G in my time but the recent one offering sterilisation operations is the most enterprising for
some while. The aversion of male glider pilots to
the responsibilities of parenthood is legendary,
so the clinic in question could be on to a good
thing. On the other hand, the mainstay of most
clubs are those monastic fettlers who year in,
year out make the workshop their cell and the
trailer park their cloister: I don't see them succumbing to an uncontrollable tidal wave of
desire - not unless they spot an original
Minimoa rudder lying intacta in the hangar roof.
In the 1930s they had other, less subtle
ways of reducing the propensity to breed, viz
the heavy landing in an unsprung primary;
the very thought of which brings tears to the
eyes. A London Club member was deprived of
one of the essential parts in just such a prang
(the word prang is pure onomatopoeia - the
sound of flying wires and landing wires parting company under protest) but a year later
fathered a child and went around boasting
that he could still fire on one cylinder. I bet he
didn't fly primaries again, though.
Charlie Spratt says that a simple way to assess
whether a youth is progressing from boyhood
to manhood is to ask, "Which would you
rather do: see a woman naked or set off a
bomb?" However one teenager stumped
Charlie when he replied, "How big's the
bomb?"

Heck, it's Supposed to be Dangerous, isn't it?


/ am an expert on safety the way burglars are experts in the law. That is to say I have
not had a systematic education in the subject but I do have a hazy awareness that
safety and I are somewhat at odds. Like the recidivist burglar I can speak from expe
rience of having done unsafe things, but am insufficiently deterred from repeating
the offence, despite the frequent punishments that are exacted.
Such a confession, I realise, shows low intelligence on my part. That makes sense:
the experts say criminals are indeed people of low intelligence. What they mean is
the criminals who are in jail are of low intelligence. I am convinced there are mas
ter-crooks of genius who live amongst us as respected citizens. Likewise there are
pilots of the first rank who are deadly, but who so far have never had to fill in an
accident report or make an insurance claim - yet. They have caused others to make
out accident reports and claim on their insurance, but their own record is spotless.
The two reasons I do not name such pilots are that 1) I have to share thermals with
them in the coming season and 2) with their low insurance premiums they are
among the minority who can afford to buy my book.

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.

In fact, I had devised a simplified way of


navigating in cloud by dead-reckoning12 that
turned out to be the only success of the day. I
was delighted, after an hour-and-a-half out of
sight of earth, to pinpoint an unmistakable
landmark though a small hole in the cloud at
8,500ft. Having satisfied scientific curiosity and
personal pride, I headed for home, which was
now about 50 miles away. I had also satisfied
myself, unjustifiably as it turned out, that the
wind speed and direction were as forecast at all
times, all places and at all heights. On average,
this was generally true, but at particular places
it turned out to be a fallacy.
The return home was not so easy. I had
bargained for the headwind, but the vast clogging-together of black cu-nims was demoralising. It was increasingly difficult to identify the
up-and-coming cauliflower, head for it, locate
its core and wring height out of it before hail
and ice had taken their toll.
Eventually, after pursuing a ripe-looking
cloud and being driven off by a totally silent
but very purposeful bolt of lightning, I decided to glide it out.
12 Again, the use of such an arcane expression will
help historians date this piece. For younger readers,
"dead-reckoning" is a corruption of the term
"ded(uced) reckoning", which entails drawing vectors
(lines) on paper and assuming constant wind-velocity
at all heights, and steady speed and heading of the
aircraft in level flight with an accurate compass and
air speed indicator, and meticulous time-keeping. In
short my navigational triumph was a pure fluke.

78

Heck, it's Supposed to be Dangerous, Isn't It?

There was the question of finding a decent


place to land. On the edge of the Fens, the
low-lying fields were like row upon row of mirrors reflecting the broken sky. I rejected landing
in any of these paddy-fields. It wasn't just the
prospective nightmare of organising a retrieve.
There was a real danger that on touchdown the
wheel would sink in, possibly flipping the Dart
over on its back. Even if that didn't happen, how
would I be able to turn the wingtip single-handed into wind every time the squalls hit, let alone
to tether it down? No, I had to land on a large,
well-drained surface near to people/ telephone/
road - and facing into wind, of course.
Through the patches of broken cloud at
1,500ft. I saw a village and felt confident that a
usable field would be found near it. Then village, fields and sky were blotted out by a blanket of low cloud that doubtless represented the
last belch of a departed thunderstorm.
Despairingly I watched the altimeter unwind
until it fell to 400ft; only then did I break cloud.
There were no indications of wind at all no washing, no fires. What do you expect with
all that rain? The few trees in that area gave no
sign, their leaves heavy with water. Raindrops
on the canopy compelled me to peer irritably
through the clear-vision panels. A bare minute
remained for the search. I was only grateful
that it had momentarily stopped raining,
though the sink seemed as bad as ever.
Then I saw it: The ideal field. A sportsground, all of 250 yards long, running up and
down wind, give or take 30 degrees. Trees on
the approach but less than 20 feet high.

Leafy landing-places (1995)


My first reaction as we climbed out on tow on
the practice day of the April 1995 competition
at Chester, South Carolina, was "Help! Where
does anyone land?" Trees stretched to the
horizon on all sides, and navigational land
marks were scarce. I asked a local, what hap
pened with older gliders in the days of 28:1
and no GPS? "Oh, they piled into the woods
all the time." There are a lot of people in
Britain and the USA with a nostalgia for 28:1,
and even more yearn for 15:1. The first prin
ciple of nostalgia is that anything that works
well cannot be lovable. Love therefore is
expended in inverse proportion to efficiency.

The field was so big that the boundaries of


the cricket field only occupied about a third of
its area. White-flannelled figures were stealing
some play between showers. I decided that if
they did not see me and make obvious movements away from the centre of the field I
would prolong my crosswind leg and drop into
the adjoining field, which looked rougher but
was without obstructions. (I only wish now
that they had ignored me altogether!) As the
bowler ran up I was sure that the batsman
would swing, heads would turn my way and I
would be seen. Sure enough, the ball pitched,
the batsman struck out and heads turned.
Figures stood transfixed for two seconds then
made an orderly sprint to the edge as I pointed the nose at them with a dramatic waggling
of wings. I felt positively smug at this coup;
the ideal field and 22 brawny pairs of arms to
manhandle and de-rig in any conditions. A
nice long bomber-type approach at 65-70
knots, skimming over the little trees, touching
down a third of the way up the field. Too easy.
It was only after covering a hundred yards
on the ground (about four seconds) that I
noticed that my wheel-brake was having no
effect and that my groundspeed was still
immense. A healthy loathing of groundloops
made me pause a further second or two, then
with a mere fifty yards left and a collision
inevitable I forced the wing on the ground and
kicked on full left rudder. The sports ground,
however, was finely mown and very wet, like a
greased billiard-table, so the wing-tip discovered what the wheel had already found out there was hardly an ounce of friction in it. The
rudder discovered (earlier than I had) that our
airspeed was not as high as our groundspeed
and that it could make little impression on our
path over the grass. The astonished cricketers
saw their uninvited guest whistle past them,
turn through barely 20 degrees and without a
pause pile noisily into their ten-foot high fence.
Two massive concrete posts reinforced
with multiple steel bars were severed by the
cockpit and starboard wing. Flannels rushed
up with anxious queries of, "Is he alive?" and
were reassured by the pilot sitting up in the
debris and swearing, "I am a..!"
After the early moments of shock I was
able to stride about on sorely bruised but
intact limbs (thank you, Fred Slingsby and the
invention of glass-fibre) to measure the 175

Heck, it's Supposed to be Dangerous, Isn't It?


yards from touch-down to the fence (176
yards if you allow for the vital amount of
"give* in those newly-appointed arresterwires). The caretaker was very kind. '"We were
going to move that fence anyway." What you
call making a virtue of a necessity.
Then, wetted finger up, I tested the
wretched wind. No doubt about it. It had
swung through 120 degrees. A downwind component of nearly ten knots, coupled with a
buxom 70 knots over the boundary to cope
with a non-existent wind gradient, amounted
to a pile of kinetic energy which that beautifully-kept surface could never dissipate.
There is only one moral to this tale: there
are days when you shouldn't leave the ground.

The seventh sin (1980)


Of the deadly sins. O Brethren, the deadliest
is Pride. It takes many forms, and one shape
in which it manifests itself amongst glider
pilots is, for example, to refer to those ordinary members of the general public who
have the sense not to spend their time messing about in gliders as "peasants/' Another
form, particularly virulent before the war but
still endemic, is to regard power pilots with
disdain, as yachtsmen do motorboat-owners.
This error was briskly sorted out, so far as I
was concerned, more than twenty years ago
by an ancient aviator who had soared and
motored through the air for countless hours
over untold years, man and boy, peace and
war. Cornering us brats in the bar where he
had overheard some cocky remarks like the
above, he demanded to know (rhetorically,
being quite uninterested in any answers)
whether we had ever flown at night, or
across oceans, or in fog, or monsoon, or blizUpright fellow (1999)
For some reason that I forget George Moffat
and I found ourselves talking about wheels-up
landings on hard runways. He capped anything
I could boast of by stating that he once landed
a Nimbus 3 wheels-up on the asphalt - with
full water, which is a heck of a lot of extra
weight. It ground such a pronounced flat on
the bottom of the Nimbus that the glider
remained perfectly upright after it stopped.

79

zard? Had we? Of course we hadn't. We were


a bunch of fair-weather fliers who only knew
a fraction of what aviating was about. That
shut us up.
Of course since then I have flown gliders in
torrential rain, hail, snow, ice, fog (or at least
very, very low cloud) and have groped my
way onto the ground in near-dark. (Your
insurance brokers are on the phone: shall I
tell them you're out? Ed.)
But in all those cases I had started out flying in sunshine with no intention of grappling with the murky elements. Fair weather
fliers in such situations begin to feel very
humble and sit there promising fervently
that if they get back on the ground in one
piece they'll never do it again, honest, cross
their hearts.
Powered aircraft are able to get into situations that gliders cannot get into, That's why a
power pilot needs to be better than a glider
pilot in dealing with bad weather. The times,
however, that a glider pilot can get into an
unaccustomed bad-weather plight are when
he is on tow, usually when retrieving or ferrying a glider from A to B.
My worst fright ever (and that is saying
quite a bit) is something I intend to bore you
with right now.

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.

80

Heck, it's Supposed to be Dangerous, Isn't It?

into brilliant blue skies quite near home after


I was quite specific because in the few mina massive, meandering tour of the countryutes between landing and making the call, an
side. It had taken an hour to cover 20 miles.
inch of snow had already fallen and in half an
It took me another hour of gentle local
hour the place looked like the North Pole. To
soaring under the post-frontal cumulus to
my surprise, in the first clearance a tug landrecover my nerve sufficiently to land.
ed with two of my clubmates aboard. They
I do not think lessons on how to be aerohad been told, incorrectly, that I wanted an
towed in blizzards are relevant here - other
aerotow retrieve. It was sunny and soarable
than don't. The only proper lesson - apart
back at base - so they couldn't hang about,
since the tug was urgently needed by my fel- from making sure that whoever takes your
retrieve message writes it down and repeats it
low members. I muttered about the threatento you verbatim - is, if you don't want to go,
ing low clouds, was assured that there were
some gaps we could get through and was don't go. The lethal sin of pride embraces the
desire not to lose face, not to thought a cowrather unhappily towed off.
ard, not to risk being a nuisance and therefore
What followed was the most hair-raising
hour of my entire gliding career. Within min- unpopular. Don't give in to it.
utes the promised gap had closed and the tug
Postscript: This ordeal took place at Easter 1975,
vanished ahead of me in a billion snowflakes.
and the friendly gliding site was Booker It occurs
The turbulence was equivalent to the average
to me 25 years later that I was saved by the nosecu-nim or wave rotor cloud, with the added
hook in the Kestrel, which of course could not
discomfort that the ground was steadily rising
as we crawled into the buffeting headwind back-release. Long-distance aerotows with a
belly-hook in rough weather carry a big risk of
across the range of hills that separated the two
sites. There was no question of my pulling off shedding the glider through back-releasing when
there is slack in the line.
and landing since we were all of 300ft above
The tug pilot was Tbrry McMullin (subse
the high ground which was only occasionally
quently killed in a road collision in his sports car).
visible in the blinding whiteness of the storm.
The passenger was Murray Hayes, who with
A score of times the tow line snaked back in
nothing to do except pray for this hour, had the
loops that swayed far under the glider or way
worst time of all. The Supercub which was left in
out to one side, then without warning it would
Terry's will to the Club, bearing the name "Tbrry
go violently taut as the tug reappeared amid
the whiteness, often 40 degrees above or Mac," is still there, still towing. It is now painted
vivid yellow, so if it ever tows a glider into a bliz
below or to one side. On some occasions we
found ourselves flying in formation - trailing zard again it will at least be easier to see.
the line between us in a wide "U." A collision,
a line snarled around the wing or a linebreak
No old, bold pilots? (1981)
were each time on the cards. Why the line didn't break. I can't imagine. It must have been
A letter in a recent S&G that caught my notice
the toughest towline since D-Day.
fired a charge of buckshot at Mike Fairman's
In desperation I tried to keep the line
straight by using airbrake - though fearing suggestion that, in contests, field landings
away from approved sites should be discourthat excessive use of brake would lose us our
precious 300ft (there was no question of flying aged by deducting penalty points. The writer
pours scorn on what he sees as a pathetic failhigher, since the occasional glimpse of the
rugged winter landscape was navigationally ure of nerve that accompanies creeping old
age, and sarcastically suggests people who
essential to our tug driver). As I moved the
feel like that should take up knitting instead.
brake lever, the undercarriage warning horn
Who, I ask as I read, is this virile young daresounded loudly - so I remembered to create
devil challenging us to get out there and risk
some drag by lowering the wheel. Then I
all? Not merely the boldest pilot of our time,
learned how to skid with crossed controls in
member of the Caterpillar Club (or its equivaanticipation of the line slackening and things
lent depending on the brand of parachute)
gradually began to come back under control. I
and Open Class National Champion many
was learning fast. Eventually we broke out

Heck, it's Supposed to be Dangerous, Isn't It?


times, but the uncrowned King of the
glider-repairers.
The last time I saw Ralph Jones (if one
excludes the dreary meetings with the insurance assessors and wailing next-of-kin, ie partners) was at a party during an especially
destructive contest. He arrived tanned, flashing gold accessories, in an immaculate creamcoloured suit, looking for all the world like a
character out of "Dallas* whose oil-well had
just come on line. He was entitled to, since in
that little local competition the weather and
visibility had been terrible: there had been a
mid-air collision, widespread field landing
crashes and six or seven canopies written off.
I wouldn't for a minute suggest that his profession colours his views, since he has always
flown the way he works - hard. All the same I
can imagine JR doffing his Stetson to RJ and
drawling "Smart fella!*

Home sweat home (1983)


It was terrifying. They came out of the sun,
they zoomed up from under my tail, or tried to
jam a wingtip in my eye. They drove in on collision courses from all angles. Whenever I left
to find a new thermal they followed and resolutely circled in the opposite direction. If
they thought I was not centred they immediately circled half a diameter away and challenged me to hold my ground (or my air,
rather). They flew right under me so that I was
petrified of stalling - the ASW-20 will drop like
a stone for a hundred feet or so if you overcook
it - or they ran their wheels gently over my
canopy and blotted out the sun.
Where was this? The Huit Jours d'Angers (or
the Eight Days of Danger, as it is called)? Or
Hahnweide, up against the ex-Luftwaffe's
finest? Tfexas? The UK Nationals? No. It was an
ordinary non-competitive afternoon at a club
whose name is concealed so as to protect the
guilty. Indeed had it been the Nationals I
would not have minded. You have a pretty
good idea how many hours (and how many
crashes) each pilot has. You know whom to get
close to, and whom to avoid. By their contest
numbers ye shall know them. But at an ordinary club all you know is that these maniacs
are not experienced at mixing it, so what they
are doing is presumably done out of sheer

81

Landing "Aux vaches" or How to


make a cow really mad (1969)
The Annual Accident Reports make dismal
reading again, and I only hope that our reac
tion is to say, "There but for the grace of
God..." and, "What can be learnt from those
poor fellows' experience?" rather than show
ing smugness or patronising pity for the
unlucky pilots.
All the same, I am intrigued by the pilot's
statement which contained the self-exculpat
ing explanation, "collided with running
cow." What was wrong with just saying, "Hit
cow"?
Well, for a start, it would look un-British.
Leaving aside the odd bounder in our midst
whom we can not longer dispatch to the
Colonies to spare his family from embarrass
ment, we are not the types to shoot at sitting
pheasants out of season, or ram browsing cat
tle with sailplanes, right in mid-cud, as it
were. The other implication is that it was real
ly all the cow's fault for running into the glid
er's path; had the ruminant's nerve not
cracked, the whole fracas would have been
avoided.
Fair enough. However, I suspect that she
was one of the last of the anti-invasion breed
of 1941, trained to charge enemy gliders.
These are recognisable by a strange lack of
milking-gear, a ring through the nose, and
answering (if you have time to ask) to the
name "Bruce."

ignorance. Having mentioned this to a number


of contest pilots at the Nationals, I learned that
the club in question is not unique; it is pretty
perilous in most places. Either I am getting
more cowardly as time wears on, or it is that

82

Heck, it's Supposed to be Dangerous, Isn't It?

25 years ago really inept pilots couldn't soar at


all, especially when only winch launches and
strutted trainers were available.
Nowadays, the sky is full of expensive
glass-fibre, superb variometers and dunderheads with suicidal tendencies.
French gliding clubs have marvellously
witty cartoons as wall posters stressing different aspects of safety. We over here generally
manage to make safety seem boring. Perhaps
my colleague, Peter Fuller, could be persuaded to put some life-saving humour into a
series of Do and Don't posters.
Here are Reichmann's Do's and Dont's for
circling in thermals:
1.
2.

3.
4.
5.

6.
7.

First sailplane into the thermal sets the


circling direction for all later entrants.
Newcomer must fly such that already circling sailplanes are not inconvenienced:
that is, work your way into the circle spirally from the outside.
Anyone displacing his circle must not
hinder other sailplanes in the old circle.
If outclimbing another sailplane, the
worse climber must not be hindered.
As a general rule, never fly closely right
below another ship; the other plane has
almost no escape route, particularly at
low speeds.
Always observe your airspace and know
who is where, when.
Attempt to fly such that the other pilots
can always see you.

The only alternative is that other, not quite


obsolete, French device for dealing with
anti-social nuisances...

The art of coarse groundhandling: or do cars and


gliders mix? (1984)
I'm afraid that my insurers have suffered
more from my misfortunes on the ground
than from any flying mishaps, though the latter have, er, happened from time to time. One
expensive prang took place at two miles an
hour when a tiny pin fell out of the tow bracket as I was towing a Kestrel down a steep gully
at Dunstable.
When I heard the clunk as the bracket
came undone, like an utter moron I applied

the brake instead of motoring gently on down


the slope. Result: the trailing edge of the rudder slowly crumples against the rear bumper.
A repair bill of over 1,000.
Another slow-motion catastrophe, while on
a towline behind a car, occurred during a competition in which two gliders had just collided
in mid-air (without injury, amazingly) and
everyone on the ground was clearing the runways in a panic. My driver started forward just
at the moment I was putting my arm through
the clear vision panel to pull the release knob.
The canopy of the Nimbus 2 disintegrated
slowly but inexorably around my arm, which
remained relatively intact, though my voice
cracked somewhat.
I draw useful lessons from all such incidents,
though it doesn't help much. I am reminded of
the Colonel who wrote of a subaltern, "One
thing I can say for this officer is that he never
makes the same mistake twice. He always
comes up with a brand new mistake every time."

If I can buy it, I can fly it, or.


Physician, cure thyself (1980)
In America, I was told, there is a "Doctors
Syndrome" that causes many accidents. A doctor or other successful professional or businessman, who after early years of hard work
and poor pay, when he had no time or money
to learn to fly, becomes successful in middle
age. He now takes flying lessons and buys
himself an aeroplane. (Or worse still, the other
way round.) He then, with very few hours in
his logbook, takes up his friends or family to
show off his new toy and kills off the whole lot
in very short order. That is what you can really call a tragedy. Newspaper journalists use
the word tragedy to describe any sad event,

Heck, it's Supposed to be Dangerous, Isn't It?

Caterpillar corner (1984)


Having recently had the experience of watch
ing from cloudbase as two gliders plummeted
towards the woods below, then seeing para
chutes opening, I am resolved to treat para
chutes with even more tender, loving care
than before. By the way, I always make a point
of getting out of a cockpit with the parachute
on, however uncomfortable that may be. The
reflex action of undoing cockpit straps and
parachute before clambering out is, to my
mind, lazy and potentially dangerous.
Quote from an American publication, The
Warrenton Democrat: "If you are one of the
hundreds of parachuting enthusiasts who
bought our Easy Sky Diving booklet, please
make the following correction: on p8, line 7,
the words 'State Zip Code' should have read
'Pull Rip Cord'."
I wonder if that tiny misprint was drawn
to their attention by their Complaints
Department.

from a mother of five being struck by lightning


to Spurs losing at home to AC Milan, but I am
using it in the proper Greek sense to mean the
destruction of a good man by hubris, best
translated into aviationese as over-confidence.
Successful middle-aged professionals have
got where they are in the world not by humility but by giving orders. They are used to
telling others what to do; they expect to be
deferred to. They don't take kindly to being
lectured or grounded by instructor-chappies
half their age and earning a tenth of their
pay. Nobody can tell them anything. In
England I can think of at least two or three
fatal cases of this happening to well-to-do
men (not doctors: they don't get so rich over
here) buying high performance gliders immediately after solo and then getting far out of
their depth. Their still surviving confreres
might read this or better still, read John
Williamson and Bill Scull.

Attachez vos ceintures! A true


story (1988)
Not long ago a British syndicate chose to take
delivery of a new glider from a central France
by flying it to England on aerotow. So much

83

speedier than trailing by road, the theory


says. However long-distance aerotowing is not
much fun, even in poor weather. In perfect
soaring weather it can be Hell. On this day the
lift was rampant.
Shortly after setting off from the factory
towards the Channel, as they bumped their
way through the thermals, the tug pilot was
surprised to look over his shoulder and see
the glider spiralling down out of control to
crash in a field.
Panic ensued when they landed and
dashed over to the wreckage, to find no pilot.
He, however, presently arrived, clutching
armfuls of parachute, in the company of the
local fire brigade.
He had been catapulted through the
canopy by one specially powerful bump, and
promptly hit the silk. They went straight back
to the manufacturers and told the astonished
management that the new ship had lasted less
than one hour, and could they please have
another one immediately.
The prize for chutzpah goes to the glider
pilot for asking the manufacturers for a volume discount on the grounds that they had
bought two sailplanes in one day. I don't know
what their answer was but one can guess.
Postscript from Bob Bickers
I found that my former ASH-25 partner Bob
Bickers was the tug-pilot and without wanting
to duplicate the pretty full account in Wally
Kahn's book, here is his story from the
moment the tug landed:
"I jumped out of the machine and set off at
a run down the lane to the hamlet on the way
to the crash site. In my best French I was
shouting, "Au Secours, Sapeurs, Pompiers" at
the top of my voice. I received one or two
quizzical looks but nothing else, not even a following out of curiosity. After about a kilometre I arrived at the field and finally, having
crawled through a gorse hedge, at the glider.
There was no-one in it and no sign of any one
in the field. Immediately behind the glider was
a large, high, gorse thicket. I wondered if he
might be in it somewhere and started searching, getting torn to bits. Still no sign of any one.
As I emerged from the gorse I was in time to
see a Fire engine pass down the lane at the
end of the field and, Lo and behold! a somewhat bedraggled Pegase pilot standing on the

84

Heck, it's Supposed to be Dangerous, Isn't It?

back. He appeared to be shoeless but otherwise unharmed.


I returned to my aeroplane, to find the
farmer shaking his head whilst surveying the
field. To my surprise he was an Englishman,
which made life a lot simpler for the moment.
He advised me that I was not permitted to take
off from the field without the permission of
the Gendarmes, who were sending an officer
forthwith. In the meantime I asked the farmer
to part the line of hay piles which bisected the
field, sufficient for me to pass through whilst,
I paced out the field, and then to use his tractor to tow the aircraft back right to the edge of
the field. On landing, the Rallye had sunk
through the dry crust of the field into the mud
underneath. Hardly surprising given the trout
farm lakes surrounding the field I was in.
After an age convincing the Gendarme that
I should be allowed to return to Le Blanc I was
permitted to take off. The field was 240 paces
long with a further 200 paces of trout lake and
then 50ft trees. I was not sure I really wanted
to do this. Eventually I set full power and waited. It seemed like half an hour before the
Rallye started moving, as we approached the
lake I dropped full flap and just before the trees
pulled back on the yoke as hard as I could. I
was very aware that I had probably just grazed
the top of the trees but immediately pushed
the nose down and eventually climbed away.
By the way my co-pilot had been left behind
with the Gendarme as a sort of hostage to
ensure that I would return to Le Blanc.
On arrival I was whisked away to the town
hospital to the bedside of the erstwhile Pegase
pilot where an official of the French
Department of Civil Aviation was carrying out
an accident investigation. Here I learned that
Up, up and away (2000)
The February-March 2000 issue ofS&G carried
a warning from the Royal Netherlands Air
force about the side-effects of taking Viagra.
Apparently it does strange things to your eye
balls. No, that's not a misprint. Colour vision is
significantly impaired.
Anyway the Dutch Air Force insists on the
lapse of at least 12 hours between consump
tion and flying. What I want to know is, what
the Hell does one do to pass those 12 hours?
Somebody enlighten Grandfather, please.

when we had hit the first thermal on climb out


the Pegase pilot had been treated to the sight of
his aircraft straps floating up into the air. He
had then put the stick between his knees whilst
attempting to do up his straps. Just then he hit
the 10-knotter. The stick was taken out of his
knees and he grabbed at it - having let go of the
straps. He said that the glider seemed to stop
dead in the air and he was ejected through the
canopy, his shoes and socks being pulled off in
the process. He pulled his rip-cord and floated
down to a safe landing.
Now the pressures of being a serviceman
and on a specialist unit began to take over. I
was due to fly a Very, Very Important Person
the following morning early, and there were
no deputies available to fill in for me. It took a
lot of persuading but I eventually convinced
the Gendarmes and more importantly the
Official from the Department of Civil Aviation
that I should be allowed to convey the two
bereft ex-owners of a Pegase back to our base.
Around 4.00pm we got airborne. The plan
was to go direct to Le Tbuquet where we had
asked them to stay open for fuel and customs
outbound and then on to Lydd who we had
also telephonically persuaded to remain open
until we arrived. My two young would-be
Pegase owners were prepared to pay any necessary overtime bills.
Half way up the coastline on a beautiful
balmy summer's evening my two passengers
were fast asleep and I was getting too warm
for comfort. The Rallye has a delightful facility which enables you to open the canopy in
flight, and leave it open if you wish. Without
thinking I reached up and pulled the canopy
open. Simultaneously there was a rush of
cooling air a shout of "Oh No!" from the rear
seat where our inadvertent parachutist had
been sleeping. He was apparently convinced
he was leaving the aircraft all over again!"
R A Bickers
Plat adds: when I asked Bob the obvious ques
tion, "Why were the Pegase seat belts not fas
tened?" he said the new owner "was probably
overawed by the occasion." Yes, I can see that for
an inexperienced pilot, the prospect of being
towed a very long way in a brand new glider,
with the English Channel looming in the middle
of the journey, would he quite daunting. Nerves
could easily override basic procedures like a cock-

Heck, it's Supposed to be Dangerous, Isn't It?

pit check. I don't normally feel sorry for insur


ance companies, but they deserve our deep sym
pathy in this instance.
The other thought I have is that it may be just
as well that the Gendarmes kept Bob's passenger
hostage, since it sounds as if he might not other
wise have cleared those trees...

Not another routine crash!?


(1990)
One extrovert reader of S&G told me that he
(no, I remember for various reasons that it
was she) only found two things worth a good
belly laugh in this magazine - the Platypus
column and the EGA official accident reports.
I think it is a backhanded compliment to be
regarded as about as funny as a compund fracture, but never mind, any kind of praise from
the punters, even the sadists, is better than
none. In that case/' I said, "the best piece of
reading would be an accident report involving
Platypus - one, he selfishly hopes, that leaves
him sufficiently whole to write it up afterwards?" "Oh yes/' she chortled, "that would be
spiffing! Please oblige."She slapped me heartily on the back, dislocating my shoulder, and
roared back to the bar. Well, I do get pretty
desperate for ideas, but having a prang in
order to generate copy is going too far.
To give you a notion of how desperate I get
with the old writer's block, which is not confined to paid-up union members but can happen to rank amateurs, this particular piece
resulted from my using a random-number generator on my Mac II computer to decide which
page of S&G I should open, the rigid rule of the
game being immediately to write something
prompted by the very first item on the ran-

85

domly chosen page, regardless. Page 205


August issue 1990, Accident Reports, came out
of the electronic hat. So now you know just
how dried-up the well of literary inspiration
has become. I can only thank heaven or the
microchip that page 205 wasn't an advertisement glorifying some gliding site or electronic
device: advertisers can be very touchy people.
You can see their point of view: they don't pay
good money in a recession just to be mocked.
I did once write up a prang that I had in 1970
I turned it into a major piece in S&G with illustrations by Peter Fuller, on whom I so often
depend to save the day. He's the one who can
make a leg in traction seem funny. I had another crash in 1977 but I didn't write that one up.
One reason for my reticence the second time
around was that after the 1970 confession the
editor was deluged under a shoal of letters, both
of which deplored the poor taste of my washing
my dirty underwear in public. It wasn't dirty,
just a bit damp, as you might expect under the
circumstances. The correspondents said that
decent chaps hid themselves after such disgraceful episodes, and didn't boast about their
lack of airmanship. And there I was imagining I
was doing a public service.
A much better reason for not writing up
the second crash was that it was exactly the
same as the first one. Which indicates that if
anyone had learnt anything from my public
breast-beating over the first accident, it certainly wasn't me. There is a dreary, repetitive
sameness about most crashery which must
make people like Bill Scull despair. Truly original ways of wrecking gliders are so special,
there ought to be some kind of medal: a Prang
of the Year award limited, for reasons of good
taste, to those that can get to the podium
under their own power.

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....

Wintry thoughts about policies,


premiums and six point print
(1997)
It's perishing cold as I write this at the beginning of December 1996. A gloomy seasonal
item to contemplate is insurance. The
Africans have a useful saying, ''Never throw
stones at the crocodiles while fording a river/7
and since insurers are the biggest crocodiles
in my particular creek, I am not going to bait
them. Indeed, I think insurers of light aircraft
and gliders are absolute saints. When I am
inclined to grumble about underwriters I
remind myself that I would not insure glider
pilots or their equipment at any price. So the
three following items are just observations
rather than whinges.
First I was impressed during my 1995 tour
of the USA by how much cheaper glider
insurance is in America than in Britain. To
insure an ASH-25 to the same value cost
1,000 less in the USA. That saving paid a
large portion of the cost of ferrying the beast
over the Atlantic to Florida. It could just be
that American pilots are safer than ours - a
hypothesis for which I saw not a trace of evidence. Or their outlanding places are safer.
Sorry, but that's unbelievable. Or that they
enjoy economies of scale in that vast country.
Maybe, but would that account for our insurance costing 50% more?
Then, after 11 years without incident, I had
not one but two belly landings in 1996. The

second of these disfigured a handsome


asphalt runway with a long and very expensive white streak. And disfigured a handsome
ASH-25 with a short and very expensive black
streak. As Lady Bracknell would have said, "To
have one belly landing in a fortnight is a misfortune, but to have two seems very much like
carelessness." Leave aside the fact that Lady B
would hardly have said belly. Soon I was being
politely but very insistently asked by the loss
adjuster to furnish my pilot's logbooks for the
last 39 seasons, otherwise I was not complying with the fine print in the contract, and
would not get paid until I did. Of course I had
not read the fine print, chiefly out of my customary terminal laziness but also because if I
did read it I wouldn't understand it. So with a
very ill grace I spent ages searching for old
logbooks in my loft, copying competition
results from ancient editions of S&G and cal-

Don't throw stones at the crocodiles.

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

87

delayed start, so as to keep the once stricken


but now convalescent craft in the contest with
a sporting chance.
But that will become just a distant, treasured memory, along with other romantic legends. If Lloyds have their way, never again
will we see the repairers, in the absence of
proper drawings and jigs, simply pull the severed tail back until the rudder cables go taut
and then fill in the gap with plywood. Nor
shall we hear again the advice delivered by
the craftsman to the pilot, as he waited for a
bungy launch in his heavily-bandaged
Olympia in a Regionals on a blustery northern
crag some forty years ago. "She'll fly all right,
lad. But mind you don't land in the next three
hours; the glue's still wet."

The dismal science (1999)


At a recent mass meeting of our club Steve
Lynn, a brilliant accountant-pilot (I leave you
to work out whether he is brilliant as an
accountant, or as a pilot, or both, or merely
that he is brilliant at the financial analysis of
gliding, which is a different kettle of fish
entirely) delivered the opinion that it cost so
much to keep track of the launches and flying
hours of club gliders that we might consider
not bothering to keep the figures at all. In fact
some clubs on the Continent do not charge for
club aircraft by the hour but ask members to
pay an all-in fee at the start of each season, so
it is not a totally barmy idea, provided you
have a fair system for allocating gliders in fine
weather. However we still do need to know
how many hours each machine has flown for
airworthiness and maintenance purposes, and
in our chats with government about airspace

88

Soaring costs

- and even Lottery money - we need some


solid statistics about what proportion of general aviation activity is carried out by gliding
clubs. In short, the radical notion of not keeping the figures at all is unacceptable.
But Steve's question remains: how to we
make it easy to collect and analyse the flight
times? Especially as it is a rotten chore out on
the field and often not done well.
Answer: technology! (Peal of trumpets,
stage left. Da-Daaaaa!)
Soon, I suggested, GPS loggers will be so
cheap that all club gliders and tug aircraft can
have them, permanently running, to be downloaded in the office once a week. Even winches could log launches automatically. A sidebenefit is that with the loggers you will, when
the sad occasion arises, have an exact time
and place of impact for insurance purposes.
Club gliders collect an awful lot of impacts,
often when they are still on the ground just
fresh out of the Workshop after an earlier
impact.
However that might require all club tractors and golf-carts to carry loggers too, so you
can reconcile the data in the computer and
discover which tractor dinged which twoseater. People love driving these vehicles fulltilt into club gliders. They are more cautious
about driving into privately-owned gliders
since someone actually cares about them,
unlike club gliders, to the point of physical
ferocity. (Now I think about it, some members
should be required to carry loggers, but that is
a dangerous line of enquiry.)
However the brilliantest idea came from
some young wag. Well, it was Bob King, the
Club Chairman, but he was retiring after a
long and heroic stint at a thankless task, and
must have been feeling demob-happy. (I wonder, does that term mean anything to those
who were never in Her Majesty's uniform?)
Why not, he said, paint supermarket barcodes on the sides of the club gliders and
make them fly past a bar-code-laser-scanner
on take-off and landing?
This stunned everyone so much that the
topic was dropped entirely. However I think it
deserves thought. There might be a small
problem about the lasers blinding the pilots in
the early stages of development, though the
Workshop's welding goggles, such as we used
during the famous eclipse, should obviate that

danger. Pilots might not be able to see the


ground or each other, but you can't have
everything. Good book-keeping is worth considerable sacrifices.
Another threat may be what lasers may do
to the gonads and other intimate parts. No
problem. Most gliders have to carry lead ballast, and if hammered into the shape of lederhosen this protection would not be too
uncomfortable to wear, once you got used to
it.
I shall need technological advice, so I'll
give Bill Gates and Wal-Mart a yodel.
PS By the way, if you do meet someone
who truly is brilliant at the financial analysis
of gliding, do NOT ask them what it really
costs. It will ruin your life.

A prayer for a wing (1993)


A small ad, psychiatrists would doubtless
assert, is a cry for help. "Bunny. Come back to
the syndicate. All is forgiven. Cuddles. PS.
Please bring wing pins with you." Some advertisements are fascinating since we must wonder how the situation came about that provokes a particular cry for help. Thus I always
seem to be come across ads in S&G or on clubhouse notice-boards that say something like,
"Urgently wanted: starboard wing of Dart 17."
Did the owners of an otherwise intact Dart 17
leave a wing behind while on holiday in the
south of France? Probably not. Or did someone run over it with a pickup truck, not just
nibbling at the tip, which is a quite common
and recoverable blunder, but smack across the
middle, reducing the spar and brake-box to
matchwood? I jest, of course, knowing the
true answer. In the particular case of the
Slingsby Dart, one of which I managed to spin
at about 400ft above the bar of the Dunstable
Golf Club within minutes of being winched off
on my very first flight in the new ship in 1966,
there is little doubt that the call for help in
the advertisement arises from an asymmetrical impact with the ground following a
spiral descent in a stalled condition. Thus one
wing escapes, and a tearful call goes out for
a mate.
A reader of S#G, smugly cosy with pipe
and slippers, reads the tragic small ad to his
wife, who is knitting a pitot-warmer, and not

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

Leave a wing behind.

89

their money back. Shame and embarrassment


make people act in ways that are not wholly
rational.
Wells pere (Martyn) relates a still sadder
story. Encumbered with two outer sections of
a three-piece Skylark 4 wing, he said one day,
This junk has to go. Where's my chainsaw?"
and in a few minutes reduced the 45ft of timber to chunks of firewood, all a nice size for
popping into an Aga stove.
No, I don't have to tell you what someone
rang and asked for the very next day...

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

90

Soaring costs

Barry Rolfes. There is not one word of hard


advice or penetrating wisdom in it."
Solid proof of this dismissive attitude to my
outpourings was when I saw some pictures of
a comprehensively broken glider a couple of
years ago, and read the account of how it had
happened. What I read made my teeth grind.
Much more of this stupidity on the part of my
fellow pilots and I shall have worn my teeth
down altogether and be gnashing my gums
noiselessly. Only a few months before that
sad event I had sounded off in this journal
about the folly of would-be glider-owners
(WBGOs) who insist on flying a machine
before they buy it, and the even greater folly
of would-be ex-owners (WBEOs) in agreeing to
allow some stranger to stagger around an
unfamiliar circuit with the WBEO's life savings, usually after a quite inadequate briefing
as to what lever does what. If D Piggott (or
someone like D Piggott, except that there is
nobody like D Piggott) says in one of his
indispensable surveys of second-hand
sailplanes that the Schnurlpfii 4B is a safe and
sensible glider, then I'll take his word for it
and learn to like it once I've bought it. If he
says it has the handling characteristics of a
Starfighter crossed with a supermarket trolley, then I won't touch it, whatever the glideangle per Pound Sterling. By the way, Derek's
code for these evil traits is, "Big Glider
Handling." Be warned. I'm not normally deferential to superior authority, but I make an
exception for Derek.
In the particular sad case in question a
WBGO was allowed by a WBEO to try out
some perfectly straightforward glider, and the
WBGO managed to run out of height, speed
and ideas in a patch of scrub about a half mile
from the site. One could say that the WBGO
and the WBEO deserved each other.
However, for those people who, despite not
being professional glider-fliers, believe that
they will gain deep insights about a machine's
performance, handling, freedom from vices
etc in the course of a ten-minute flip, I offer
this form which I have just devised:
1, Fred Nurk (WBGO) hereby hand to Alf
Baskett (WBEO) a banker's draft representing
the full purchase price of the Rhonflieger 3,
BGA number xxxx, prior to aviating in same.
If following the approval flight, I decide not to
keep the aforesaid aircraft, the WBEO is

obliged to repurchase the machine, if undamaged, at the identical price. Arrangements


have been made with Lloyds underwriters
Messrs Rytoff & Rytoff that, inasmuch as the
aircraft is my exclusive property for the duration of the flight, any insurance claim arising
is my responsibility, including the deductible
excess, loss of no claims bonus etc, etc."
You could get a sharp lawyer to knock that
little notion into proper legal shape, no problem. It would doubtless reduce the demands
for flights by WBGOs, but that is the whole
idea.
But wait! It has suddenly dawned on me
that perhaps the WBEO whose glider was
destroyed was not so dumb as I thought. He
collected the insurance and is now the happy
owner of a spanking new ship - without getting so much as a scratch on him. So it is possible that he had read my homily and laid his
plans accordingly. Good Grief! Why don't I get
out the black ink and mail him a friendly
note?
'Dear Sir, Your secret is known to me.
Unless etc etc."

Sell, sell, sell! (1981)


In S&G the small advertisements always command our attention, even if we are not thinking of buying or selling. Like an investor poring over the Stock Market reports, we watch
the value of our glider move up and down.
Writing small ads to sell big gliders is a skill
which some people have and some have not.
John Delafield is almost professional in this
regard and should be hired to write other people's glider ads for two per cent of the gross.
What? Oh all right, John, five per cent. It

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.

91

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.

If you want to know the price,


you'd better be sitting down
first (1996)
When in the last century a millionaire
acquaintance of Commodore Vanderbilt, amateur sailor and professional robber baron,
inquired what it cost to run a yacht, he got the
characteristically arrogant reply, 'If you have
to ask, you can't afford it." A similar-sounding
but more endearing response was made by
Fats Waller to a woman who asked him what
he meant by rhythm. "Lady, if you gotta ask,
you ain't got it!" When I decide that I can't
afford the effort and expense of gliding I
might well take up jazz piano instead. (Alistair
Cooke still plays jazz at 88 years, so it is obviously good for the constitution. The EGA and
Lloyds will be glad to know that by that age I
shall have hung up my John Willy and will be
emulating Fats, except for the bottle of gin on
top of the Joanna; that stuff is death to French
polish.) One advantage a piano has over a
glider is that you don't have to rig the damned
instrument every time you want to sit down at
the keyboard, and with what it costs to fly big
wings I could buy a new Yamaha or an old
Bechstein every year.
Let's face it, there is more drivel spoken,
and believed, about the costs of gliding than
about any other aspect of the sport. Someone
who talks great sense about thermal-centring,
or is an acknowledged authority on glider
maintenance, or is always heeded respectfully on the topic of contest-winning will, the
moment the price of gliding is raised, start
uttering the most mind-numbingly cretinous
fantasies. For instance, Fred will say cheerfully that he has ''made a profit" on his Discus
because he hears that a second-hand speci-

92

Soaring costs

men has just changed hands for more than he


originally paid for his in 1984. It may be so:
certainly the Discus has been the best buy of
the 1980s and the 1990s, having defied every
effort by other designers to render it obsolete.
But the boastful owner will ignore the fact
that the pound sterling has halved in purchasing power in the past 12 years, or be unaware
that the chap who got such a good price spent
10,000 not long ago on refinishing the gelcoat
and rebuilding the trailer. What our smug
friend does not do is ask what it will cost to
replace his old ship and all the accompanying
equipment with a brand new outfit.
Either he is lying to us (which is perfectly
OK) or he is lying to himself (which is unforgivable) but most likely he is too economically immature to be allowed out of the house
with any sum of money greater than the bus
fare.
Haemorrhaging money
The fact is gliding is a ruinously expensive pastime. (For Pete's sake, I've got advertisers to
keep happy! Ed.) Well, let the chips fall where
they may, ruat caelum, is what I always say.
I have tried calculating the costs of owning
a glider, and have even bounced these sums
off professional accountants. Since these
accountants are also keen glider pilots, you
would think they would be able to analyse
what I propound and quickly confirm my thesis or put me straight if I am in error. However
that is not what happens. My sums come
winging back to me with muttered remarks
like, "Well, you could look at it that way" making me aware yet again that accounting is an
art rather than a science. Obviously I have
just ruined their whole weekend by compelling them to apply their professional skills
to matters which they did not want to think
about. It's like doctors not wishing to confront
the possibility of having themselves contracted a socially disastrous disease.
The other thing that terrifies the male, seriously-married, accountant-glider-pilots is that
my sums might by chance fall into the hands
of their wives, whereupon the roof will rise as
if in the grip of a Kansas tornado. 'You said it
was equivalent to a cheap holiday in Spain
once a year - it's more like a moon landing
every month, according to this friend of
yours!"

That'll teach you to open my mail: you


were perfectly happy until breakfast time.
Anyway he's no friend of mine. And his sums
are rubbish/
'Are they now? Explain precisely in what
way they are rubbish/'
"It's too technical and complicated to
explain" (desperately).
"Come on, humour me, you forget I read
maths at Cambridge/'
In the worst case, accountants (gliding)
who have married accountants (earthbound)
have no escape at all, except an elaborate web
of forgery, which could prove costly if used as
grounds for divorce in front of an unsympathetic judge.
"I grant Mrs Pinchpenny a decree nisi on
grounds of severe mental cruelty and gross
deception. Instead of carrying on discreet
affairs with other women like any normal
man, her husband flaunted extravagant new
sailplanes in public while she languished at
home, humiliated by his inept falsehoods
relating to their true costs, which he strove to
minimise with a tissue of fabricated syndicate
expenses. In addition to stiff alimony, I award
her, to dispose of as she wishes, Mr
Pinchpenny's new motorised ASH-25E. I see
he has written down this rather neat piece of
kit in the books at only 8,000, so he should
not feel the loss too severely, heh heh."
(Judge, lawyers and public gallery collapse in
merriment, not shared by Mr P.)

Raising the wind (1990)


Naturally, my sole interest in money is so I
can afford to glide, and anything that threat-

Used in an invoice.

Soaring costs

93

below the rank of chairman or managing


director; and 2) let them do all the talking, and
send them a massive bill so they know they
have been well advised. I'm hoping to get to
the position where I sit cross-legged on a cushion for one hour at breakfast-time, seeing a
stream of tycoons for ten minutes each, then
my chauffeur can get me up to the club before
the thermals start.

The men with the white coats


are coming for us (1991)
Raise the cash.

ens to stem the flow of launches or trips to


Australia must be taken seriously. A few
weeks ago my boss called me in and began
talking to me about the amazing opportunities
there were to be found in the world of consultancy. He's very subtle fellow, for I was out in
the corridor before I realised I'd been fired.
Nevertheless he was right about the consultancy racket. With this change of life I had to
pay for a financial consultant and a legal consultant (that's the same as an accountant and
a lawyer, only costing twice as much).
The first one had a plush office in St
James's St, right near the Palace, and he oozed
charm and reassurance. He said, "Now, Mr P,
tell me all about it in your own time," and on
his desk is this damn great clock, with the big
hand marking the hundreds and the little
hand quietly sweeping up the 5 notes. The
lawyer was even smarter - she operated from
a little Victorian house in Fulham, no overheads - and charged 120 an hour. Two
pounds a minute! We dealt entirely by phone
or post. I don't know whether she fancied me
but she kept inviting me round for tea, and I
thought, "Even Lyons Quickbrew takes four
minutes, that's an aerotow - and this could be
an oriental tea ceremony - plus VAT - and I'd
have to sell the glider!" I felt that anything I
said or did in her drawing room might be
taken down and used in an invoice. All the
same I suppose I could have done worse than
have a lady friend who could earn two pounds
a minute without getting up off her sofa.
So I have become a consultant myself and there are two simple mottoes which are
"the higher the fewer," and 'less is more." That
means 1) have nothing to do with anyone

No lady of fashion looks so anxiously each


morning for lines, cracks, wrinkles, blotches
and other signs of ageing skin as does a modern glider. The same mixture of ignorance and
dread, pseudo-science, myth and old wive's
tales, circulates amongst the victims:
'All you need is to get your man to rub in
royal jelly and beeswax last thing at night,
darling .. You must stay out of the light ...
Good Lord, you don't mess around with silicones?...Sunblock 25-plus, and don't lie
around uncovered, with everyone staring at
you and comparing notes/
"I hate it when the young men peer at you
from three inches away and say, "She's really
let herself go, looks like crazy paving..."
"Don't go up too high and don't get all hot
and cold, that's ruin."
"Soap? You must be mad, you might as well
use Brillo pads; water only - distilled water of
course, none of that London muck ... Oh my
God, there's another line, I swear that wasn't
there yesterday."
"Do you know Alphonse of Enstone can do
you a whole new skin from face to fanny13?
for just 10,000 plus tax?"
"It's all right for you, ducky, you've got
three rich lovers."
"You absolute bitch, come outside and say
that!"
"Don't be silly, I never go outside, as you
know perfectly well!"

13 This glider went on a trip to America and uses odd


expressions like this to remind the others that she is a
World Traveler

94

Soaring costs

Even more galling, the 1983 glider watches


the obsolete 1973 Kestrels and Libelles swanning around still crackless and lineless; it's so
unfair. At least not many women have the
humiliation of seeing other women two or
three times their age flaunting far better skins.
The dreariest thing is having to listen to the
excuses manufactured by the makers - sorry, I
meant the excuses made by the manufacturers. "Well, in the old days of schwabbelac (a
lovely sound that, you can roll it around the
tongue - the word, I mean, not the actual
stuff) it was made of a mixture of arsenic and
radio-active waste, and the government won't
let us use it any more; it's verboten."
They never say, "Look, silly, the new
method is quicker and easier and therefore
cheaper, and produces a marvellous result for
the first few years; then you get rid of your
glider at a thumping great loss to someone
who is prepared to do a lot of work on it, and
we sell you a brand new one. Now put down a
deposit and stop whingeing!"
Such frankness would come as a welcome
breath of foul air, even if it wouldn't solve the
chief problem of Britain's bankers, which is
whether to re-open our 18th century debtors'
prisons specifically for glider pilots.
Seriously, though (What do you mean seriously? We've got three writs already. Ed.) any
well-organised syndicate should set aside
about 1,000 a year solely to cover the eventuality - no, the near certainty - of either
re-coating their glider or selling it at a loss in
the not too distant future. A special bank
account, inflation-proofed if possible. A
Sinking Fund, an accountant would call it. No,
I don't like the sound of that: call it a Soaring

There's another line.

Fund, sounds more positive. The Soaring


Fund, remember, is in addition to the cost of
depreciation, obsolescence, routine wear and
tear and maintenance, annual Certificate of
Airworthiness, insurance etc etc.
For most syndicates that is an extra five to
ten pounds an hour just for the pleasure of
watching the ultra-violet eat your wings.
By the way, I hope we are not going to have
people writing in with a lot of drivel about
gliders maintaining their value over long periods; 99% of the time it's an illusion caused by
inflation. Of course if money is failing in purchasing power at ten per cent a year a glider
will appear to maintain its value; but just try
selling it and using the money to buy anything else - in particular an identical replacement glider - then see whether value has
been maintained. Occasionally the price stability is a short-term phenomenon caused by
waiting lists for new gliders - but then by definition an identical replacement glider is not
readily available, and when it does become
available it will always cost significantly more
than your old machine will fetch
second-hand. Let's face it, modern gliders
haemorrhage money, and it's folly to pretend
otherwise. Why deceive yourself?
Re-gelcoating by a competent workshop
has historically produced gliders that performed superbly and lasted for years: it used
to be said in the 1970s that the very best
Nimbus 2s were those that were just a few
years old and had been comprehensively
pranged - written off, ideally - and then had
the wings rebuilt and reprofiled by one of the
masters of the art, like Ralph Jones. By that
time the shrinkage and waviness, which is
nothing to do with gelcoat deterioration but
with the "curing" of the underlying structure,
had stabilised and could be filled in to give a
perfect airfoil that would stay put. Why did
the machine have to be pranged in order to
produce this happy result? Because only an
insurance company could afford to pay for
such a luxury as re-gelling a complete pair of
wings.
It's Lloyds on the phone. They're extremely
worried that people will get ideas...Ed.

Travel broadens the behind: gliding in Europe,


Australia & New Zealand
To leave Britain's shores and mingle with foreigners was once the sole preserve of
the rich and multilingual. It used to be painfully expensive to travel any distance
from home. Hotel-keepers and restaurateurs either failed (Italy) or refused (France)
to speak English. These twin barriers excluded vast sections of the British populace
from the Continent. Well, it's fruitless to lament the passing of those wonderful faroff days: they were too good to last.
For glider pilots, Abroad had more still to offer than Langoustines au facon du Chef
and lightly-chilled Gewurtztraminer: it meant quite simply, thermals. Fatter, taller and
more consistent thermals. Wally Kahn (not altogether poor and unmistakably an
homme du monde, at ease in any international social gathering, and my role model
in life) describes with relish in his book A Glider Pilot Bold the frankly undignified
scramble to bring his barograph trace back from France to the BGA's London offices
and claim UK Gold C number 10 just one step ahead of Dr Brennig James in 1951. I
was consumed with envy and admiration when I heard this story, and resolved to do
likewise as soon as the Goddess of business fortune smiled upon me.

Lederhosen und gamesmanship


(1972)
The hills are alive to the sound of horse
flies and splintering plywood ...
This summer, mit Lederhosen und eine sensible Segelflugzeug mit decent airbrakes, we
carved a swathe through Tyrolean thermals,
carved a swathe through Rotwein and Bier,
carved a swathe through a meadow that
looked like part of a set from 'The Sound of
Music" and nearly carved a swathe through a
skein of mountaineers who leaned out too far
from the North Wall of the Inn Valley.
Which is by way of saying we joined the
growing band of idlers who spread the fame of
British soaring by more or less taking over the
Austrian soaring site of Zell-am-Zee each year.

Fluent French.

About the flying - maybe some other time.


But I must tell you now about the gamesmanship at the launch point, which was unbelievable. It is all to do with the fact that
a) If the day is to be very, very good, then
you must be launched very, very early;
ie, before 10am.
b) Tows from an airfield height of 3,000ft to
7,000ft, which are essential, are very
time-consuming, so it is no joke being at
the back.
c) No one is supposed to form a startline
grid until they give the word, though it is
not at all obvious who they is at the crucial moment, nor what the word is, nor
whereabouts or whenabouts it is supposed to be given.
Sometimes a privately-started grid gathers
momentum and becomes accepted as the de
facto rule, at other times the private initiative
is too blatant, like that of the lone British pilot
who started the grid at 6am; his grid was not
recognised and for all the good it did him he
could have stayed in bed. Serves him right for
being hearty as well as unsubtle. Finesse coupled with brass cheek was more the thing. It
worked like this:
One moment all the gliders would be
patiently sitting behind the perimeter track
looking as though they weren't going anywhere special; then you would turn your back
or blow your nose and when you looked again
the whole lot had miraculously formed up

96

Travel Broadens the Behind

into a competition-style grid - except that


your glider would be the last of about 30.
If you got wise to this you might improve
your position in the next day's line-up by casually strolling off, studying the sky intently or
looking for somewhere to relieve yourself then, as the opposition relax and put their
heads inside their cockpits and make fettling
sounds, you pounce, seize the K-6e by the
snout and whisk it as fast as it is possible to
whisk a glider through ankle-deep mud to a
spot which by this very act of defiant skulduggery is now consecrated as the number one
position for the starting grid that day. Phew!
At least, that's what you think. It's now
10.30; you have been rigged four hours and
you are about to go. You know it's going to be
an enjoyable day because the horseflies are
ploughing into the hairs in your legs like
Kestrels into fir trees, gouging great bleeding
lumps out of the perspiring flesh. Under the
canopy you gently baste at a Medium Rare
Broil setting.
Never mind, you will be up and away into
the high cool mountain peaks in a minute.
Heh! Heh! You can't suppress evil laughter.
Some pundit in umpteen metres of glass-fibre
has got sunk. Serves him right; he shouldn't
have barged in at the front an hour ago.
Ye Gods! He is taking your tow, cool as a
cucumber. You wave frantically, wondering in
which of many tongues he will contrive not to
understand you. Cheerily, he holds up five
fingers, indicating that he is entitled to a second launch before your first because he is
attempting five hundred kilometres.
You signal your opinion on the matter, with
vigour.
He smiles broadly, delighted to know that
you only plan to do two hundred kilometres...

Off to the prairie (1986)


I have given up mountain flying. My nerves
won't stand it any more. Nor can I take the
frustration and humiliation of being unable to
get away from the nursery slopes on a
mediocre day, while watching the typical
Alpine pilot work his wingtip into every little
lift-yielding crevice like a diner with a toothpick, to vanish on a 300km and reappear three
hours later to dump a full load of water on the

piste. That sort of thing giveth me to rend my


soaring hat, pour dust on my head and vow to
abandon the sport entirely.
Why not, you ask, fly with one of those
magnificent instructors in a Janus and learn
from them how it is done?
I've done that for as long as I could take it.
They are indeed magnificent, and their local
knowledge and skills are superb. The trouble
is that
1) Every such instructor talks, without
pause for breath, in very rapid, impatient
French. Though that's a lot better than
when they try rapid, impatient broken
English. Now my French is not bad, and I
can usually remember what a rudderpedal or a flap or an incipient spin or a
downdraught is, but it is less than instantaneous. It is not helped by the fact that
the instructor is constantly on the radio
to all his other little chickens, so a bellowing command from the back seat, "get
closer to the rock face, silly boy! * may be
intended for someone else, though if
your wing is more than a few centimetres
away from the mountain you can take it
that he means you.
2) They all seem incapable of letting a pilot
make any kind of mistake, but grab the
controls immediately they feel that
something short of perfection is being
achieved. This makes sense when you
are glued to the geology, so to speak, but
the habit persists even when you are
thousands of feet clear of anything hard,
where the odd mistake would do no
harm. I could only deal with this by
promptly raising my hands over my head
to show that I was not in charge and
would not touch the stick until I was
asked. This had no effect at all, so it
seemed that half the time the aircraft was
being flown by two people wrestling for
supremacy and half the time was being
flown by nobody at all, while the glider
plummetted towards the snows and the
chamois scampered nervously out of our
steepening path.
To be fair to the French, the worst offender in
this latter respect was a German. (That's right,
alienate everyone. ED.)
So it's goodbye, beautiful and altogethertoo-exciting mountains, hello lovely, flat and

Travel Broadens the Behind


boring prairie. Prairie is French for meadowland and wide open country, and reminds us
that the French possessed most of North
America before the British mugged them and
took it for themselves.
My resolutions are flimsy things, even when mack
in public. I did in fact revisit the Alps in 1990, 1992
and 1997. and I have braved (though I wish there
were a verb that suggested something less gung-ho)
the vertiginous rock-faces of New Zealand and the
turbulent mountains of Pennsylvania and
California, though the last two arc not very Alpine.
What - or who - brought about the change of
heart? Two people, one British, one French. In
1990, after a spectacularly varied beautiful
500km flight in the ASH-25 from le Blanc via
Roanne and the Rhone Valley to the Alps, Bill
Malpas and I spent a week at Sisteron. There he
helped me improve my knowledge about the area.
Bill has thousands of hours of Alpine gliding, and
lives in Angers, so he is an honorary Frenchman,
while looking like Hollywood Central Casting's
idea of an Englishman.
Then a professional course with the incompa
rable Jacques Noel of Aero Club Alpin at Gap
taught me to understand the hazards of mountainflying. I learned thereby to contain fear. Well, up
to a point: I found myself saying repeatedly to
myself, "This-man-has-a-wife-and-kids-This-manhas-a-wife-and-kids" as we reversed 60-degree
banks to stay in the lift that surged up hollowedout vertical crags. No, not in the ASH-25, but in a
Janus A - less perform.ance but much better rate
of roll. Not one of the unldnd remarks I made in
1986 about Continental instructors applies to
Jacques. He is a star. I must admit he has a dis
concerting habit of indicating every hour or so
that the spot we are over right now is where soand-so killed himself through sheer folie, but he
has made his point. At least I now know precisely
how and why so-and-so is sadly no longer with us,
and the important lesson is digested.

The rain in Spain sprays mainly


on my plane (1993)
The speed with which one's mood can go
from boredom to panic and then to exhilaration is one of the special appeals of gliding.
Indeed it is what gliding is all about if you
have dny soul.

97

In May 1993 the European Soaring Club


was ferrying our ASH-25 behind a Robin towplane, piloted by Brian Spreckley, from
Monflorite to Soria in northern Spain, roughly
180km. (Soria is invitingly pronounced Soar
'ere. A misnomer, I would say, if the waterlogged week that followed was any indication.) The other pilots and gliders came by
road, so we were privileged. Platypus was in
the front seat of the 25, Marion Barritt was P2.
The journey would take about 75 minutes into
a south-west wind, under a slate-grey sky,
with rain threatening and no prospect of lift.
The air got steadily rougher as we pushed
across the high and increasingly unlandable
ground, resembling the backside of the moon.
I did begin vaguely to wonder whether it was
rotor cloud kicking us around in the lee of a
mountain that towered above us just south of
our track. Wave isn't one of my strong suits says he, implying that he has some strong
suits but is too modest to mention them.
Then suddenly - without our having got
out of position but with the cable alternately
slackening and pulling taut - we heard a click
and there were the rings on the end of the
towrope briefly twinkling at us before they
vanished into the distance.
My first action, once my voice had come
back down a couple of octaves, was to ask on
the radio for the GPS co-ordinates of the nearest usable airfield. The desolate Spanish
moonscape looked horribly close. I could visualise Don Quixote and Sancho Panza plodding
across it in search of windmills. Then a calm,
small voice behind me (no, not my conscience) said, "Have you noticed we are going
up at 800ft a minute?" I hadn't noticed, since I
had switched the audio off early in the flight,
not wishing to have it mewing at me for 75
minutes, and I was now preoccupied exclusively by navigational and getting-down-inone-piece worries. I promptly lost the wave in
my excitement, found it again and, pushing
towards the mountain, worked it up to
14,000ft. With no oxygen, we reluctantly levelled out and sped over the top of our mountain along the 60km to Soria with hardly any
loss of height, discovering that the wave must
have been triggered by other ranges to the
south-west. We cruised around Soria, scene of
a famous and brutally successful siege by the
Romans two millennia ago, until the tug and

98

Travel Broadens the Behind

the trailers with the rest of the expedition


arrived. As we landed the heavens opened up
and stayed open for days. It just poured. That
entirely unplanned wave flight turned out to
be the only decent flight of the entire expedition. The other members of the group were
oddly unwilling to listen to the exciting details
of our story. I can't think why.
I hardly need to point the moral of this tale
(apart from the practical one that if you have
to use belly hooks on aerotow, they should
have their back-releases immobilised for long
distance tows or launches in rough mountain
air). It is that the best flying often comes
when you have not planned it - out of the
blue, or in our case, out of the dirty grey.

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

Zooming around in the cockpit

suddenly feel thirsty and make for the only


source of moisture, the sweat that, what with
the heat and the pressing circumstances, is
pouring down your cheeks. They acquire a
keen curiosity about the interior geography of
your nostrils and ears. They get wedged
between your bifocals and the clip-on Polaroids
and block your view of the airspeed indicator,
vario and the ever-nearing featureless waste.
I have thought of fly-paper to trap them, a
pot of honey to keep them happy, or a lethal
blast from a flyspray to zap their central nervous systems, but with my robust airmanship
every loose object in the cockpit except the
flies would end up on the flypaper, and gobs
of honey would get all over the canopy; and in
the confines of a small cockpit I would worry
about the effect of biochemical warfare on my
own rather delicate central nervous system,
whatever disclaimers they print on the can.
I have just this very second thought of a
solution: a venturi device that is connected to
the outside airflow with a hose, so that you can
suck the little blighters up and squirt them out
of the clear vision panel. Pure genius!
Damn! The wretched creatures have splattered themselves all over my leading edge.
Featureless wastes, here I come. It'll be a long,
lonely walk in 100 degrees F - but I'll have
millions of flies for company ...

End-of-tour traileritis (1993)


After thousands of miles of towing across
many countries on the wrong side of the road,
what bliss it is to unhitch the trailer and dump
that long, dead weight back at the club! How
exhilarating to zoom off on the open highway,
free, free, no longer wondering whether the
swaying monster behind you has just wrecked
a market stall, ripped out a petrol pump or
run over a gendarme's foot.
Talking about the gendarmerie, my worst
moment with a trailer abroad was within sight
of the white cliffs, at the Calais hoverport. An
impatient employee of the hovercraft company
was signalling energetically that I should turn
right much more sharply than I wanted to, and
would I hurry up, please monsieur? I obeyed.
There was a series of rending metallic crashes
of the kind that make one's heart sink. I looked
in the wing mirror, aghast. The Cobra trailer

Travel Broadens the Behind


wheels had demolished the aluminium folding
doors of the customs shed, which were very
tall, very new, very elaborate and certainly
very expensive. They were folding all right, but
not the way the manufacturer intended.

****+**$$$$.

Immediately surrounded.

I was immediately surrounded by a dozen


flics and douaniers and hauled into a tiny office
to be interviewed at great length. I forgot that
there are occasions when it pays to appear to
be unable to speak any foreign language at all.
Masses of forms and insurance claim documents were filled in. Mothers and grandmothers were pledged, and I braced myself, on
returning home, for an avalanche of litigation.
I never heard a word about it again. I just
hope they lost the paperwork. But I've never
ventured near a hovercraft with a trailer since
then. I'd sooner go on a big ferry that is used to
handling articulated trucks. No, I don't intend
to take my glider through the Channel TUnnel
if it ever gets finished. I'm bound to get the
trailer wedged across the hole at the French
end, and then I'll see a strangely familiar
bunch of cops and customs men bearing down
on me with the glint of revenge in their eyes...

Hans-Werner Grosse on setting


world records (1988)
Platypus flew with Hans-Werner Grosse in Hans's
ASH-25 in Alice Springs just before Christmas
1987. No records were broken then, though the
experience of flying at near to never-exceed speeds
at 16,000 ft over a bright red and utterly unin
habited desert under a deep blue sky is something
every glider pilot should experience at least once.
As Plat departed for work in Sydney, Hans's wife
Karin arrived, the weather suddenly boomed and
several new world marks were set.

99

Platypus: What are the main ingredients in


breaking world records?
Hans-Werner Grosse: First, of course, you
need a good glider. Secondly, you need a lot of
experience. Then you need to look over the
globe for regions of good heating. Using the
Met information of different countries you
look for a 'boundary" between tropical air and
semi-arid regions. (Tropical air itself is useless; you don't want thunderstorms every
afternoon.) Don't put all your faith in the official weather statistics, however: before making a costly expedition to a far continent with
your own glider, you had better visit the
region and find out about the local soaring
weather for yourself.
For long triangles you need big plains
rather than mixtures of high mountains and
plains; discontinuities of surface features are
only partially beneficial.
Plat: Many of us dream about crossing
France by the Massif Central and flying on into
the Alps.
HWG: You must arrive at the mountains at
the correct time: it's difficult going from the
plain to the mountains. You might have done
records that way 30 years ago but not now.
The exception is the Appalachian "tramlines"
in the USA, but that is not for me. The only
decision you have to make is whether you fly
three metres or 15 metres over the trees.
There's very little choice.
Plat: Haven't they run out of space in the
Appalachians as the New Zealanders seem to
have done? (Many world records, especially O/R
distance, were achieved in New Zealand wave in
the 1960s)
HWG: No. They could increase the triangular distance considerably. Five pilots did
1,360km triangles on one day, which shows
that more is possible. One turnpoint has to be
well away from the ridge, requiring a dash in
ordinary thermals to and from the ridge.
The speed along the ridge can be increased
by using massive amounts of water-ballast,
since circling performance only matters for a
short distance. However, one pilot has been
killed flying overweight, trying to see how
much he could carry.
ooo

Plat: What speeds are achievable with presentday gliders on tasks up to SOOkms?

100

Travel Broadens the Behind

HWG: The current records are too low,


since such small distances are only attempted
on the second-best days. (Pilots confined to
British soaring conditions are allowed to take
a couple of minutes off while they bang their
heads against the nearest wall or just cry quietly into their beer ...)
If you are prepared to waste a good day (I
mean a day when you could have done
l,000kms or more) you might get 170 to
180km/h. On a really good day in this region
there will be two or three hours in the middle
when you can average more than 170km/h,
which would take you round a 500km ''sprint*
for the world record.
Speeds achieved in flights in South Africa
benefit from the high plains and consequent
high cloudbases. Your True Airspeed increases
relative to Indicated Airspeed by about 5% for
every 1000m, and that is equivalent to extra
ballast. Currently, however, taking everything
into consideration Alice Springs is the best
location as far as I am concerned.
Plat: What about wave?
HWG: We haven't seen really fast triangles
in wave yet. Wave is best for O/Rs, and maybe
for distance records - early morning and late
evening, with thermals in the middle.
Plat: New Zealand ran out of land.

Daring final glides.

HWIG: The usable parts of American


mountain ranges for wave may also be limited, because of the discontinuity between the
airmasses north and south of the jetstream.
That could limit the distances achieveable in
pure wave flight.
Plat: Justin Wills says that the pure distance
flight is not given the respect it deserves: it is seen
as an easy downwind dash, whereas it requires a
great deal of planning - as well as luck with the
weather. He is thinking especially of the problems
of organising a flight that starts in, say, Yorkshire,
and takes you across the Channel with the oppor
tunity to do a big distance on the other side.
HWG: I don't know whether it deserves
respect as such, but it definitely is an enjoyable experience. Yes, he has there the special
problem of crossing the Channel at the right
time and with enough height, not just to reach
the French coast but to be certain of penetrating the dead zone caused by the sea breeze
(which as you know becomes worse as the
day progresses) and reaching good soaring
conditions.
Plat: And there are special UK airspace prob
lems for a Channel dash, too. But looking at the
question of good soaring conditions, how often do
you get weather of the kind that enabled you to
get 1,460km in 1972?
HWG: The flight in the ASW-12 from
Liibeck to Biarritz was done in weather that I
have never witnessed since that day - which
explains why it is still the world record in
spite of technical improvements in gliders
and weather forecasting. Imagine a great 'bubble" of cold air sweeping in from northern
Sweden, ideal for soaring, that had passed
over us in the night; I ran into the rear of it at
exactly the right time in the morning over the
Rhine, and ran out of the front of it south of
Bordeaux late in the afternoon. With today's
gliders in the same weather you'd exceed that
distance, naturally.
Plat: But you'd run through the bubble quick
er and maybe not go any further at the end of the
day.
HWG: Yes, but you'd have a better chance
of catching it from behind at the beginning of
the day.
Plat: Are you saying that such an airmass is
limited in size?
HWG: Yes, it always seems so - at least the
most beneficial part of it is.

Travel Broadens the Behind


Plat: What sort of dimensions?
HWG: 800 to 1,000km is a goodsize airmass
- and it's moving downwind quite fast, of
course, which adds some hundreds of extra
kilometres.
Plat: What about straight-out distance record
possibilities in other pans of the world?
HWG: Some people in the USA describe
flights of 2,000km, starting in wave, as possible.
Plat: Yes, starting very early in a high wave
and doing a long downwind glide to reach the
thermals just as they are starting. At the World
Champs in 1965 at South Cerney I met one of the
American support team, Brittingham, who told
me of a heroic attempt which took them (I think
it was a two-seater) about 300km from the top of
a big wave with the help of a strong tailwind;
only snag was, there weren't any thermals at the
end of it, so they just ran into the ground before
lunch time. The great wave day and the great
thermal day don't necessarily plug into each
other neatly - though Nick Goodhart got a (com
pletely unplanned) wave to 10,000ft at the other
end of the day on his goal flight to Portmodk in
1959, which still stands as a UK goal distance
record.
HWG: Another problem is that the direction of the tailwind component is often inconsistent, because of the discrepancy between
upper and lower level winds. In fact consistent winds over 2000km are unlikely.
Obviously if the wind curves a lot you get less
benefit from it in terms of free kilometres.
000

The Biarritz flight was a "gift from heaven." In


southern Germany you couldn't have soared

Crossing frontiers.

101

at all - it was overcast. There was no special


pilot skill involved.
Plat: But you showed me the weather maps
for the period up to and including that day; you
obviously expected good conditions.
HWG: You must prepare - you have to be
ready and not be taken by surprise. The
approaching airmass was quite easy to forecast.
You too could break records, if only you are
prepared.
Plat: if you couldn't fly for some reason could
you coach other people to break records?
HWG: Not everyone could be coached; you
would have to be successful in competitions
first. You have to be prepared to speculate and
drive yourself forward. It's getting the balance
between daredevilry and hesitation. You must
be able to imagine the "energy-track" through
the best air that will be your flight path. I
think one could train people to be better. But
what you can achieve that way is limited.
Plat: If you took the Tbp Ten from each Class
in the World Championships and set up a com
petition at Alice Springs, could you get records
out of such a meeting?
HWG: Yes! However, some competition
pilots win just by their skill in gaggle flying
and by more daring final glides. But the
record-setter needs to sense where the invisible streets of lift are - without depending on
other gliders to mark them. Ingo Renner, for
instance, could definitely break all records
here as soon as the right conditions came
along. Some other top pilots might just kill
themselves by misjudgment: landing out in
this region can be fatal - it's simply not on.
Plat: What do you have to say about gadgetry
and instruments?
HWG: The Biarritz flight was done without
waterballast and with primitive instruments:
the vario had a leaky total energy. Certainly
good instruments make flights easier, but
pilots have won competitions with elementary instruments.
I wouldn't like to fly now without my
Schumann vario and Schumann box for total
energy compensation. It's a mechanical vario
and shows me a reliable picture of the value of
thermals; it's American and the weaker US
dollar makes it cheaper now, by the way.
Plat: Why isn't an electrical vario better?

102

Travel Broadens the Behind

There was no chance to show truly superior


ability. Pilots should go to the briefings with an
ability to understand weather, they should
study those temperature traces and make their
plans. It should be as in chess, where the superior brain has the superior chance of winning.
ooo

Reach the French coast.

HWG: I don't know why, but the Schumann


vario works. I use the electrical for the audio,
for the computer and for final glides.
Plat: Have you ever flown gliders in England?
HWG: No, only Tiger Moths, when I came
over to Southend and bought one after the
war. (HWG subsequently told us how he came
to be shot down in his Ju 88 torpedo-bomber
in World War II, but that was in the
Mediterranean.)
ooo

Plat: Aren't you interested in championship fly


ing any more?
HWG: Closed-circuit speed tasks, which is
what championships consist of entirely these
days, are a dead end. They are not meaningful tests of pilots, they only improve certain
skills. Most of it is tactical point-snatching.
Sadly, free distance isn't practical nowadays - think of 3,000km retrieves! However,
Maurie Bradney at Waikerie is testing a modern form of cat's cradle, which uses multiple
TPs which the pilot does not have to declare
in advance. Outlandings are avoided as much
as possible but the ability to use the whole day
is tested. This has real possibilities.
I quit competitions years ago and never
regretted it. I lost interest when I found that
my experience was not broadened, new
insights not gained. The top pilots felt frustrated after Benalla. Yes, there were big distances
flown at high speeds, but it became a treadmill.

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.

The rain in Spain sprays mainly


on my plane - again (1998)
In May 1998 my second gliding trip to the
Iberian peninsula contained one more hazard
than the first one in May 1993 - a competition. It requires more airmanship and more
common-sense than I possess to get through a
contest unscathed in a country which has
almost no aerodromes and in which ploughed
fields are about the only resort in an emergency. All other fields in Spain seem to he full
of little trees or irrigation pipes. Not a problem, of course, if the weather is benign and
everyone stays up.
The weather was malign.
I'll skate quickly over the humiliating
details and just admit that I did 3,000 worth
of dings to wingtip and fuselage on Day Four
of the British Overseas Championships. Lots
of field landings were done by other pilots
without comparable damage, so I offer no
excuses. Disconsolate, we trailed the bits
home through continuous down-pour from
south of Madrid, through France - the entire
country from Biarritz to Calais darkened in a
veritable monsoon, the peage and the thun-

Travel Broadens the Behind


dering camions barely visible even at mid-day
- to the Dunstable workshop.
This set me thinking about field landings
and the increasing undesirability of having to
do them. In the 1950s and early 1960s nearly
every cross-country ended in a field. This was
exciting at the time, if only because we were
young, but this necessity also conferred two
advantages. First, because our gliders were
expected by Fred Slingsby to have their noses
rubbed violently into agricultural dirt after
almost every flight, they were designed with
monstrous great skids to do the work of stopping the aircraft and protecting the cockpit.
Secondly the pilots got very expert at picking
fields and landing in them, often doing 20 or
more field landings a year.
Modern gliders, by contrast, have no protection forward of the wheel, and if the wheel
sinks into soft, rock-strewn soil then stones can
do a lot of damage. Pilots in modern gliders
also do very few outlandings, and they can usually reach a proper airfield if the weather turns
sour. It is now possible to go through entire seasons without ever being forced to land in a
farm. So we aren't used to it - and when we do
discover that this wonderful 60:1 craft really
isn't going to stay up it is a nasty psychological
jolt. We did not experience any such jolts in the
days of wood: the question was not whether we
would hit the spuds but where. Now we find we
are approaching this unknown patch of terrain
in a fast, slippery projectile that won't relish
getting grit up its nose. All of a sudden we wish
this was a Skylark 3.
Landing out, which was once the rule, is
now the exception. There are now far fewer
field landings per 100 miles of flying than 40
years ago, but the proportion that cause damage is probably higher, and as for the cost of
repairs...
Comps directors and rule-makers can do a
lot to minimise damage by clumsy oafs like
me. I mean apart from banning us from
comps entirely. There are a lot of us clumsy
oafs, and we are an important constituency
who need to he considered, almost as big as
the leech constituency, with which there is
of course a sizeable overlap. We usually prang
in fields when we can't find somebody to
leech off.
As a contest director and task-setter in the
past - fear of lawyers now deters me, and I am

103

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

104

Travel Broadens the Behind

person shudder: all that can be said for it is


that it has endless comic possibilities for this
column.

The new supership for 2000 AD


(1999)
If I were a Fleet Street hack, I would say 'for
the Millennium" except that am I one of the
stubborn pedants who knows that the
Millennium begins on Jan 1, 2001, and I hope
the new project is not delayed till then. This
limited-edition two-seat motorglider on order
by Hans-Werner Grosse, Bruno Gantenbrinck
and a handful of very keen span-druggies is
rumoured to cost around a quarter of a million Pounds and will have 30.9 metres span,
though it sounds more impressive if I say 101
ft. That is slightly more wingspan that the
short-lived Austria14 of 1930, in which Robert
Kronfeld made history by being the first pilot
to escape from a glider by parachute, after it
broke up in cloud. Materials and structures
have improved a lot in the past 70 years. In
mid-May 1999 the test rig managed finally to
break the wing at 9G. That is twice the G-loading at which Hans and his crew were starting
to black out in Junkers 88 dive-bombing practice. So if you do manage to break the wing of
the new ship, you probably won't hear it
unless you are wearing a G-suit. With luck it
will be flying in the spring of 2000.
14 Kronfeld hoped that with the very low sinking speed
and low flying speed of the Austria he should be able
to gain sufficient height, by flying straight across a
thermal, to get to the next thermal, and so on indefi
nitely. The Holy Grail of cross-country flight without
this tedious circling business would thereby be
achieved. The Austria never lasted long enough to test
this proposition. However aerodynamicists who have
examined the extremely cambered (high-lift, very high
drag) wing-section of the Austria have deduced that its
max glide was about that of Ka 8, say 27:1. With its lim
ited speed range, and bearing in mind the sink
between thermals, the Austria would have lost too
much height before it reached the next source of lift to
achieve the cross-country flight without circling.
The new supership is another matter. If you see it
circling, it means either (a) the pilot's GPS has failed
and he is lost, or (b) he is letting passenger take sce
nic photographs, or (c) soaring conditions are so terri
ble that everyone else might as well go back to bed.

Performance should be about 20% better than


the 25-metre ASH-25, at least at lowish speeds
that are appropriate to northern European
weather: that is an L/D of around 68 to one.
For those jaded with a mere 27-metres, it is
the perfect fix, at least till the next one comes
out, at, let me see...
(Are you calculating the span, the performance or the price? Ed.)
All of them. On the realistic basis that cost
goes up as the cube of the span, and making a
modest allowance of 3.5% annual UK inflation
and another 2.0% annual slippage of the currently over-valued Pound against the D-Mark
or Euro, then in 11 years' time, when I am the
age that Hans-Werner Grosse is now, I should
be able to get, wait for it 33.2 metres (109ft), giving a max glide of
about 73:1 forOne Million Pounds.
Monte Carlo, here I come!

Omarama nirvana (1998)


I return from New Zealand full of regret. Why
hadn't I gone there 20 years earlier? Why do I
only discover this wonderful place when I'm on
the brink of collecting my old age pension?
Well, there is no point in fretting about lost
opportunities, Plat, just get yourself organised
to go again every December from now on while
you can still tell your port from your starboard.
I flew Justin Wills's ASW-17, one of the few
Schleicher designs that I hadn't flown before,
and a delightful machine it was, too. Justin
flew his much-loved Libelle 301 - that's the
flapped version - and I should have been outflying him at every point with my 20 metres to
his 15. Mysteriously this was hardly ever the
case. In fact there is a consensus amongst the
local pilots that we should get him a more
modern machine - one with top-surface
brakes only. That way we would be spared the
humiliation, as we struggle to get to his altitude, of seeing his lower brakes sticking out
while he waits for us to catch up. We could
instead delude ourselves that we were truly
gaining on him. While chasing Justin round
the unfamiliar rockscape I would watch the
Libelle gradually shrink in the distance until
he heard on the radio a sound that must be

Travel Broadens the Behind


familiar to the owner of 10,000 sheep - the
bleating of a lost lamb, "Ju-u-usti-in, whe-e-eere a-a-are yo-ou?" - at which point he would
throw a circle so I could see him. Since the
ASW-17 outflew the Libelle in level flight in
the wave, and is obviously the better straightline performer, I can only conclude that Justin
was getting more lift off the rocks than I was,
and accordingly that he was flying much closer to them than I dared.
Day by day, however, this old and very
unbold pilot acquired more confidence as he
got lost less often, identified the best outlanding strips by eyeball, and applied the lessons
learnt from Jacques Noel at Gap last spring, in
particular: "Keep your speed up and always
have your escape route in mind."
Soaring the face of Mount Cook, 100 kms
north of Omarama, was the most enduring
impression. The second most enduring
Get clean away in NZ skies (1998)
New Zealand air is clean. Not only is it free of
bugs, it is free of dirt Industrial filth does not
pollute the leading edges, or the pilot's lungs,
the way it does in England. The air that
sweeps across the Tasman Sea or the Pacific
has not touched land for thousands of miles.
Take a little ride up in the wave, not very
high, and you can see both oceans at the
same time. The visibility is virgin vodka: on a
1,000 kilometre out and return the only thing
that would stop you seeing both the start and
the turn-point when half way down the first
leg would be the curvature of the earth.
The South Island is about the same area as
England and Wales, but with less than a fifti
eth of the people. The mountainous west is
truly unspoilt. It looks as the European Alps
must have looked in the days before some
body decided that an Alp wasn't a proper Alp
unless it sported a television mast or a funicu
lar railway or a hotel or a ski-station or a mas
sage-parlour or something ugly that made
money. The sense of wildness and wilderness
amongst the dazzling white New Zealand
peaks is total: there are hardly any roads or
even tracks down in the narrow green valleys;
if there are I couldn't see them. And since
there is nobody down there to watch televi
sion there are no masts. I wonder for how
long ?

105

impression was when I decided to take some


pictures for Sailplane & Gliding, threw a lazy
circle over the great tent-shaped peak, forgot
that the westerly winds at 13,000 ft were 70kt,
and plummetted 2,000 ft into the vicious leeside downdraught in the cold, dark shadow of
the mountain. Something to remember for
next time. I made six trips to Mount Cook, and
on every occasion the mountain looked different, sometimes wearing a teardrop-shaped
cloudcap like a racing cyclist's helmet.
I may have just been lucky, but every day
of the two weeks I was there I could have
soared in wave, thermal, convergence or
ridge-lift. The only reason for my choosing to
stay on the ground for four days was for recuperation, especially after one eight-hour bout
of polishing rock and pursing every variety of
rising air.
Navigation in New Zealand is easy, so long
as you can see the ground. Mountain ranges
and distinctive lakes make GPS unnecessary
for the experienced local. However it is a
great comfort to the newcomer to have the
GPS tell him that he is in easy gliding range of
a scrap of ground that is occasionally used as
a crop-dusting strip. I wouldn't have noticed
the strips at all without the satellites calling
out, "Look down now, stupid!" although some
strips are said to have a telltale patch of white
chemicals at the uphill end, towards which
the busy Pawnee-driver, or the failed soaring
pilot, points himself on the approach. GPSlinked glide computers are not idiot-proof, or
at least not yet, and you do need to look at the
terrain intelligently: the computers have not
been trained to say, "You can reach this field,
sir, but ONLY if you can drill through nine
miles of solid rock. Would you mind if I suggested an alternative place to crash?" We'll
have such gadgets soon, don't worry.
"Come on, what about the famous Kiwi
wave?" you are asking. You know, I think that
the damn wave has got the country typecast
in the minds of the world gliding fraternity,
like an actor that is only expected to play
swashbuckling parts when he can do a hundred other more interesting characters. Thus
visiting Australian pilots, and a lot of British
too, come to Omarama solely for their height
diamonds and head home the moment they
have their badge. If a doctor said to me, "Your
softening brain must never be taken above

106

Travel Broadens the Behind

12,000ft again except in an airliner," I would


still want to glide in New Zealand as often as
possible. Yes, some day I'd like to take some
expert advice and try a really big distance
flight that used the wave, but solely for the
vast speed that it offers, not for altitude.
When you think of Kiwi gliding, don't think
of height: think of beauty, variety, solitude
and unlimited possibilities for exploration and
adventure.

Up the Creek without a paddock


(G Wills 1999)
If I said to you there's a top soaring pilot living in
new Zealand by the name of Wills you'd think I
was talking of Justin Wills, whose farm is near
the foot of Mount Cook. But Gavin Wills, Justin's
half-cousin, is a mountain soaring pilot of amaz
ing skill. His flights in the New Zealand January
2000 Nationals left me, as hapless (and useless,
except as undroppable ballast) passenger in his
Duo Discus, quite staggered at the untamed
beauty of the landscape, which I viewed at much
closer quarters than I normally care to, and at
his skill in extracting updraughts from every
crevice. He wrote for the New Zealand magazine
Gliding Kiwi this account of a New Year's Eve
adventure that I shall not forget. What is unique
about this narrative is that Gavin was nowhere
near the scene of the action at any time. From a
few fragments of phone conversations and
hearsay he has constructed a remarkably accu
rate picture of a near-disaster that was somehow
averted.
Platypus is a well known and respected
correspondent for the English magazine
Sailplane & Gliding. During a recent flying
visit to New Zealand he left a message on
my cell phone. It was obviously important
but it was so full of unanswered questions
that I thought it might be fun to share
around.
He and Justin Wills were enjoying a glider
flight from Lake Manapouri in the south of the
South Island back to Omarama. Justin was flying his immaculate Libelle and the Platypus
was pair-flying in Justin's ASW-17. They went
via the scenic route (as Justin was wont to
describe it) which meant 250 km of scraping
along mountain ridges and over some of the

most inhospitable valleys of the Southern


Alps.
The cell phone message went like this.....
"Hello Gavin, I've landed in a little meadow by the Lake at the bottom of Timaru
Creek."
I'm thinking - Yikes, what are you doing
there, mate? Timaru Creek is full of precipitous
rock, forests and a long boulder-strewn valley
floor. Glider pilots have spent many a drunken
night debating how to deal with the awful consequences of getting low in Timaru Creek does one land in the rocks, the lake or the trees?
"I'm fine..."
"What about the glider, then?"
"...and I'm drinking beer with the Lake
Hawea fire brigade."
What? Not a good move; it's New Year's Eve
and 30 km away from the glider! And anyway
how did they get the Fire Engine up the track
beside the lake and who the Hell called them
out?
"Do you have Gillian's cell phone number?"
"No. But where is Justin?"
"Please let her know that I'm not with glider but I'm at the fire station."
"OK, but where's Justin?"
"Thanks a lot, see you later."
So I called Gillian at home but there was no
reply and it was not until the next day that the
story began to unfold.
The Platypus had lost radio contact with
Justin, his pair-flying guide, at about the time
they entered Timaru Creek. Whilst trying to
establish radio contact and with Justin circling
overhead, presumably with his head out the
window trying to shout instructions, the
Platypus descended inexorably into airspace
hitherto unexplored by glider pilots - the terrifying canyon of Timaru Creek. The GPS
trace subsequently showed that he was below
about 500 feet above ground for 15 minutes
before he exited the valley at 250 feet heading
for Lake Hawea. Whilst he was preparing for a
water landing, the "little meadow" apparently
popped onto glide slope from amongst the
trees and the Platypus gratefully groundlooped to a stop. He landed without damage.
And what about the Fire Brigade? Justin,
ever mindful of his responsibilities, had called
an emergency via the local gliding frequency
and the Lake Hawea Fire Brigade took off up
the lake. But what they are still puzzled about

Travel Broadens the Behind


is how and why they were called to a crash
site 15 minutes before it never happened!
The meadow is clearly an important place
that should pass into local gliding legend. It
should be known as the Platypus Patch, and
because he solved the debate of what to do
when one gets low in that inhospitable canyon,
all South Island glider pilots should be forever
grateful to the Man from Timaru Creek!
Gavin Wills
Platypus insists on having the last few hundred
words: I'm bridling somewhat at the suggestion
that I wilfully chose to abandon the glider and
goof off to some party 30 Terns away. Within min
utes of my arrival the police, ambulance and fire
brigade, in that order, all turned up on the
unmetalled road that came reasonably near the
clump of grass I'd landed on - meadow is far too
grand a term. After I had photographed the
ambulance ladies and the fire engine and all who
sailed in her, the cop car whisked me away to the
fire station to communicate with my friends at
Omarama. Here the firemen insisted, against my
The sport of cooks
National characteristics should never be crude
ly stereotyped. It's rude and wrong to assume
that the English are cold, the Americans loud,
the Germans boringly efficient the Italians
randy, etc. etc. I once landed at a farm near
Vendome in France, where after hosing the
cow-pats out of the tail parachute the
farmer's two children kindly took me to the
pond, in which the three of us began to fish
with crude bamboo rods. In no time I hooked
a sizeable perch which I swung joyously over
my shoulder onto the grass. Knowing the
French hunted solely for food and not, as the
English, for the pleasure of inflicting terror
and pain on dumb animals, I set about this fish
with my rod and bashed its head in, yelling,
"Look kids, supper!" in my best French. They
burst into tears. "That's Alphonse", they cried,
"we always throw him back!" I could have
thrown myself into the pond in remorse.
All the same, they recovered their
sangfroid and not long after, Alphonse,
sauteed in home-made butter, was as good to
them as they formerly had been to him.
Maybe the stereotypes have something to be
said for them after all.

107

protestations, that I was in shock from my ordeal


and needed a stiff brandy or two. This diagnosis
licensed an instant emergency raid on the medi
cine chest. Trauma is clearly contagious, because
several of the off-duty volunteer firemen decided
that they might be in shock, too. Since it was New
Year's Eve, wives and girlfriends began to arrive
and it became pretty gregarious.
After some hours waiting patiently by the
phone, I eventually said that I better head back
towards the glider since dusk was approaching and
I had no idea where anyone was. A police car came
and fetched me, and had gone about a kilometre
when to my astonishment I saw Gillian and Justin
Wills in their Holden station wagon, with trailer and smiling! Apparently Justin had seen me hit the
ground and knew exactly where I was, and soared
home. A four-wheel drive vehicle and a large band
of strong men supplemented the Wills team, and all
had gone straight to the spot, found the glider quite
unharmed (to general astonishment), and derigged
it without any interference from me. Then the
strong men headed back to Omarama to resume
their interrupted New Year's Eve party on the site,
and Gillian and Justin headed for the Lake Hawea
town, where we joyously met.
I walked carefully and thoughtfully over that
patch of ground two weeks later when on a
motoring tour of the South Island. I would not
accept 3,000 in hard currency to do that landing
again, even after having the advantage of
inspecting every hummock, hillock, gully, rabbit
hole, tree and bush close up. Well, not if the other
side of the bet was that I paid for any damage to
the glider or myself.

Roar before you soar (1999)


One easy way to make enemies unnecessarily
is to be the sort of person who will do anything to get a laugh, no matter at whose
expense and no matter how unjust. That must
be the only reason I have not got my knighthood by now - some cheap throwaway joke
about the Royal Family, I seem to remember.
The little grey men must have there with
their notebooks.
Typical of this kind of cruelty to innocent
bystanders was when, in a Soaring Society of
America banquet speech in Seattle in 1993, I
said that gliding cross-country with an engine
in reserve was like making love with a con-

108

Travel Broadens the Behind

dom: The only time it gets exciting is when


the bloody gadget fails!"
But now I may be changing my mind.
Before I am inundated with free samples
and lavishly-illustrated 30-page user's manuals from the London Rubber Company, I
should explain quickly that it is, of course
engines in gliders about which I may be
changing my mind. The SSA remark got a
laugh at the expense of the motor-glider pilots
but it was hardly fair, since at that time I had
never flown in any glider with an engine.
More than a year went by before Marion
Barritt and I visited Hans-Werner Grosse at
the 1994 German Nationals at NeustadtGlewe, in what had been East Germany. In
the middle of the vast grass airfield, by the airport buildings, there were still the steel-wire
cages erected by the old regime to corral the
power planes so as to prevent unreliable elements escaping from the people's paradise to
the West German border, only 50kms away.
One felt the squalor and the chill of the Cold
War as if it had not yet ended. In what had
once been a beautiful area, the fields around
Neustadt-Glewe were ripped up and stained
by Soviet tanks, now long departed, their
crews having poured used oil into the ground
as a matter of habit.
/ won't describe here the ordeal the previous day
of driving at a snail's pace, Marion patiently at the
wheel, with my un-motored ASH-25 in the trailer,
across the Polish-German border with several thou
sand other vehicles after the British Overseas
Nationals in Leszno, with no lavatories except the
woods on either side: that revolting experience has
been related elsewhere, and mined many a read
er's breakfast. However I now realise that if my
ASH-25 had been equipped with an engine, I could
have flown over the border on that damp and drea
ry afternoon, and taken my chances with the local
customs and immigration wherever I landed.
Anything would have been better than the hours in
the queue at Frankfuri-am-Oder. Never again shall
I take a glider by road into or out of Poland. No, it
has not got better since 1994: I noticed from the
aerial photographs taken near the border by Uli
Schwenk, winner of the 1998 World Open Class
Championships in Poland, that the Frankfurt-amOder queues are undiminished, and still stretch
from horizon to horizon.
Hans-Werner Grosse has long been a convert to motor-gliding, and as one of Hans' fans

I ought to have been less skeptical about


engines. Liibeck, where he normally flies, is a
maritime town vulnerable to all the vile and
variable weather that seaports are bound to
suffer. In short, the air is very British. Even
the biggest wings need help in such skies.
Hans flew his 27-metre ASH-25 from
Luebeck to Neustadt-Glewe as a visitor, not as
a contestant - Hans has some acid remarks to
make about modern competitions: the unwillingness of pilots to take risks, and their preference for a day when all land out, or simply
don't take off, over any risk that the other guy
might get the smallest advantage . This glider,
a Walter Binder modification, is soon about to
be superseded by a 31-meter behemoth, but
more of that later. Immense trouble had been
taken to reduce weight. So the glider had no
tow-hook, and only one instrument panel up
front. That makes it a true motorglider, in that
it cannot be launched at all except by its own
power. However it was not too hard to see the
key instruments from the rear seat. However
that could just be because Hans is not a big
pilot. The canopy was a single-piece affair,
very much like a Schempp two-seater.
In case you think I am biased to Schleicher, I
ought to mention that I fly a syndicated Janus C
from Minden in Nevada, and love it. The Janus
is the only tandem two-seater that - never having
been an instructor and got used to back-seat driv
ing - I am happy to fly from the back as pilot in
charge; this I put down to the splendid view from
the one-piece canopy. Sealing may be a problem
with one-piece canopies (either from differential
expansion due to heating or from airframe flex
ing) and I am terrified of damaging them when
open on the ground, but on balance I prefer
them.
I have flown with lots of friends in our
Dunstable-based ASH-25, and those that have
never flown in a big ship are always astonished. 'It never seems to come down!" they all
exclaim. After 11 seasons of flying an ASH-25
and being thoroughly spoilt, there is only one
way for the blase to recapture that sense of
astonishment: that is to upgrade to a more
powerful drug and add another two metres.
The sense of floating through the clouds
effortlessly in Hans-Werner's machine was
evident even to a pampered old roue like me.
On a somewhat soggy, overdeveloped day
much like any English day, three hundred

Travel Broadens the Behind


kilometres just drifted by in three hours without much circling.
However the real fun was at the beginning.
After the uneventful but noisy climb to 500
metres not far from the airfield, the engine was
supposed to retract. Instead it stuck in a partretracted position, which was just about the
worst thing it could do, since it caused massive
drag but was unusable as propulsion. We probably could not glide back to the field and ought
to prepare to land out. It was a less than ideal
situation if we had to land on rough terrain in
that state, I pondered as the individual with his
head nearest to this big lump of inert metal.
With all the calm of a battle-scarred Junkers 88
torpedo-bomber pilot, Hans fired up his mobile
phone and called the designer of the engine at
home. What plan B was if the inventor had not
been at home, I never enquired.
As I tell the story to my cronies in the
Dunstable bar, when we are vying for the honour of having had the most hair-raising experiences, the designer was in his bath, and he
and Hans had a friendly chat about the state
of their wives' health, as one does, before getting round to the fact that Hans and I were
falling out of the sky and needed advice of a
practical and immediate nature. This story is
a gross (sorry) exaggeration since I have no
grasp of conversational German and have
only the most general idea of what was said.
Certainly there seemed to be no sense of
panic, and the essential information was
obtained. Polite good-byes were exchanged,
the mobile phone was stowed, the engine was
stowed, and we soared away.
I have to admit, that was exciting .

French without tears (1999)


I am not joking when I say that if I had not
been born British (I am I fact 45% English, 48%
Scots, 12% Norwegian and 11% Irish - no, don't
bother to write in) I would like to have been
born American or French. The Americans I
admire for their energy, enthusiasm and restless pursuit of perfection; the French I envy for
their culture, sophistication and their confident
assurance that they are already perfect. I am
receiving from my good friend (well, he was
until five minutes ago) Jean-Renaud Faliu a
wonderful aviation magazine called Volez! It is

109

lively and good to look at. It is so attractive I


am almost inclined to go back to France to
glide after a lapse of several years. However
the bureaucracy - and I am talking of the
country that taught the world the meaning of
bureaucracy - a British pilot now has to go
through to be allowed to aviate in France is so
tedious you begin to think they have mistaken
the poor guy for a truck-load of condemned
beef. Why French physicians have to probe
every alien orifice to determine whether a visitor is i\ hazard to aerial navigation, and are not
prepared to take the word of a British doctor, I
don't know. No wonder French doctors of
Medecins sans Fnmtieres got a Nobel prize for
boldly going where nobody else is prepare to
venture.
But Volez! makes flying in France look
enormous fun and I may decide it is worth
the hassle. So I am reading it avidly not just to
find out what exciting things are going on
across the Channel - like mid-air collisions
between gliders and airliners - but to acquire
some vocabulary before a future visit. Volez! is
written in a breezy style, a bit like Pete
Harvey in a beret with a Gauloise stuck to his
lip, very colloquial. Even my Distinction in
School Certificate French in 1949 isn't up to
capturing the nuances without a lot of help
from a charming French-born female neighbour here in London. (And you can wipe that
smirk off your face, too. These translating sessions are hard work.) Here are a few phrases
that I found in Volez! that caught my eye.
What, for instance, is "trou bleu?" Since the
context of the article indicates serious concern amongst the pilots involved in the
world's first ever 500-km cross-country, this is
clearly something worrisome. Should we pack
all our trou bleus in our old kit bag and smile,
smile, smile? No, a "trou bleu" is, of course, a
blue hole. "Trous bleus" is therefore not the
standard dress worn by generations of French
farmers but a multiplicity of blue holes.
"Rues de cumulus" is so obvious I won't
insult you by translating it. But I might mention that an Australian play called
"Cloudstreets" is being highly acclaimed in
London this month, and because of the title I
am inclined to go along to see if they try to
launch a glider into the auditorium in Act
two. It's astonishing what stage effects they
can get these days. I went to "les Miserables"

110

Travel Broadens the Behind

some years ago and I could not remember a


single tune, but came out whistling the
scenery instead.
What is a "coque"? As Mrs Platypus found
out years ago, after being asked by a
Frenchman to hold it firmly as we de-rigged in
a wheat field, that is merely the fuselage. As
in monocoque construction.
'A deux doigts de vacher". That ought to
mean it takes just two fingers to milk a cow.
But I think it really means to be within an ace
of landing out.
"Treuil bitambour" From the picture I can
see that a treuil is a winch, but what is bitambour? Well I guess it is breaks down into bitambour - sounds like two tambourines. TWodrum winch, of course!
"Un bon vent dans le dos" could mean "I
really had the breeze up" but no, it means "a
good tail wind". Likewise to suffer from "prise
au vent" does not mean those haricots in garlic butter you had at lunchtime are working
overtime: it means Drag. (Sorry, Interested of
Bedfordshire, dressing up in women's clothes
is not "prise au vent". No I am not going to ask
my French neighbour what it is either.)
I am sure that the punishment squad of the
Academic Francaise will pounce on the
Anglo-Saxon "logger" and drag the editor of
Volez! to Devil's Island or to compulsory cultural re-education classes ("Devil's Island, any
time!" shrieks the editor as we see his heels
disappear through the doorway.) Yes, "logger"
means logger. Soon the Academic will come
up with a three-word, ten-syllable expression
that means the same.
I bet "lancer au sandow" has you stumped.
I knew by pure chance. I had tried for my
height diamond over 20 years ago at Sisteron
many times without success, and got to
20,000ft in my Nimbus 2 on the very last day
of my third visit to that site. Kiki, later manag
er of several victorious French World

Championship teams, produced an oxygen set


and said he would secure it into the space
behind my head with what he mysteriously
called "sandows". These turned out to be bungies. But why sandow? Then I remembered
that Eugene Sandow was a famous strong man
a century ago, who was a whiz at self-promotion. He must have built his pectoral muscles
with chest-expanders made of rubber shock
cords, and marketed them on the "You too can
have a body like mine" theme, so his name
stuck. The usual chest-expanders one sees in
sports gear shops use spiral steel springs, but
they rip out the chest-hairs and pinch the nipples if you let go of them too suddenly, and
whatever you might think to the contrary, that
really is not my idea of a good time. Rubber is
safer, though I still think you might catapult
yourself out of the window if you are careless,
so strenuous exercise should be restricted to
the ground floor till Bronze C standard is
gained. (What the heck has this to do with gliding? New Ed.) Sorry, all I meant to say was that
"lancer au sandow" is to bungy-launch.

Now you have perfected your word-power,


you are fully prepared for a soaring expedition
to France. Well, apart for the medical, and how
you practise for that is your business.

Under western skies: gliding in the USA


It was either Oscar Wilde or George Bernard Shaw who said that America and Britain
were two countries separated by a common language. Like most witty remarks that
one is less than half true. If an Englishman wants to feel he is in a foreign country with
out the hassle of getting a passport he should board a bus in Newcastle-on-Tyne and
try to figure out what the two Geordies in the seat in front are saying to each other.
Thanks to the happy chance that the earth rotates from west to east, you can
board a plane in rainy London at breakfast-time, cross the Arctic Circle and arrive in
California in time for lunch and a soaring flight over the Mojave Desert where the
dust devils spiral up to 18,000ft. The place is so near, the cost of getting there and
the cost of living so low; I am astonished so few people come from Britain to the USA
to glide. I can only put it down to lack of information.

Great snakes! (1991)


From the 1991 World Champs Newsletter,
"Uvalde Express", Texas, edited by Marion Barritt
The best glider pilots are supposed to make a
fresh decision every 30 seconds. This is
believed to illustrate what massive intellectual pressures our champions are under as they
battle with the elements. What it in fact
means is that the greatest soaring brains in
the world have the attention span of all of 30
seconds on a good day. A grasshopper could
concentrate longer.
This was well demonstrated by the response
to the excellent lecture by Dr Walt Cannon
(one of the big guns in aviation medicine, as
they say) in which he strove, against the collective will of the finest gliding minds in our
globe, to get across the simple fact that the
greatest danger to pilots flying in this neck of
the woods was dehydration. Not snakes, nor
alligators, nor the National Rifle Association,
but plain lack of water. Dr Cannon's problem
was that he addressed himself to the left-handed, or rational and cogitative, side of the audience's cerebellum (or cerebella, since glider
pilots can never be said to be all of one mind).
''So you can see from all these graphs and
tables that you must drink lots of wa..."
'What about cobras ... ?"
'There are no cobras. As I was saying, drink
lots of..."
"What about coral snakes?"
"Forget the coral snakes, it's thirst you
should..."
A long argument ensues amongst the audience about whether snakes kill their victims

with anti-coagulant or coagulant ... or by


attacking the central nervous system.
'It doesn't matter, you won't die/' explains a
slightly impatient doctor.
"Not even from a rattlesnake sitting on
your parachute?" asks an insistent pilot.
By now Dr Cannon is clearly wishing that
his tormentors were all sitting on rattlesnakes.
I was tempted to bring up the report I'd
heard during three minutes of television news
- mixed in with 57 minutes of advertisements
for haemorrhoid cures etc - that there were
200 swarms of killer bees loose in southern
Ttexas. However that would have prevented me
from raising the key issue: "What happens
medically to people who have had nothing to
eat since breakfast and have to wait till past
9pm listening to a load of irrelevant questions?"
But, being neither a pilot (admired and
respected for being their country's chosen
representatives) nor crew (cossetted, or at
least tolerated, for their sacrifice and selfless
labour) but an insignificant in-between, a backseat, pass-the-pee-bags-don't-vomit-down-the-

112

Under Western Skies

great-man's-neck co-pilot, navigator and reargunner, I kept silent.


Dr Cannon deserves a medal. It's his audience who should be fired.
Noted in Uvalde
A talking pickup truck: as we came out of a
restaurant and walked between two parked
vehicles, one of them boomed in a Robocop
voice, "Get-away-from-this-vee-hicle! Youare-too-close!" It's the only time I've ever
wished to vandalise an innocent pickup
truck, partly out of curiosity as to what it
might have to say on the subject.
The heat. Pilots sat in air-conditioned cars
until the last moment, then were escorted
under umbrellas to their gliders. As soon as
the pilots were launched the crews raced to
the hotel pool, their radios close at hand.
The domination of the automobile. I have
seen no pedestrian crossings or "islands"
half-way across those wide, wide roads. You
just take your life in your hands and dash.
Yes, Granny, that means you too. (So that's
why the little old ladies all wear Olympic
running shoes!)
The perpetual sunshine. I could hardly
believe the statistic that over 95% of days
are good for cross-countries, but we are
coming up to that ratio already since arriving here and no relief in sight.
Nevertheless the yearning for a cool, wet
English day is not strong: I recommend a
spell here for Europeans who just yearn for
the crowing of happy variometers for a
change.

Texas is different (1991)


Coming home from abroad, you see your own
country with new eyes. Texas skies are lovely,
but the terrain is drab. In England it is the
other way round. So green and undulating
the land; so grey and flat the clouds.
After the rectangular fields, grid-plan
towns and arrow-straight roads of America, I
was vividly reminded, on the approach to
Gatwick, that most fields in England are any
shape but rectangular, towns are a disorderly
muddle and no British-built road is straight. I
once pointed this out to an Air Canada pilot
sitting alongside me in the Caproni Calif: a
real gentleman's conveyance, now sadly
missed, apart from the annual rigging ordeal.
(This was a year before I sold up and 18
months before the Caproni's starboard wing
and tail fell off and the two pilots jumped to
safety, but that is another story.)
He politely contradicted me: "Look, there's
a straight road, from horizon to horizon."
"That", I said, "was built by the Romans two
thousand years ago, and since then someone
has lost the piece of string."

The speeds that little ships are doing are


phenomenal. If I lived here I wouldn't
bother with big wings. If you can do
140km/h in a Discus who needs 25 metres?
"Andy Pybus flying a Discus from Australia
138.5km/h..." announced Mark
at
Huffstutler at briefing today. Sir Charles
Kingsford-Smith would be proud of you,
Andy. His historic flight in the other direction in a Fokker Tri-motor "Southern Cross"
could not have been much faster.
ooo

Ten gallon hat

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

Under Western Skies


and Holighaus at the drawing board but a pilot
of world championships class at the controls.
For Texas, yes, terrific! But in Texas wings are
just ornaments. One of those ten-gallon hats
would do the job.
With the benefit of hindsight, I can say that
mij doubts regarding a 13.4 metre sailplane in
1991 now seem fully justified.

Go west, middle-aged man!


(1993)
July 1993 was a good choice of month to get
away from the British rain and to cross the
Arctic Circle to the land of snowy ridges - the
Spanish for which is Sierra Nevada - to take
part in the bonhomie and excitement of an
American regional competition at Minden,
Nevada. I rented a local DG-300: I knew from
earlier visits that it had good instruments and
functioning oxygen. In terms of upper surface
wing finish it was about average for a rental
glider that sits out in the open every day. The
lower surface had been dragged over a pile of
rocks on an away landing just a few days earlier - by another customer, not me. There had
been no time to repair it before the competition and though the damage was not structural (I was told) it looked horrible, The DG handled beautifully and climbed OK, but if I tried
to run with the privately-owned Discuses etc I
fell away badly. (As neat an example of a bad
workman blaming his tools as I've seen. Ed.)
The shortness of the contest period surprised me, only six days. But we got six contest days out of six, as was expected, and
frankly that was quite enough in the heat.
Tasks ranged from 250km to just short of
500km, though the Americans are resolutely
un-metricated: every task is scored in miles
and miles per hour.
We were flying for fun, and the atmosphere
was relaxed and gentlemanly. After my two
early field-landing disasters my maps were
marked up by experts among the other competitorswith suggested routes through the
mountains, and with their help I made fewer
blunders. There were quite strong feelings
about sportsmanship. When one pilot gave
out fairly general information about the thermal he was enjoying, he was immediately
rebuked for helping some contestants to have

113

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.

114

Under Western Skies

a radio call announcing that the Contest


Committee had decided to change the task.
Worse still, instead of reducing the task length
by lopping off the last turnpoint, the
Committee made it a pilot-selected-turnpoint
task, or POST. I had never done a POST
before: I had naively assumed that if a POST
were to be declared this would happen on the
ground, and I would have enough time to sit
and read the rulebook before launching. "Who
are the Contest Committee?" I bleated. "We
are!" came the reply from the other members
of my gaggle, who immediately split off in different directions. Bereft of any ideas about
where to go or whom to leech off, I alone
stayed on the original track and headed for
the foothills of Mt Patterson in California,
where I had managed a brilliant escape from
the rockface up to 15,000ft only the day
before. However the whole point of gliding is
that history can never be relied upon to repeat
itself. I plummeted like a grand piano to the
valley floor and enjoyed cold beers with Mrs
T&mmy Johnson and her family.
Before the contest I had nursed fears of outlandings, thinking not so much of rattlesnakes
but of trigger-happy farmers protecting their
property from varmints like glider pilots, and
especially foreigners. In the event the hospitality was splendid. On the first retrieve the
starving crew arrived just in time to find the
pilot had been royally fed by Mrs Moreda and
all the plates cleared away The farmer's family had patiently waited long past their normal
supper time, but one air mile was three road
miles round those mountains and it was long
past nightfall when the retrievers trundled in.
Finding a small glider in one of several identical large alfalfa fields in the dark was just an
extra challenge in the, "We'll all laugh about
this in ten years' time" category.
After the next landout, the very next day,
two carloads of helpers arrived from Minden
airport, my reputation having spread. They
came partly out of compassion and partly out
of curiosity. Two outlandings in two days looks
very much like recklessness. The farmer
allowed only one vehicle to drive into the
field, which was in effect fallow but had a light
crop sown that was designed chiefly to bind
the soil and prevent it blowing away The trailer, carrying on its roof the half a dozen extra
crew, was dragged towards the glider over a

Where to fly out west (1995)


After two soggy and brutally expensive
European trips in 1992 and 1993, I can recom
mend Minden. Food, beer, petrol and accom
modation are cheap, the language is remark
ably similar and the flying unbeatable. It is
the World's best soaring site. People are very
friendly, but as on most US airports with a
soaring operation there isn't a club as we
expect to find in England or France. To avoid
loneliness, especially after the thermals stop, I
suggest you a) go as a group from the UK, b)
enter a competition or c) join a soaring safari.
There are two gliding operations based at
Minden Airport, Nevada, USA. These are:
High Country Soaring and Soar Minden. Both
rent gliders and provide aerotows, and there
is an excellent glider repair shop on the air
port.

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

Under Western Skies


about 13,500ft above ground, and I set off confidently, not too concerned about the blue sky
ahead nor about the fact that the other contestants were disappearing, most of them travelling
quite a bit faster and flatter. But isn't it strange
that when there is plenty of lift and good cumulus marking it the air is full of gliders, then
when it goes all blue and difficult the others
have vanished and you are suddenly on your
own? It's like policemen: when you don't want
them you see them everywhere, and when you
need one badly there's not one to be found.
With the July noonday sun baking the
stony Nevada wilderness, there should be bags
of lift, or so you would imagine. Well, I tobogganed quietly down for 40 miles without a
burble. (That's why 17,500ft is a necessity, not
a luxury.) I had rounded the turnpoint, a grey
and gloomy looking little mining town - the
sort of place Glint Eastwood drifts into, blows
apart and drifts out of three reels later - and
ended up level with a stony wind-facing ridge
about 1,500ft above the desert floor, bathed in
sweat and self-pity. There was nothing to land
on except a vast salt lake bed just within gliding range. I later learnt that the salt lake was
fenced off in sections and was used as a Navy
ammunition dump.
ooo

From time to time little bits of thermal


allowed me to gain the odd hundred feet and
make a dash for another ridge a bit closer to
the area of cumulus which I had left less than
an hour earlier. This struggle seemed to take
hours. It did take hours. The only consolation
was to hear a whole gaggle of top pilots,
including two with 1,000km diplomas
achieved in Standard Class gliders, suffering
for most of the afternoon on another ridge,
debating their chances of ever getting away
and comparing the merits of different alfalfa
fields. They were obviously nearer to the
greenery than I was, and nearer to the big
lakes and the thermal-killing irrigation that
made the fields green. I could see no green at
all, just rocks. Thank Heavens it wasn't just
me suffering, I thought.
Eventually patience was rewarded, and like
a thirst-crazed desert explorer crawling on his
belly towards a distant oasis I dragged myself
into the cool shadow of a high, thin patch of
cloud. In minutes I was back up at 17,500ft

115

and heading effortlessly for home. Champagne


day! At $5 a bottle every day can be a champagne day.
ooo

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!

What do you do with a sunken


pilot? (1994)
Imagine that you land on the shore of a lake
in a desert landscape with no road in sight. It
is late afternoon. A retrieve plane arrives
promptly, but sinks up to its axles in mud and
sand and is unable to tow you out. The tug
eventually revs itself out of the mire and staggers back into the sky without you; it's getting
dark and, as I've said, there's no obvious track

116

Under Western Skies

by land from the airfield to the glider. What


can you realistically look forward to now? You
can expect to spend most of the next 24 hours
with the glider, no doubt. With luck your hot
and very disenchanted ground crew might
find a way to you the next day - this place is
vast and empty and roads of any kind are rare
- while the burning sun climbs high overhead, and you might be out of there and back
on the airfield just in time for tomorrow's
cocktail hour. Or maybe the next day's.
Ah, but this is different. I mean unlike any
gliding event anywhere on the globe. What
happens is a helicopter comes buzzing in and
whisks you back to the ranch in good time for
a shower and join tonight's Happy Hour, not
tomorrow's. The glider is left behind. It'll be
taken care of. On the way back, a cameraman
in the helicopter enterprisingly makes a continuous videotape movie of the only practical
route from the landing spot to the nearest
proper road with signposts. By proper, I don't
mean an asphalt road, but a dirt road that
four-wheel drives and horses are designed for.
This videotape record is for the aid of the professional ground crew. They will venture out
the next day with a four-wheel drive and a
trailer and have a hell of a time extricating
your glider, calling all sorts of blessings down
on your name as they do so. You, however, following cocktails and a sumptuous dinner,
have an excellent night's sleep in your air-conditioned mobile home.
After an early morning balloon flight, you
try a spot of fishing for trout in the river or fat
bass in the lakes, and maybe some skeet
shooting. Then a monster breakfast - choice
of steak, eggs, crispy bacon, ham, sausage,
fries and umpteen kinds of fruit, fruit juice
and cakes, buns, scones, toast and muffins,
served by three devoted waitresses for whom
nothing is too much trouble. There now has to

Through the scrub.

be a fly in life's otherwise perfect ointment,


since you have no glider today, right? Wrong.
Another sailplane is washed down by another
professional crew, filled up with water, oxygen
tanks topped up and wheeled out on to the
airstrip for Sir to use today. Don't forget to
take your delicious packed lunch and lots of
ice-cold Coke, Gatorade and Calistoga Springs
mineral water just in case you land out again.
As you thermal contentedly up to the cloudbase of 18,000ft (well, 20,000ft plus is attainable, but the Federal Law is the Federal Law)
you might espy a little cloud of dust 13,000ft
below on the desert floor. That is Tom Stowers
and his team hacking their way through the
scrub towards your first glider. Gosh, I'd nearly
forgotten that little ship, sitting on the lake
shore under the baking sun. But this new one
is really nice. Gosh, I haven't circled for at least
160km. You know, I could get used to this...
Well, don't get used to it. It happens once
only. This is soaring heaven, and the next time
you find yourself experiencing anything
remotely like it you are probably not in this
world; you've probably just stepped under a bus.
To be one of the Barren Hilton award-winning pilots is strictly a once-in-a-lifetime privilege. If you achieve the best flight by the
Hilton Cup rules in your Class and region in
any two-year period, you are eligible to go to
the Flying-M Ranch and have ten of the most
astonishing soaring holidays that it is possible
to envisage. Then your name is added to the
list of names on the honour roll of medal winners, and you make way for other aspirants in
subsequent years. Now you have something to
tell your grandchildren about.
It is truly a vacation, too, not a competition
or even a task week. The medals are awarded at
the beginning, not the end of the proceedings.
This trip is pure fun, but among pilots so skilled
and eminent that naturally everyone tries to
make the best of the conditions, declaring
records or 1,000km attempts almost every day.
Plat, there's just one question. Ed.
What?
If this is for eminent pilots, with the greatest
respect, what the Hell were you doing there? Ed.
I'm glad you asked that question, even if it
could have been put more politely Oh, and another thing - was it you who land
ed by that lake to the immense inconvenience of
all concerned? Ed.

Under Western Skies


I thought you said just one question. No, it
wasn't me. I landed on a small dry lake earlier the very same day. That little story is told
later. As to the second question: each awardwinning pilot is allowed to bring along one
friend. John Good of New Hampshire, the US
Eastern Division winner, sent me a fax out of
the blue - we'd never met before - while I was
in Poland at the British Overseas Nationals in
spring 1994, inviting Platypus to go as his
guest. This was purely on the strength of my
little column in Sailplane & Gliding. Literature
has some rewards, I am amazed to learn.
At first I nearly didn't accept, since John's
fax used a four-letter word. It mentioned my
role as Crew. Not knowing anything about the
Barren Hilton biennial gathering, I came over
all faint at the idea of being Crew, and nearly
said No Thanks, until my better-informed
Nevada friends said I must be crazy. Hired
staff with white gloves did everything on the
flight line, they said with only slight exaggeration, and work (another four letter word
which can give me a nasty scare) was not
expected of award-winning pilots or their
hangers-on. No, I would not be Crew at all, it
was just a turn of phrase. Having witnessed
what the actual crew had to do when these
star pilots landed out, I was right to feel faint
at the idea.

Start the US competition season


gently with Geezerglide (1995)
The best way for a mature pilot, which loosely describes me, to get into the swing of the
US contest season is to enter the Seniors
Championship in Florida in March. Florida is
inexpensive to fly to and living there is cheap.
Life is cheap too, if you believe the media, but

Platypus gets his entry in early for Geezerglide.

117

the fact that 40 million tourists visit Florida


every year puts the occasional murder in
some perspective, assuming you aren't the
murderee. I did indeed become the victim of
a vicious crime in Orlando, playground of the
world, but more of that later.
The Seniors is strictly for pilots over 55.
Every year now for six years, around February
or March, veteran competition fliers have
trundled to Florida from the snows of Canada,
the Midwest and wherever thermals are still
hibernating, in their vast motor homes. These
monsters whip along at a lithe five miles per
gallon, with a glider trailer behind making an
insignificant difference to the already dire
handling or fuel consumption. Once at
Seminole Lake gliderport, these mobile mansions become gin palaces and social centres.
Another popular gathering point after flying is
the veranda of the clubhouse, where a vast
fridge dispenses continuous free beer, iced. At
that time of year (the Ides of March) in
Britain, beer served outdoors would also be
iced, but it wouldn't need a fridge.
Last year I very publicly abandoned
Europe from Spain to Poland as a soggy,
windy dead loss. I arrived in Florida in a monsoon. I kept hearing, 'You should have been
here last year" from people who have not read
what that does to my blood pressure. I think I
am towing areas of damp behind me everywhere, and might make a modest living by
entering contests all around the world and
then being paid to stay away. Show me a silver lining and I will provide the cloud.
Florida skies in March 1995 seemed rather
like English skies in June almost any year,
offering much the same mix of bright sun
quickly followed by good thermals, then followed by sudden spread-out. This spread-out
was of course good news for the ASH-25,

118

Under Western Skies

which has no chance in a handicapped competition unless something horrible happens to


all the little gliders. It may seem ungentlemanly for me to pray for my rivals to land out,
but every season I ask the good Lord to consider my handicap and arrange for the opposition to land safely at a convenient airfield,
or at a charming ducal estate where butlers
pour the tea and pretty girls divert the dashing flier until the crew (his not very diverted
wife, probably) arrives. There aren't many
ducal estates in Florida, but the little ships
made masses of safe landouts in pastures and
small airports on the first two contest days,
which cheered up this spiteful old geezer no
end. Whatever happened, you ask, to the fine
traditions of British sportsmanship - losing
with a gracious smile and all that tosh?
I am sorry, but handicapping relieves one
of any obligations of that sort.
A stroll around the launch-point produced
some startling insights into what the older
pilot can do with a catheter and loads of plastic tubing, which I won't go into. (Gee, thanks.
Ed.) Certainly people were ready for any contingency. One pilot sat waiting for take-off
with a whacking great hunting knife, not quite
as broad as a Crocodile Dundee special, but
about as long, strapped to his chest. This, he
said, was for such emergencies as finding oneself hung up in a tree in one's parachute,
though I thought it might be just right for
fighting alligators and cutting rattlesnake poison out of one's leg. Stan Nelson, a former
director of astronaut recovery systems for
NASA at Cape Canaveral and another citizen
who knows Florida well, always flew with a
.45 hand gun in the cockpit. I didn't ask him
what he had in mind, but I think he did not
much like the big shadow that an ASH-25 kept
throwing over his Ventus CM's canopy. A few
holes in the intruder's structure would let
more light through, and would also diminish
its performance significantly, as if the 25's
handicap was not severe enough already.
However he managed to win the contest without resorting to lethal force.
Talking about rattlesnakes, a live one was
found making itself a home in a trailer. The
snake's captor came with it to briefing the next
day, looking either stone dead or just remarkably relaxed (the snake, I mean) and did a
howidunit on his exploit. Florida is full of

Old contest pilots never die,


their tasks just get shorter
and shorter (1995)
Senior pilots do not much like retrieves (and
senior pilots' wives even less), so Charlie
Spratt, perhaps the world's most famous con
test director, set the tasks with a determina
tion to get everybody back, making
allowances for the mix of Standard and Open
gliders in one Class of 26 machines. I can give
you an idea of how unusually poor the
weather was when I say the tasks were too
short to merit even one pee-bag in my
ASH-25, No. 13. (Just as primitive tribes - and
pilots with large motor homes and little trail
ers - measure all journeys in days rather than
miles, so I measure flight distance in
pee-bags. A zero pee-bag flight is not much
over 100km. I admit the usefulness of this
measure is flawed by the fact that it varies
from pilot to pilot, as well as shortening
steadily as one gets older, and finally the
number of bags per 100km must obviously
vary with thermal strength, but what the
heck, this is my column and like Humpty
Dumpty, I can make these terms mean what
ever I want them to mean.) Anyway the tasks
were so brief, it seemed that barely had
everyone taken off that the smug so-and-sos
with big wings were back on the verandah
drinking the free iced beer and listening to
the outlanding reports. Heh-heh. Handicap,
schmandicap, who cares if the weather is truly
British?

Do not much like retrieves.

wildlife, and you are well advised not to make


it any more wild by, for instance, treading on it.
After the competition I returned to London
to do a bit of work, at which you might say I
am a minimalist, so my partner flew his airliner full of tourists into Orlando and took

Under Western Skies


over the ASH-25 for a few days. Suddenly he
rang me from Orlando to announce bad news.
Since he is the sanest and safest pilot around,
I could not imagine what he was going to say
next. Outside his hotel our entire tow-hitch
plus ball had been stolen. The bit that
attached directly to the Jeep was easily
replaced, but there are no 50mm balls generally available in the USA, where two-inch balls
prevail. The 50mm ones normally on sale in
the UK do not have vertical pins for fitting
into US tow-hitches. Frantic telephoning by
me located the only 50mm ball with a US fitting pin in the whole of Britain. Watling
Engineers delivered it within 24 hours. The
only problem then was taking this odd-shaped
hunk of metal through airport X-ray machines
when I returned to the USA in April. The
Heathrow security people said nothing.
Doubtless they are so sophisticated they said,
"Obviously not a bomb, just a 50mm steel
European standard tow-ball on a 7/8in US
standard pin/' and gave it not a second's further thought. But US airport security pounced
every time.
Now I have to take the hitch off and lock it
in the car whenever it is not in use. All the
same, if that is the worst loss the glider or I
encounter during this season in the USA, I
shall not complain one bit.
Just after we were all launched on Day 1,
Contest Director Charlie Spratt was suddenly
whisked away to a hospital 500 miles away in
a plane belonging to Chicho Estrada, one of
the contestants. Up till that day his amazingly
active life since he developed kidney trouble
had been organized around the demands of a
mobile dialysis unit. It now looked as it he
would today be liberated from that constraint.
He left with the good wishes every pilot transmitted, one by one. It was a very emotional
moment. Then the anti-climax. Three people
were lined up for two kidneys from a young
man killed in a car accident. Charlie lost. He
flew back and was very matter of fact about it,
but it was a blow, and we all felt it.
The pilots bought the fuel for the 1,000
mile round trip. However on the day he got
back from the competition, March 22, another
kidney, scoring six, near perfectly matched as
can be expected from a donor who is not a
close relation, turned up, and he was lucky
this time. He is recovering well.

119

Seminole Lake Gliderport, Clermont, Florida


has soarahle conditions all year round, though
July and August arc rather tropical and unstable.
Knnt and Ingrid Kjensle will give you a warm
welcome to one of the most attractive soaring
sites that I have seen. It's only 20 minutes' drive
to Disneijworld etc so the family don't have to sit
around waiting for you to land.

The curse of Platypus strikes


again (1995)
June 13, the first day of the 1995 US Open
Class Championships in Nevada, was decidedly interesting. You know, when someone
serves you a dish you can't eat and they ask
you how you like it, all you can mutter with
your mouth full of the godawful stuff is, "Er,
ulp, interesting." The five pilots who got
round the more or less unlandable mountains
and desert in the teeth of a high wind, by polishing the ridges low down then surfing the
wave to over 17,000ft, each deserve a medal.
The other 18 failed to make it - a monstrous
failure rate for Minden.
Plat showed his increasingly craven character, the product of old age compounded by
avarice and sloth, in rejecting the prospect of
100 points at the price of a certain landout on
an uncertain airstrip. Instead, after five hours
of struggle covering nearly 250km, I clawed
my way back home over snow-draped peaks
and settled for zero points. Not having any
crew at this competition was a sort of excuse
for such behaviour, but in the glorious days of
my youth, when two field landings in a day
were the norm, the absence of crew would
never have stood in my way. It would have
been, "Damn the torpedoes, full speed ahead,
and let the Devil organise the retrieve."
Then the next three days in a row were
scrubbed. At Minden Competitions this is
unprecedented. Pilots were in shock and I was
regarded with dark looks. I know how Jonah
felt shortly after he was introduced to the
whale. My jovial offer on Day One to quit the
competition (and indeed the site altogether)
for a fee of $100 per head, that is $2,300 in
total, came to be taken seriously, and at briefing on the third scrubbed day several hundred
green ones had been collected, but not sufficient to meet what auctioneers call the

120

Under Western Skies

reserve. I think a round $1,000 would just


about have persuaded me to derig and move to
a safe distance, like 500 miles.
ooo

After that the gods decided the competitors


had been tormented sufficiently and relented
to give six successive days of weather that in
England would have been greeted with ecstasy, but which in Minden were considered just
barely acceptable. Normal thermal soaring
conditions were resumed, so I shall not report
on them since I have forgotten, if I ever knew,
how to make normal competitions sound fun.
One day is worth mentioning, however,
because it was the fastest ever US Nationals
contest day, with Jim Payne's winning speed
in an ASH-25 of 183km/h or just a hair under
lOOkt. This wasn't one of those freak speeds
resulting from starts in the stratosphere, by
the way. Starts were limited to 5,000ft above
ground or 9,700ft above sea level.
It was a three hour POST (pilot selected)
task in which the key rule to remember in this
instance is that you cannot just shuttle back
and forth between two turnpoints. You must
use three or more turnpoints in any repeated
sequence, and the trick in this particular day's
weather - forecast to be strong Sierra Nevada
wave to the mandatory ceiling of 17,500ft was to choose a flattened north-south triangle
or quadrilateral for your racetrack, with
Minden roughly in the middle, and then zoom
round it without wasting your time in circling
or S-turning till the three hours were up.
Another relevant constraint was the limit of
ten turnpoint pictures: 12 in total including
start and finish. This meant you could only do
three or four circuits, so if you were going very
fast you had to choose a racetrack large
enough - say, 200km per circuit - to avoid running out of film before the three hours expired.
It seems that the fastest pilots did not hunt
about from the primary to the secondary wave,
as I did, but managed to stick to one or the
other. That accordingly meant they did not
have to dash through heavy sink, which
required one to slow up again when lift was
reached to restore the height lost.
Panic at the thought of dropping below
15,000ft and missing the wave would alternate
rapidly with panic at the prospect of being
sucked at never-exceed speed through 18,000ft

and being disqualified. (Remember that at that


height 120kts indicated is over 150kts true airspeed, and it is the true airspeed that determines the safe upper limit.) It was only within
a very narrow window that you could relax
and admire the dazzling view. Since Minden
was visible in gin-clear air the whole time, any
spectator with a sufficiently high-powered telescope could in theory have watched this soaring Indianapolis throughout and placed bets
on the riders. I have to say that after my own
three circuits at a paltry 145km/h I was happy
to land. It was like finishing three massive
bowls of one's favourite sticky pudding.
Thanks, but I've had enough.
I notice I have been using food analogies a
lot here. This must be to do with the difficulty in the USA of escaping from huge amounts
of very inexpensive food, most of it delicious,
and only some of it "interesting." It's amazing
that everyone in the land is not SOOlbs, though
quite a few are. Such people don't often glide,
of course.
000

Hardened cynics (that is, any glider pilots


with a pile of dog-eared logbooks) will not be
at all surprised to hear that the best weather
of the month of June was the week immediately after the Nationals, when the competitors had folded up their mobile homes and
quietly stolen away.
Some of the more luxurious travelling ginpalaces literally do fold up: they concertina, at
the touch of a switch, from a capacious 12ft
wide on the field to a handy 8ft wide on the
road. It's a disturbing experience, it you've not
seen it previously, to watch and hear a monster caravan, with much whirring and heaving, attempt to vanish up its own back door.

One grand flight (1996)


Mike Bird describes how in the last week of June
1995 he did two 1,000km flights in the skies of
Nevada and California with just two days' rest
between. He also explains why.
Something very much like carelessness
was to blame for my having to do two flights
of well over 1,000 kms to get one FAI
Diploma. Yet if I had done the first flight correctly I would have rested on my laurels and

Under Western Skies


not attempted the second flight so soon after
- if ever - which would have been a pity.
Superficially the raw statistics of the two
attempts look identical. The task was identical. Take-off and finish times were about 10
minutes different. There was less than two
per cent difference in achieved speed.
Maximum heights were very nearly the same.
But everything else that really mattered where the good and bad conditions were to be
found - was different.
ooo

It is not actually cheating to get your 1,000


km Diploma by bringing a 60:1 sailplane to
Minden and lying patiently in wait for The
Great Day, but it comes pretty close. All you
have to is to haul the best glider in the world
to the best soaring site in the world (3,000
miles by road from Jacksonville, the port of
entry in Florida), get briefed by local 1,000
kms expert Pat Philbrick, have your maps
and declaration form marked up ready with
the Pat's yo-yo (Start Rawe Peak; TP1, Keeler;
TP2 Basalt; TP Radar Station; Finish Minden:
see diagram 1) then plague the forecasters on
the phone every morning. This is a game for
old pilots with time on their hands. The rest
of you will have to rely on exceptional luck
or exceptional talent, of which I have neither.
Whereas the Sierras are a high and unbroken range, the ranges to the east are mostly
lower and have gaps which require real work
early in the day until - yes, wait for it - you get
to the White Mountains 200kms south-southeast of Minden. They are not called White
because of snow - often there is none, though
there was plenty in 1995 - but for the palecoloured rock. This 11,000 to 14,000 ft ridge is,

121

Conversation piece (1995)


A friend of mine in England once landed miles
from base,and there was nobody at the club
willing or able to retrieve him (it must have
been a quiet week day, since he is a perfectly
reasonable guy, who does not make enemies
easily) so in desperation he rang one of his
ex-girlfriends (let's stress that EX) at her home,
and pleaded for her to come to the club, hitch
up his trailer and come out to get him. He
must be one of the violin players of all time,
for she eventually, if reluctantly, was persuad
ed to leave the comfort of her home late into
the evening and retrieve him. I ought to offer
readers a prize for the most convincing piece
of dialogue between two former lovers as
they meet in a ploughed field at midnight
with the drizzle gently slanting down.

when working, a glider pilot's paradise. Even


hardened world champions go moist around
the eyes when you mention the Whites. Pat's
yo-yo is designed to enable an early start, and,
after 200 kms of what may be struggle, to
make use of four runs, each of 150 km, along
the Whites during the best part of the day. If
you are lucky, therefore, you get 600 km of
your 1,000 km diploma in breathtaking conditions.
Talking about breath, reliable oxygen is
mandatory, since you will be working
between 10,000 and 15,000ft on a moderate
day and between 13,000 and 18,000ft (the airspace limit) on a good day.
For those of you who aren't going to ferry a
glider to the USA, I should mention that while
some of the rental gliders might have idiosyn
cratic instruments, questionable total energy

Ground above 3200ft


(1000metres)

Rawe Peak - Sta


<
Release':
OKeeler-TP1
Owens
Dry Lake

Steve Longland's map of the area.

122

Under Western Skies

plumbing and the odd dent in the sun-scorched


glassfibre, they all have oxygen systems that
work. When officialdom opens the wave "win
dow", people take rented ships, following the rule
that the best glider to take to great heights is
somebody else's, to 35,000 ft plus. Can't have the
paying customers passing out at altitude, it's bad
for business. So you should feel pretty confident
about renting a Minden glider from that point of
view.
The idea is to be launched by one of Tony
Sabino's Soar Minden tugs before the valley
thermals have started: this entails releasing
close to 11 am at 7,900 feet over the Pine
Nuts mountain range (3,200ft above Minden)
using a suntrap which Pat Philbrick swears
will always work, where the dirt roads snake
through a pass in the lowest part of the
range. (Getting back to Minden Airport if the
suntrap doesn't work would depend on there
being no sink, and would certainly concentrate the mind if you were in a standard class
glider. There are a couple of dirt strips en
route that barely might suffice, however. )
Having released, found lift and crawled up
out of the pass to a more reassuring height
you then make your way north to Rawe peak
a few miles south of Dayton County airport
(which is fine for any 15-metre glider to land
at but not for 25.4 metres, since there are
rather tall runway lights roughly 20 metres
apart), snap your Remote Start picture of a
bunch of huts & aerials at the extreme north
end of the Pine Nuts, and you are on your
way. That means you have to soar about 16
km further than the 1,015 km of the task
itself, but because the area starts working so
early it is worth the extra distance.
It was now a matter of waiting for the
right day It soon came, though to the frustration of the many and the delight of just a
few The week immediately after the Open
Class Nationals at Minden, with its very
mixed weather including three consecutive
days scrubbed, was the possibly the best
week in 1995. (It was ever thus.) Indeed I
believe that an}^body with enough stamina,
and a willingness to work around the overdeveloped areas on the days when I stayed
on the ground, could have done five 1,000
km flights in a week.
ooo

The first attempt was made on June 24th.


Only later did I remember that this was exactly two years after my 758km Diploma flight in
England. The Pine Nuts were working only
moderately well, and indeed on the 200km
journey down to the Whites I averaged only
about 90kph, well under the 120 kph that I
regarded as essential if I was to get home
before 8.30 pm. The long spine rising up from
Topaz valley to Mount Patterson is often hard
work, the steep slopes needing to be scratched
and ridge-soared every inch, and the morning
of 24th June was no different.
Finally I reached the fabled White
Mountains, muttering to myself discontentedly about the pathetic speed achieved so far.
And then it was just as Pat had prophesied.
His yo-yo task is designed to give four runs
along 150 km of more or less continuous lift.
In that 600 km I stopped to circle on four occasions, and that was twice too often. I experimented first with dolphining, zooming from
110 knots to 40 then plummeting back again.
Each zoom added a thousand feet or more; the
subsequent plummet through the sink subtracted most of that but not all. I was relieved
not to have a passenger with a delicate stomach to consider. The dolphining was exhilarating and worked well enough, since I steadily
gained height in this way, averaging 70 to 80
knots over the ground. By way of a change, in
the next tour over the same terrain (what you
might call Yo-2 of the Yo-yo, as opposed to Yo1) I tried flying at a steady 100 knots regardless of the vario. The GPS, however, indicated
between 120 and 140 knots ground-speed (230
to 260 kph) depending on the wind component and the altitude. This time I gained no
height overall but just devoured the ground.
The first time I had flown the length of the
Whites, during the Barren Hilton week in
1994 I left the range with excessive optimism
and insufficient height across a desert without
cultivation or airstrips, and landed the LS-4 in
a dry lake (well, on it rather than in it, thank
heavens). This time I had a better glider but
conditions were similar. I took all the height I
could get and set off at a sceptical 60-70 knots
toward Minden. The abruptness with which
the day deteriorated justified my caution.
Every cauliflower cumulus ran to seed as I
approached. It was the morning's struggle in
reverse. I clambered over Mt. Patterson's

Under Western Skies


southern slopes, fell into Tbpaz valley and
took everything that looked, smelt or felt like
a thermal. Water was dumped, both of the
drinkable and undrinkable variety.
But heck, it was almost the longest day of the
year and it was just past seven pm and this was
an ASH-25 with one pilot and no water, why
was I fretting? The much-needed thermals,
after teasing me a while, took pity and lifted me
gently into the Carson Valley and to a joyous
champagne reception. It was all over but for the
mere routine of photographs, declarations and
the other bits of paperwork. All over, did I say?

One grand flight (again) (1996)


Disaster struck. I had photographed Basalt
itself (which is a ghastly mess of mine-workings so far as I can tell) and not the road junction nearby. The road junction was specified
in the declaration co-ordinates, which I had
written out and signed. The junction did in
fact appear in the photos but at the wrong
angle. This blunder was due not to simple stupidity, but to complex stupidity - a more
intractable kind, and much more difficult to
cure. The reason was that in the competition
the week before (and in all US competitions)
the turn-point and the aiming-point for the cam
era are two different places, about a kilometre
apart. You pirouette directly over the turnpoint and snap the aiming-point. So I drew all
my sectors laboriously through the Basalt photographic aiming-point and not through the
turn-point proper. If you are confused that's
fine, don't worry, you know how I felt.
Three days later, after a much-needed rest
and choosing not to launch into thundery,
overdeveloped skies for two days, I started
again, about 10 minutes earlier than before. I
eventually finished about 20 minutes earlier
than before, so you might think that the two
flights were much the same. But that is the
extraordinary thing about soaring. You can't
do the same flight twice.
The trip from Rawe peak to the Whites was
quite astonishing: five knots at Rawe Peak at
1105, seven knots at Segal 20 minutes later
and eight to ten knots between Sweetwater
and Potato Peak before noon, with none of the
familiar struggles up the spine of Patterson.
Obviously I was going to do a sensational

123

time. Obviously? This time the Whites did not


behave as the Whites should: no wings-level
dolphining was possible. Good thermals, but
no continuous lift. By comparison with the
previous attempt, this was the slow portion of
the flight. There I was, grousing at the fact
that I had to stop and circle in eight knots.
On the return from the Whites around six
PM, the whole area from Patterson to Minden
looked stone dead. Gaps in this part of the
world are vast. So I made a long, slightly worried glide to a cu-nim over Walker Lake, 90
degrees off track and about 100 kms from
home. This dark and occasionally rainy cloud
finally wafted me up to 17,000 ft, but like a
fool I fretted about making it back, in case
there was headwind or sink. As I tiptoed at
55kts due west directly into the setting sun a time of day and a direction of flight that
always make it very difficult to see anything
on the ground at all - the flat, shiny object in
the far distance baffled me for a long time
Minden: the other diamond mine
(1995)
/ should explain a few basic facts about
Minden. It is 4,700 ft above sea level, lying
between the Sierra Nevada and the Pine Nuts,
a big range and a parallel small range run
ning roughly NNW-SSE. Nevada means Snowy,
by the way, and this really applied in 1995,
when snows were especially heavy. Although
the Sierras are spectacularly beautiful and are
a renowned wave source, they are rarely used
in thermal flights. The ranges to the east face
the sun and the prevailing westerlies, and are
the preferred terrain for summer distance
attempts and competition tasks. They also
have broad valley floors that are sort of landable. Where you can land on the west side of
the Sierras the Lord alone knows. The only
fellow who ever won a contest day going
down the Sierras (using their western slopes,
picking his way through lakes and trees that
cover a very high rugged plateau) instead of
the ranges to the east was a foreigner who
didn't know any better. For some reason the
east was washed out on that day, so he did
the right thing by accident and got 2,000
points, since visitors' points are scaled relative
to the best performance by a local US pilot.
They still talk about it, many years later

124

Under Western Skies

until I realised it was Lake lahoe. Obviously if


I could keep seeing the surface of Lake lahoe,
nearly 2,000 ft above Minden and 30 kms to
the west of Minden, I did not have to be
Euclid to work out that I had plenty of height.
The nose went down. The champagne corks
popped again and this time the sectors and all
the other paperwork were OK. With the rather
complicated start procedure in the morning
and the detour in the evening, I had flown
something over 1,100 kms.
An hour later, when it was very dark
indeed and while I was telling everybody
about my having come back just in time, Tom
Kreyche appeared out of the shadows from
the same direction in his Discus. It seemed as
if that big old cu-nim was not at its last gasp at
all but had gone on stoking itself for nearly
two hours. That was the good news. The next
day the developing people, instead of heeding
Tom's strict injunction to leave his film in a
continuous strip, cut it up in the usual way.
He had to do the task all over later in the season. Murphy's Law strikes again.
For the record, only three people beat 1,000
kms flijing from Minden in the 1995 season: Rick
Walters in the above-mentioned Discus; Rick's
partner in the Discus, Tom Kreyche (who did it
twice because of his photo-foul-up); and Platypus
flying his ASH-25 (who also did it twice because
of his photo-foul-up).

Now it can be told - up to a point


(1995)
US immigration (1995)
/ do wonder about the green form you have
to fill in for US Immigration, putting you on
your honour to assure them that you have
never taken part in genocide or terrorism.
That must stop the crazed killers in their
tracks, I bet. When I first came to the USA the
visa application form asked, "Is it your inten
tion to overthrow the government of the USA
by force?" and a chap I know wrote down,
"Sole purpose of visit." He still got his visa,
which proves how tolerant people are over
there. "Are you here on business, pleasure or
terrorism, sir?" "Well, I hope I can fit in a bit
of all three." "Say, that's just great; enjoy
your stay, take care and have a nice day now."

I'm back in Uvalde after four years, girding up


my loins to take part in what the Texans modestly call the Texas Nationals (don't query that
claim if you wish for a quiet life) and memories
flood back. After the passage of those years, I
think it's time this column discreetly revealed
the fact that the fun and games in Uvalde in
1991 between visiting World Championships
teams and ladies of the Lone Star State were
not confined to the French, though one member of the French equipe did earn his Green
Card in the nicest possible way, and is now
happily assimilated into Texas society.
One of the younger non-flying members of
the British team is said to have had a torrid
romance with a Uvaldean and was all set to go
back over Christmas 1991 to pick up where he
had left off, so to speak. A friend met him in the
new year and asked how the trip went.
'Nothing doing," was the glum reply, "her husband came back!" Very tricky that kind of thing
in Texas: anywhere south of the Mason-Dixon
line jurors are apt to take a very lenient attitude
towards husbands who perforate their wives'
boyfriends with anything from a Saturday night
special to an AK-47. (Mason and Dixon were a
couple of British surveyors, by the way, who
knew where to draw the line, which is more
than can be said for the British team members
in 1991.)
It must have been the heat: age was certainly no barrier to Cupid's laser beam. Thus the
most senior and distinguished gentleman in our
entourage was snapped up by a Texas lady who
specialises in collecting fine old English
antiques. Well, she's got an elegant specimen
there to be sure, and very hard wearing, too. A
yearly rubdown with linseed oil and wire wool
and he should last more or less indefinitely. An
absolute bargain.
(What about you, Plat? Ed.)
Well, er - Good Heavens, we seem to have
run out of space...

A fax From Minden


This issue's 'Tail Feathers" comes to readers of
S#G from Minden, Nevada, where I've been
alternating landscape photography on the
ground with gliding along the Sierras in the
company of a distinguished former chairman
of the BGA. In this climate, and at my age, and

Under Western Skies

with the lust for records, badges and diplomas


already satisfied on previous trips, I'm happy to
fly just every second day. The DFCBGA and I
look off the day before yesterday in the Grob
103, rented from Tony Sabino, owner of the
Soar Minden. Distinguished former chairman
had not flown for nine years, having taken up
croquet and photography instead (either a sad
sign of senility or the beginnings of wisdom,
depending on your own point of view) and I
was eager to demonstrate both the excellence
of the Sierra wave and the excellence of my
skill in exploiting it.
Such eagerness and pride must inevitably
lead to a fall - or in this case a plummet. I
unerringly released in the trough of the wave
at 2,500ft above the valley floor and descended at 700ft a minute, landing seconds after the
tug, to be greeted by a chorus of, "Whaddya
you two doing back here?" etc. The next time,
better luck - and better communication with
the tug - led to a rough but positive ascent
into steadily smoother air and a swift ride to
18,000ft, the usual ceiling for gliders.
Distinguished former chairman was much
impressed and took lots of photos. These pictures will come in handy as postcards of the
"Wish you were here" variety, designed solely
to provoke furious envy in the recipient.
Talking about wilful provocation of envy two years ago an Australian pilot dropped in
at Minden and, being without a passenger, I
took him up in the ASH-25. We did a brisk
500kms local-soaring the Sierras. I do literally
mean local-soaring- we did 125 kms to the
south and back, then 125kms to the north and
back again, always within gliding range of
Minden from 18,000 ft. In the back seat he
would frequently focus his video recorder on
the instrument panel while crowing into the
microphone, "Eatcha heart out, Bruce: look,
120kts at 18,000ft!" Apparently he regularly

125

swapped tapes with a gliding friend and this


particular tape was going to turn Bruce quite
green. The thought obviously gave my passenger even more pleasure than the flying itself.
The urge to make one's friends sick with jealousy is an innocent desire which I can entirely understand, and to which I myself give way
whenever I get the chance.
Back to the DFCBGA - after 250kms wandering up and down the range we heard that a
legal wave "window" was now open to
25,000ft. At 22,000ft, however, 20 wrinkled old
toes were getting frozen and we were running
out of oxygen, so we pulled out the brakes and
dived back to Minden. (You mean you fumbled the wave and made a virtue out of a
necessity? Ed Well, yes. Plat.) This was a case
of an ill wind blowing some good: a young
pilot who sorely needed his height Diamond
gratefully seized the 103 and took it straight to
25,000ft. Our chilled extremities - and our
fumble - did him a favour. Back on the ground
I met another young pilot who last year got
his height Diamond - wait for it - the same
day that he went solo. Eatcha - no, stop eating
your hearts out and buy an air ticket.
I tell my American friends that it is simply
not true that English glider pilots like drinking
warm beer. It is just that they start crying into
their beer when they read about conditions in
the USA.
ooo

A word of warning. This is a land of extremes.


It can go quickly from being too easy to horribly difficult. Today, for instance, was gin-clear
with 8 and 9kt thermals and wave. Trouble is,
one gets nervous below 15,000ft because there
are vast spaces which are unlandable - not to
mention heavy sink. Glider pilots locally did
once think of banding together to clear a strip
of desert scrub near Lake Mono in California
to cater for the possible outlanding in the middle of a vast area of nothing. A splendid idea?
Not in the opinion of the Federal anti-drug
squad who feared that such a strip would be
used by armed narcotics smugglers flying
from Mexico. Indeed it is suggested that if in
trouble in a lonely area you should not land
next to a light plane in the hope of getting
help. You just might get shot instead.
000

126

Under Western Skies


unfriendly to the flora or fauna, do they
expect him to stay in bed all day, or simply
drop dead? Maybe that's what they do expect:
it is said that the only time we are perfectly
integrated with our environment is when we
are buried.
In France a glider pilot bought a farmhouse
near the field where he flew; not long afterwards he was complaining bitterly about the
noise of tugs. In Britain, airline pilots retire to
country cottages next to long established gliding clubs, then - you guessed it.

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

Since I wrote that piece, I found on a 1997 sum


mertime trip to the USA that all roads into
Yosemite National Park in California were closed
to visitors. Reason? Not snow, or rockfalls or for
est fires, but just too many cars and too many
people.

The Jeep from Hell (1987)


In a small town that I will not name, somewhere in the western USA, there's a man
bowling happily along in a spotless Jeep with
about 150,000 miles on the clock. My friends
know the garage where he has it serviced;
there's no doubt that he is a contented owner
of a fine set of wheels. And so he should be.
That Jeep he bought was like George
Washington's axe, which, as the museum
owner said, is the original apart from the new
head and new handle. I should know, because
I sold the Jeep to him, converting his cheque
into sterling and skipping the country. There
are parts of the USA where they don't use
lawyers, and instead of getting mad they get a
licence to take a rifle into public places like
restaurants, lavatories and glider hangars.
In 1995 I was planning a trip with an
ASH-25 around the USA. At my request
Marion Barritt bought a used Jeep, Plat being
sure that four-wheel-drive was essential.
Having sampled in previous years an alfalfa
field, a set-aside meadow and a dry lake bed, I
felt sure I would land out in some inaccessible
place in 1995. An old Ford or General Motors
car would not do.
When the glider was unloaded from the
RO-RO-RO (known in the seagoing trade as
Roll On, Roll Off and Roll Over) at Jacksonville
docks, the first thing Marion found was that if

Under Western Skies

she towed at more than 40mph, the normally


well-behaved ASH-25 trailer, veteran of all of
Europe, Australia, and the USA in the World
Championships in 1991, wanted to force the
Jeep to sniff the flowers, first at one side of the
road then the other. As soon as I arrived in
Florida I tried it, and simply couldn't keep it
straight. 'Ah/ said the nice man who sold tires
in Orlando, "those tires are the wrong spec.
The guy you bought the Jeep from
economised by putting skinny little tires on
when the previous lot wore out/' A pity, since
the skinny tires were fairly new. When the
improvement with the big, chunky new tires
proved to be barely detectable, the even nicer
man who sold steering components said we
needed new steering components; there was
far too much play in the old ones. At SOmph
the Jeep and trailer were now tolerable so long
as there were no side winds, bends in the road
or trucks going by. Of the 12,000 miles of driving we did with that trailer, I doubt if I did a
thousand. Marion did all the rest.
When in May we got to Tom KnaufPs airfield in Pennsylvania to fly the amazing
Appalachian ridges, home of Karl Striedieck
and cradle of hundreds of Thousands, I asked
Tom if the Jeep's engine really ought to clatter
like that. We had weaved and clattered
through six states without any serious symptoms apart from the clattering getting more
strident.
"No, it shouldn't at all! That engine is finished," he said. He was right. So in the nearest
town we found a lovely guy who sold as-new
engines. His team made heroic efforts to
install a new engine (well, when I say new I
mean it had survived a wreck in a pretty new
vehicle) in time for our trek westwards across
the USA.

127

However, in Ohio late the next day, when I


asked a garage-hand what might be causing
the rear windscreen to film over with thousands of tiny oil droplets, he said he only sold
gasoline but he was sure it was bad news.
He was right, too. He knew a splendid man
who would fix it. It turned out that in the
wreck from which our engine had been rescued, the cover that goes over the tappets and
valves and other bits had been cracked, and
oil was spewing everywhere. Total seizure of
Jeep (and Platypus) was imminent. You can
tell that I know nothing about cars; so could
they, by my glazed look and a reflex move
towards my credit card. This dire news
entailed another heroic 24-hour engineering
effort. After that the engine itself gave no
trouble, barring a couple of incidents. During
the crossing of Missouri, Kansas and Colorado
the Jeep behaved itself. However, in the middle of the Utah desert, on a long, slow gradient, the engine boiled over and the temperature soared into the red. We just waited for an
age, put in fresh water and gently pressed on.
For some arbitrary reason, the engine
behaved itself till we reached Nevada, despite
steeper mountains and more pitiless sun.
Then, like squabbling children, the other
bits of the Jeep felt it was their turn to clamour for attention. I won't list them all, except
for one special favourite in the memories of
all involved.
The electric window winding and
door-locking mechanism had died and had
been replaced, to all appearances satisfactorily. In July my friends Robin, Paul and Pete
from Dunstable came out, pining for long distance soaring in the ASH-25. The conditions
did not suit closed-circuits, so a brilliant
straight distance record flight was made by
Robin and Paul, 900kms eastwards towards
Grand Teton. That's the mountain you see at
the beginning of a Columbia Pictures movie.
On the long drive through Idaho, Pete got out
of the Jeep at 2.30am while the engine was
running. He needed to get water from the
containers in the back of the jeep. The engine
was using vast quantities of water again, even
at night. While he was walking round, the
Jeep promptly locked all four doors and tailgate. He carried no spare key.
It is a good thing Pete is not given to hysteria. Walking back towards civilization along

128

Under Western Skies

this deserted road, Pete eventually met a


policewoman, who drove him back to the
Jeep. She was very helpful, and kindly offered
to shoot the lock off. An alternative but slower solution was to let the car run out of gas in
a few hours' time, then maybe the electrics
would allow him ingress. Or they could stuff
something up the exhaust and stop the
engine, with whatever side-effects that might
have. The best solution of all manifested itself
when at 3.30am a locksmith came out for a
fraction of what they charge in England and
got into the Jeep. After that, none of us ever
got out of that vehicle without clutching the
key tightly in one's fist.
I ought to say, in fairness to this muchabused (verbally abused, that is: physically it
was treated like the Crown Jewels) Jeep, that
although the essential items like engine,
doors, windows, wheels and steering failed,
the luxury items behaved well, if in that climate you call the continuous and refreshing
blast of cold air from the air-conditioning a
luxury. And for three thousand miles the car
radio never faltered, riveting us with non-stop
reports of the 0 J Simpson murder trial.
Then while we drove across the Nevada
deserts in the dark, seeing maybe one other
vehicle every 15 minutes, the local radio stations solemnly fed us, by way of a change, terrifying eye-witness tales of extra-terrestrials in collusion with uniformed members of the
US military and the United Nations - stopping
cars, then kidnapping, experimenting upon
and physically abusing citizens and aliens (foreign nationals, I mean) from the very road we
were on, known as The Loneliest Road in the
West. Your wallet could tell it was The
Loneliest Road in the West as gasoline prices,
in the few tiny towns distributed at hundredmile intervals along our trail, rocketed up from
a sixth of British prices to a quarter of British
prices. The Jeep's faultless cassette-player
entertained us with unabridged novels on
tape, marketed to long-distance drivers who
can't stand talk-radio. Tklk-radio is for people
who can't stand Country & Western singers.
Naturally you are curious to know, after all
that agony, did we ever use the four-wheeldrivc during 1995, that having been the sole
reason for buying the Jeep rather than a big
old Chevy station-wagon at half the price? No.
Did we ever use the Jeep for any retrieve at

all in a whole year's flying? Not once. But Fate


lays perverse traps for the unprepared; if I had
not had an all-terrain vehicle, who knows
where I would have ended up? In 1998 I'll
drive a Ford Bronco, a steady to wear with a
monster 4.6 litre V8 engine. Marion bought
this one too, from a pillar of society, just like
the man who sold us the Jeep. My brow is
unclouded by worry.
(Can I commission you to write 'The Ford
Bronco from Hell'7 in 12 months' time? Ed.
Just watch this space. Plat.)

The Ford Bronco is doing fine and tows trailers


without complaint or shimmy. Unlike the Jeep it
boils not, neither does it spin.
As to the policewoman's proffered pistol,
imagine the phone conversation we might have
had afterwards. "Plat, I'm sorry but the Jeep's
shot." "Well, it was getting pretty tired." "No, I
mean it has two .38-calibre police slugs in it!"
That would have silenced even me.

When ignorance is bliss, 'tis folly


to be wise (1995)
Despite my uncanny ability, with trailer in
tow, to end droughts and make deserts bloom,
it takes a lot more of a curse than I and my
ship can muster to spoil the 1995 Texas
Nationals in Uvalde. Cloudbases were certainly lower than in the 1991 World
Championships (6,000 to 7,000ft rather than
8,000 to 10,000ft-plus) and average thermal
strengths correspondingly less powerful (5 to
6kt rather than 8kt) but for sheer consistency
it is difficult to beat Texas. Texas is where I
would head if I were coming to the USA to
soar cross-country for ten days or less - and if
I had access to a privately owned high performance glider, since renting good machines
in Texas is difficult. The mountains of Nevada
are more spectacular, the climate more pleasant and glass gliders are readily available for
hire - but you should budget for more than
ten days, since there can be occasional holes
in what are usually the world's finest soaring
conditions.
I did win just one day in the Open Class in
Uvalde, so naturally I shall write about that
and skip the rest; there's no silly nonsense
about fairness and objectivity in this column.

Under Western Skies

Coming first is its own reward.

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

129

them suffered dreadfully and arrived back at


Uvalde after the free beer and food had been
consumed by you know who. However it was
our only moment of glory: the weather never
again took Charlie Spratt, the contest director,
or the other pilots by surprise, and over the
next six days I slid gently towards the bottom
of the rankings where I belonged, as true soaring skill prevailed over luck.
/ have enjoyed two-seater flying enormously. I
have learned a huge amount flying with National
champions, World champions and record holders
like Robin May, Hans-Werner Grosse, Brian
Spreckley and John Williamson, and in the Alps
with Bill Malpas and John Good in the moun
tains in Pennsylvania, not to mention geniuses
like John Jeffries and Jacques Noel. It is the best
way of expanding one's horizons without scaring
the daylights out of oneself or jeopardising the
glider.
I also find no difficulty in getting people to
help me rig the ASH-25 either in hopes of future
flights or as a thank you for past flights. There
are also marginal days when I would not bother
to rig and fly a solo machine, but in the 25,
because someone else is keen to fly with me or
because I have promised them a cross-country
and don't want to let them down, I have gone and
had some amazing flying. So the utilisation is
very high. At one time I calculated that the cost
per achieved cross-country seat-mile for our
ASH-25 was six times cheaper than for any other
glider in the club.

Power corrupts... (1999)


As I surveyed the ugly terrain below, I
realised there was nowhere to land. Instead
there was a muddy lake with a scattering of
rocks around its rim, then rough, undulating
scrub, and then steep walls on every side,
higher than I was. And I was descending at
300ft a minute whichever way I turned.
How had I got myself into this fix?
Overconfidence, as usual.
Then I saw a wisp of cloud against the
relentless blue. My forehead was furrowed, my
mouth dry, my hands clammy, my stomach
knotted, my (Please don't descend any further down
your anatomy - this is a family paper and we
get the general drift. Ed.)

130

Under Western Skies

Yes, I was worried. The wisp, a mile away,


grew into a puff. Still sinking, I tried to hypnotise the tiny cloud into growing.
Finally I arrived under the burgeoning
vapour, swung into a steep left bank at 58
knots and ten degrees of flap. The rate of
climb indicator slowly moved to zero sink,
then to an increasingly confident ascent, settling at six knots up all round the circle. I was
not going to become a vulture's lunch this
time, after all.
But had I learned anything from yet another scare?
Indeed I had. Next time I went cross-country in the Sierras, I had better fly in something
with more horsepower than a Cessna 152 - for
that indeed was the aircraft I was piloting.
Unless, of course, I relished a challenge that
called upon every one of my 41 seasons of
soaring experience. And I suppose I do relish
such a challenge. That 300ft per minute
descent over unlandable desert was in spite of
the Cessna's throttle being pushed to the firewall. The lift in that part of the world is something I am always shouting about, but what
goes up must come down, and when you are
at 10,000 ft and the temperatures are high, little planes with little engines do literally need
to be soared. I would never have got six knots
climb at that height without assistance from
thermal or wave. In this environment a gliding background is an essential accomplishment, not a luxury.
'What's this?" you splutter. Tlat's become a
power pilot? A traitor to the Cause?" I apologise if any of you were eating soup at the
moment you started to read this.
I don't know what came over me, but quite
suddenly one day at Minden I thought, "Why
don't I get my single-engine licence? It's cheap,
the weather's wonderful and there are hardly
any airspace problems."The opposite is the case
in Britain, where it costs a fortune, the weather
is murky and wet most of the time, and much of
the air that isn't full of airliners is full of military
hardware, with the fun-flyers all crammed dangerously into the little bit that's left. Sixteen days
and 30 hours after that inspiration in Minden I
took my test, passed it somehow, and glued an
FAA certificate in my logbook.
There were one or two rational excuses for
this move. I have a very good friend who is
always inviting me to fly round exotic parts of

the world in various light planes. What has up


till now put me off accepting these kind invitations is my observation - when flying together
in my glider - that this friend was born without
nerves, or they were surgically removed at
birth. Faced with any situation in which ordinary pilots would turn ghastly pale with fright,
my friend goes, 'Wheeee! Isn't this exciting?"
We crashed my Caproni some years ago
because my friend's expressions of delight
drowned out the sound of my teeth chattering.
The latter noise is Nature's way of reminding
me that I am very near the ground, devoid of
ideas, and am about to die unless I do something intelligent, by way of a change, very soon.
The Good Lord implanted the instinct of Fear in
most of us, with the odd exception of my friend,
with a view to preserving the species. How my
friend's ancestors got this far I can't imagine,
but I suspect that the danger posed by hereditary fearlessness has been outweighed by an
even stronger procreative drive, so that the
breed has not become extinct. Au contraire.
Anyway, I now feel that I will now have
some glimmering of what my friend is doing
in the air, and that will somehow be reassuring. It could turn out to be the opposite of
reassuring, of course, since I shall now know
just enough to be seriously concerned. In that
event, a lead-weighted sock in my pocket will
be used to stage a swift in-flight mutiny. I'll
deal with the court case later.

a lead-weighted sock...

Baiting the hook (1999)


To persuade speakers to leave the comfort of
their homes and cross the Atlantic in winter
time, a conference organiser must resort to

Under Western Skies


Notes for those interested in learning to
power-fly in the USA at a fraction of UK costs
(for instance, Cessna 152 at $52 an hour
rental including all fuel, no taxes or extras, a
bit extra if you want more horses and less
excitement of the kind described above)
phone Linda and Roger at NIFTI Flying School,
Minden Airport, Nevada

every kind of bribe and inducement, so long as


the budget can stand it. If the chosen speaker
is a real bigwig, and is featured in a plenary
session of all delegates (that is, not competing
with two other guys in concurrent sessions) or
is giving the after-dinner oration, then the
organiser can offer a luxury hotel or even, it is
rumoured, a transatlantic air ticket. I've had
very fancy hotels on two occasions, but not the
air ticket. Sorry - that sounds like a crude hint
to would-be convention committees. It really
is not. What follows, however, is most emphatically a hint to anybody who is listening.
At the Soaring Society of America
Convention in Knoxville, Tennessee, in
February 1999, the Chairman, Francois Pin,
needed a star speaker for one of the concurrent sessions. So naturally he asked - Justin
Wills. However, Justin couldn't make it. So,
working down some list (I'd like to see that
list) Frangois eventually lit upon me. By now
the budget was exhausted and the only thing
he could offer was - wait for it - his own
brand-new ASW-27, to be flown by me in
Florida at the Seniors Championships, better
known as Geezerglide, in early March.
That shows how desperate people can get
when they are trying to fill a speaker-programme. One reason why Frangois was willing to part with the ASW-27 for ten days was
that he wished to fly another glider in Florida,
namely his PW5. He would be flying hors concours, naturally, since he is far too young to
qualify as a geezer. He wanted to get contest
practice in the World-Class before the 1999
World-Class World Championships in Poland.
So if it were not for the PW5, I would not have
had the lovely ASW-27 to fly. For that reason
alone, and for no other, I have a soft spot for
the little 13.5 metre Polish ship. Thus it was
that when I gave my talk at the SSA
Convention "Sixty minutes wasted with
Platypus" I told the audience that I felt unable

131

to make jokes about a) tiny gliders and


b) Frenchmen.
However that moral obligation has long gone
- it was only meant to last sixty minutes, and I
am amazed at my restraint so far. Besides, so
many jokes, mostly in appalling taste and some
couched in dreadful verse, have been made in
the USA about FP and the PW5 and The Bull,
that I see no point in holding myself back while
others let rip.
My impression as a spectator on the other
side of the thermal was that the PW5 climbed
splendidly, just like a Skylark 3. However it
seems to descend just like a Skylark 3. Not bad
at all, considering the difference in span of
about 15 feet. Naturally the PW5 tends to land
out more often than a modern 15-metre ship,
even in the hands of top pilots, especially if
the wind is unhelpful. (I am trying my
damnedest to be tactful, you can see.)
Anyway, while the rest of us were drinking
our evening beer on the verandah back at
Seminole Lake, Frangois landed in a Florida
pasture, and carefully put a brown cover over
the canopy. This presumably makes the front
of a PW5 look like the back end of a cow. No,
that is NOT my opinion, says he, looking nervously over his shoulder for libel lawyers, but it
clearly was the opinion of a large, overamorous bull.
A quarter-century ago at the great annual
French contest les Huit Jours d'Angers, loosely
translated as the Eight Days of Danger, the
formidable Director at the first briefing commanded us, "Go onto the field and mount your
gliders!" (I think he meant us to rig them). I
replied that we loved our gliders, but not that
much. However the Florida bull did indeed
love Frangois's PW5, though the effect of his

132

Under Western Skies

mounting it was more likely to derig it. A


great hoof went through the canopy. Then,
like the US Cavalry, Frangois's crew turned up
and, having been brung up on a ranch, shooed
the beast away with an fearless flick of the
wrist. The bull either recognised an experienced no-nonsense cow-hand, or more probably decided the PW5 wasn't very good in bed,
but in any event it clambered off and skulked
away, muttering to itself.
Of course this story made many more column-inches in the local newspapers than the
entire US Seniors competition. That's the
media for you. And since S&G is part of the
media, we dwell on it inordinately too. Much
play was made of the fact that the French are
experts in all aspects of love (a legend assiduously spread by the French, as you and I
know) but that this encounter was something
to astonish even a Frenchman. The next day,
back at Seminole lake, where with glue and
yards of scotch tape Frangois patiently got the
canopy ready for the day's task, I said that
since the PW5 patently lacked penetration
(otherwise it would not have landed in that
field) the bull was kindly offering some. Other
jokes were not fit for this journal.

The Mystery of Met (1999)


Frankly, I have never understood weather.
Indeed that is the very reason why I love com
petitions: after a leisurely breakfast I am told
by professionals, who have been up since five
o' clock, exactly where to go and when I can
start. Beautifully printed weather charts and
task details are handed out to the pampered,
spoonfed pilots. There's no agonising about
meteorology. That's all been done for us. Add
a bit of dedicated leeching and you can have
a worry-free contest, with no serious chal
lenge to the intellect once you're airborne, at
least not until the crew calls up to say she has
the peebags in her pocket and you have the
car-keys in yours.
I only got my British 750km Diploma
because Robin May had done the forecasts and
planned the task while I was driving at NeverExceed speed to the Club. Now I have started a
Big Distance Group at Dunstable with much
the same aim: get others to do the work.
If you are one of the lower echelons this
approach to life is called bone-bloody-idle
ness and earns severe contempt. At my level
of seniority it's called delegation and - in
business at any rate - earns millions and invi
tations to Buckingham Palace.

Falling apart gracefully


DrAlex Comfort, the author of a book we all read years ago called The Joy of Sex, fol
lowed that best-seller many years later with The Joy of Ageing. No, / didn't read the
second book, and neither did you. For some reason, age doesn't sell the way sex does.
Yes, it is nice to have grand-children. It's like flying rental aircraft. After you get
bored playing with them for a few hours you hand them back to their owners to be
washed, refuelled and put to bed. All you have to do is find an armchair and a bot
tle of Glenfiddich in a room far removed from the noise of battle. You can enjoy
Power without Responsibility, as Stanley Baldwin said in another context.
Physical and mental decline is no joke, however. Which is precisely why as I said
in the chapter about Money, we can't help treating this solemn subject with coarse,
ribald hilarity

Mentioning the unmentionable


(1986)
This bit is for boys only. One of those splendidly witty women who write for S&G nowadays can describe their side of this problem,
and I can't wait to see what they have to say.
I refer to the dilemma-no, a dilemma is when
there are just two unacceptable alternatives:
this is a positive quandary, all the several
answers being uncomfortable in every way-of
how to have a pee in a glider. It never
occurred to me before that there might be
some advantages to hang-gliding other than
cost, but now one advantage, of a sort, immediately leaps to mind. How high you have to
be before you are free of any risk of prosecution for indecent exposure I don't know,
though personally I'd worry more about frostbite, or buzzards, than the Law.
To return to the challenge as presented to
the male pilot of the conventional sailplane:
there seems no logic to it. Sometimes you can

If an official observer signs the bag it might become


a novel TP confirmation.

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-

134

Falling apart gracefully

sons. Try it by all means, but not if you are


getting on in years, since the dive could be
prolonged.
Then there are plastic bags stolen from the
domestic freezer-cabinet: these must be pretested, please, in the time-honoured way,
since you don't want to discover a tiny defect
at 5,000ft, do you? You can either jettison the
bag whole or empty it while delicately holding
onto one corner. The first is an environmentally anti-social act. The bags doubtless arrive
on the ground empty, but farmers don't like
their animals eating plastic. You could always
tie a knot in it (the neck of the bag, I mean)
and drop it on the clubhouse roof at a rival
site. If you could get an official observer to
sign the bag before take-off it might become a
novel form of turn-point confirmation.
However this sort of thing might escalate dangerously, so let's discard the idea.
Holding onto corner of the bag is tricky.
Best to wear ski-goggles while you try this,
since you are liable to get a stinging eyeful as
your reward for cherishing the environment.
How about just setting tiny tasks? A cure
worse than the disease. We might as well stay
in the bar all day and give up the sport.
Give us your thoughts. Any suggestion that
is fit to print should be sent to S&G. The ones
that aren't fit to print should also be sent here
privately; after last summer we need a few
laughs.

Careless rupture, or. Big is not


always beautiful (1992)
One of life's many ironies is that the only people who can afford to fly huge gliders are
those who are least capable of dealing with
the damn things on the ground. It is only after
three decades of clawing your way up the
career ladder and nursing your capital from
wood to metal to glass to carbon and Kevlar,
that you might just be able to buy a slice of a
supership. Most supership syndicates consist
of empty-nesters who have paid off their
mortgages and launched their children into
the world.
"You mean, old farts?"
Well, yes. At this advanced age, however,
the old far, er, senior pilot is beginning to find
his discs slipping and his dorsals, metatarsals

and abdominals not up to the job. The puffing


and groaning around the big two-seaters at rigging time is so distressing to any sensitive person's ear that younger members tend to stay
out of the way until it's all over, unless there
is a serious prospect of getting a flight and
being allowed to play with the GPS.
Someone will eventually make a pot of
money selling a device for lifting the back end
of an ASH-25. So far I have only seen crude
diagrams and played with prototype levers
and ramps that would have been despised by
the chaps who thousands of years ago put up
the great pillars of Stonehenge - a near
approximation to the rear end of an ASH-25,
by the way. Worse still, if your partner is a
fanatic for ultimate performance he will have
ballasted the fin with 50 pounds of lead, or its
equivalent in batteries, to get the centre of
gravity in the just right place for low-speed
flight. "Gosh, that's adding insult to injury,
Plat!" No, it just adds injury to injury.
If those brilliant young men from the
German Akafliegs need a project for winter
1992-93, I suggest that instead of designing
fancy wingtips for the 25, they should invent,
for this great market of people with more
money than muscle, a three-in-one combined
rigging-aid, tail-lifter and Zimmer-frame.
And please hurry, before we all do ourselves permanent injury.
Despite my scorning of fancy wingtips for the
ASH-25 I did of course buy them as soon as they
became available in 1994. And I am still waiting
for the tail-lifter.

At last, a subject on which we


are all experts (1986)
You can bash away at your typewriter, or
more recently the word-processor, for years,
pontificating on every subject, lambasting all
sorts of people, or nagging at respected institutions like
the
EGA Competitions
Committee, and get what Lord George-Brown
used to call a total ignoral. "Are glider pilots
completely dozy except when the thermals
pop?", one begins to ask. Well, some of them
are pretty dozy even when the thermals are
popping, but that has nothing to do with this
piece. Now, however, I seem to have found a
deep well of passionate interest in the bos-

Falling apart gracefully


oms, or maybe the lower parts, of the fraternity of glider pilots. And indeed in the sorority of soarers. I refer to the hot, or at least
warm, topic of having a pee in aplaneur. (I did
that last bit for alliteration, but it occurs to me
that we could widen this whole subject to take
in the international scene, with contributions
from Australia, where an outlanding in the
outback has actually made at least one pilot
resort to drinking his urine to avoid death by
dehydration, or Alaska, where you could
imagine the problem of having your pee-bag
freeze between your knees and jam the rearward movement of the stick on the roundout.)
A truly gargantuan mailbag followed
"Mentioning the Unmentionable" in an earlier
issue. Well, eight letters and three free samples. Free samples of plastic gadgets, I mean,
not fluid, silly.
The first sample comes from the Royal Air
Force Gliding & Soaring Association at
Dishforth in Yorkshire: this is a pretty simple
and brutal looking piece of Service equipment
(male only., designated 8465 99 137 6876 BAG
CREW RELIEF ALEXANDER PLASTICS 1985),
best employed in smooth wave. "Effective
use", says Paul Whitehead, "requires the pilot
to 1) Undo seat straps 2) Undo Parachute
straps and 3) TUrn body through 90 degrees.
The old problem of pushing water uphill otherwise applies".
As long as one does not get into the rotor at
the moment critique this seems not a bad solution. However-and although I customarily
throw howevers around like so much chaff
this is a pretty solid however-if you were
unlucky enough to hit turbulence or inadvertently jog the stick while rolling your torso
through the requisite right angle, you would
of course have no parachute as you left the
aircraft. I only hope you would have the presence of mind to do up your flies on the way
down, to spare the blushes of your next of kin.
Another male-only solution comes to me
from another north country pilot who has
connections with an old people's home, and is
designed for constant use by those with bladder-control problems. The problem of incontinence is no joke, and any of us could reach
that unhappy state in years to come, so there
are strictly no laughs to be had here. However,
the system looks like a combination of plumb-

135

Cobbled together similar looking devices.

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.

136

Falling apart gracefully

That is enough of that topic for the


moment: positively the last word in the next
issue. In particular I'd like to cull extracts
from the letters that say, "Whatever you do,
don't mention my name."
** Though unless you douse all over she may
wonder about the strange places that glider pilots
shave ...

here. Plat.) The ground was rough, muddy


and rutted, which made the task much worse
than usual, but we did it. Then as we were
resting, a syndicate of absolutely charming
grey-haired geezers swept in with their ASH25, all of them exhausted by the burden of
years, much travel, and lunch. Moreover they
all had bad backs. Truly terrible backs, to a

It only hurts when I laugh, or,


the War of the T-shirts (1996)
Jill Burry, a heroic figure in women's gliding,
very sadly (that is an understatement, let's try
tragically instead) spent the last, spectacular
UK soaring season flat on her back, not merely unable to fly but unable to move, because of
a slipped disk. Her specialist said to her at the
beginning of her four-month trauma, "This is
only a wild guess, but you haven't been lifting
the end of something heavy, have you?" and
was baffled when his stricken patient went off
into hoots of agonising mirth. Although hundreds of rigs and derigs over 20 years could all
plead guilty to a cumulative responsibility for
her losing the entire 1995 season, she suspects that the last straw (all two hundred kilos
of it) was part of an ASH-25 - somebody else's.
I suggest that the surgeon's remark could be
incorporated into a T-shirt with a cartoon of
puzzled doctor and immobilised patient, so
that when Jill is wearing it people will forebear from asking her to hold anything heavier
than a tailplane. Of course I greatly overrate
the humanity and decency of Lasham glider
pilots: they wouldn't forebear for one
moment:
"Come on Jill, the medics have fixed your
back to last for the next 20 years. Now cop a
hold of this Nimbus root and stop whining."
Others would stand by and watch with
hands in pockets, or take bets. "They say
when Jill's back goes you can hear it in
Basingstoke, so I want to be around when it
happens." Yes, on mature reflection, there
would be no mercy whatever.
A few years ago I arrived in a sunny foreign airfield, and in anticipation of great soaring in the coming week, promptly rigged my
ASH-25 with the help of a single woman.
(What has her marital status got to do with it?
Ed. Thanks, I'll make the dumb jokes round

They all had bad backs.

man. Every back with an official certificate of


orthopaedic unrigworthiness. Could we help
a little? Well, Marion and I could not refuse,
and we found ourselves going through the
same sweaty routine again, with the odd bit of
hindrance from Dad's Army. Pooped is not
the word. Amazingly our two backs took the
strain-though will we pay for it later?
The moral is, after having just rigged an
ASH-25, don't hang around resting or chatting.
Depending on the weather, rush your ship
onto the aerotow queue and get airborne, or
else hide away in the darkest recess of the bar.
Or you can quickly don a Jill Burry T-shirt.
More ideas for 1996 to put off people who
might approach you for a rig when you've just
done yours, and you cannot bring yourself to
say "No" bluntly:
Attack as the best method of defence, such
as a T-shirt proclaiming: "Where were you
when I was rigging my bloody glider?"
T-shirts with a price list stating pints/litres
of beer charged per ton/tonne lifted.
Long-sleeved shirts and jeans printed to
look as if your arm or leg or torso (that's the
bit between the arm and the leg) is heavily
bandaged or in plaster.
In hot weather, artistic tattoos or transfers
that look like multiple sutures and hideous
discoloration after a fairly recent compound
fracture.
A well-deserved reputation for eager, goodnatured clumsiness. You know, like a big stu-

Falling apart gracefully


pid dog. As Mrs Plat said 20 years ago, you can
get lots of peace and quiet once you have
dropped the odd wing.
000

You are already asking, "Aren't you giving


ammunition to people who will refuse to help
you when you need it? Aren't you shooting
yourself in the foot, Plat?" You are so right, but
I have thought about it:
Always have access to a two-seater, even if
your main ship is a solo machine. Then you
can bribe people with the promise of flights in
the two-pew. Even an open-air flip in an old T21 is fun, and very popular. But keep your
promise, and soon.
Your T-shirt can say, "My other sailplane is
an ASH-25 (or Nimbus 4D, or T-21, or whatever)." It is a good idea if these claims are true.
T-shirt credibility should be maintained.
Facetious T-shirts undermine the effectiveness of this important communication medium for those of us who are shy and tonguetied. Downright silly T-shirts on the airfield
might have to be policed.
Your T-shirt can carry your own Offer beerper-tonne price list, which will naturally be
less extravagant than the Bid beer-per-tonne
price list that you wear when other people
want a rig from you. What if other guy is wearing a Bid shirt? No problem: the two of you
can now negotiate a brokered deal. The
agreed exchange rate will depend on whether
it's a 1,000km day or only marginally worth
rigging at all.
Clearly you need at least two T-shirts or
maybe a drawer full of them (like signal
flags in the Navy) which I shall market
through the British Gliding Association or
RD Aviation. Bulk orders at special discounts, of course.

137

If that's your inclination, I think I have got


just the T-shirt for you.

A senior moment (1999)


It was bound to happen sooner or later. I came
fizzing towards Seminole Lake Gliderport at
red-line speed in Frangois Pin's beautiful
ASW27, wondering why I had heard no other
"five-miles-out" final glide calls, though I had
seen several sailplanes ahead of me at the previous turnpoint. At 140-kts-plus, 300 ft up, it is
not a good idea to start fumbling under one's
parachute or in side pockets looking for the
task sheet.
"Plat, how can you lose things in that tiny
space where there's barely room to breathe?"
"I dunno. It's just a talent I have. I should have
been a conjuror; I could lose a dozen rabbits in
here."
After a few low-level pilot-induced-oscillations I found the wretched piece of crumpled
paper.
Oh dear.
You've guessed it: I had missed out the last
turnpoint. I confessed my glitch publicly to
Charlie Spratt on the finish line (and to 40
snickering rivals), pulled up and tried to thermal away, but it was too late. I had this feeling
that the glider was bright red all over as I
landed and taxied towards the motor-home
where I had stored all my beer. At least some
liquid consolation was in prospect. Every
American motor-home has a vast fridge, and a
friendly pilot had allowed me to use his, the
rent being very reasonable, at one beer per
dozen per day. Drat! He had amazingly managed to do even worse than me and had landed out. His crew and motor-home had trundled off on retrieve taking my beer with them.

000

Lastly, if none of this gross, self-serving


behaviour appeals to you, I suggest you turn
away from it all and re-read the Bible.
Memorise the Sermon on the Mount. And say
thirty times before breakfast every day,
"Rigging is its own reward". No glider pilot has
yet been canonised, at which none of us
should be at all astonished, but there's your
big chance. You could become the very first
saint in our movement.

Plat has a place for everything, but everything is in


some other place.

138

Falling apart gracefully

It was the last day of the US Senior


Championships, and I never saw them or the
amber nectar again.
On the radio Charlie kindly said I'd had, "A
senior moment". That's code for, "A senile
moment" of course. I am typing this on my
65th birthday
tomorrow I get my free bus
pass and become the terror of the London
Passenger Transport Board, so maybe Charlie
is right and these moments will increase in
number. But I have decided that such absentmindedness is not in fact proof of senility. If it
is, I have been senile since the age of four, or
at whatever age it is that one is expected to
take some personal responsibility for one's
actions.
No, I blame technology. Thanks to GPS and
the Cambridge computer I had got entirely
out of the habit of drawing lines on the map.
This was the first competition in 40 seasons in
which I had drawn no course on the map.
"But", you say with incredulity, "surely the
Cambridge computer told you there was
another turnpoint to go round?"
Indeed it did, but I simply disbelieved it,
the way airline pilots always ignore a 100-decibel klaxon and a 30-inch video monitor with
flashing red letters saying, "There is a 15,000
ft mountain ahead of you and you are all
going to die in one minute if you don't turn
left NOW!" . Their last words are always something like, "Aw, shut up!" only ruder. As Ernest
Gann said, once a pilot has an erroneous idee
fixe, no amount of fact or logic will shift it.
"Plat, your resolution for the remainder of
this season must be to draw the course on the
map, and Scotch-tape the task sheet to the
map. Then nothing can go wrong!"
Oh yes, it can with me. One of those damn
rabbits will have eaten it.

Mad inventors line up here,


please (1987)
I had vowed not to write any longer about the
subject of having a pee in a glider, but I will
make an exception, since it may help to prove,
while I'm on this topic of varying cultures,
that the further people are from London the
more interesting (= weird) they get. At the
BGA conference in Harrogate I was told this
true story by a member of a famous northern

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.

Almanac for 1990 (1989)


January: Unusually mild weather; global
warming blamed. Robin May and John Jeffries
fly ASH-25 to Blarney and back in Limerick
wave. Peebag inadvertently dropped on Mayor
of Cork, causing serious Anglo-Irish diplomatic rift.

February: Unusually cold weather, global


warming blamed. EGA Conference snowed in;
Brennig James takes opportunity to tell life
story to captive audience. Pete Saundby
awarded the Mowbray Vale Insurance
Brokers' medal for patenting new parachute
that saves the glider and dumps the pilot.

140

I have seen the future ... but I'm not sure it works

Don't try to predict the future.

March: Cold snap continues unabated; so


does Brennig. Frenzied mass breakout of middle-aged conference delegates across frozen
Bristol Channel. All senior figures in UK
movement lost beneath the ice. (Furious
debate ensues in S&G re impact on future of
British gliding: nil or positive?)
April: Unusually windy weather; global
warming blamed. Platypus breaks 100km triangular speed record, but forgets to switch on
barograph. Schempp-Hirth bring out 27 metre
glider, announcing, "This is positively the
limit on span."
May: Ralph Jones vows publicly to give up
threatening pilots, tasksetters, editors and
columnists. Get Well Soon letters pour in to
Ralph. Platypus breaks 200km triangular
speed record but one side of triangle is only
27.99% of total distance; disqualified under
28% rule.
June: Unusually calm weather; global warming blamed. Cloudbase goes to 8000ft. Platypus
breaks 300km triangular speed record but flies
wrong way round task. Schleichers bring out
29 metre glider, announcing, "This is absolutely the limit on span."
July: Unusually hot weather; global warming
blamed. Cloudbase goes to 9,000ft; new airspace regulations bring ceiling down to 3,000ft
over UK. Ninety-eight top pilots slammed in
Wormwood Scrubs for infringements.
August: Cloudbases go to 10,000ft; global
warming blamed. Frenzied mass breakout of
the jailed 98, in gliders made from bedsteads
and prison sheets, comes too late for Open
Class Nationals, which has only two entrants.
Platypus leads sole rival (16 year-old Silver
badge pilot) by 7000 points, but incurs 7001
photo penalty points; comes bottom.

September: Platypus breaks 500km two


seater triangular speed record but forgets to
take passenger in back seat; disqualified.
Schempp-Hirth bring out 31 metre glider,
announcing, "We have positively no more territorial ambitions." UK National Ladder won
by Dagling.
October: Season of mists and mellow fruitfulness; global warming blamed. Ralph Jones
threatens Platypus after airmiss and latest column in S&G] Get Well Soon letters pour in to
Platypus. P. vows publicly to give up writing
for
November: Schleicher bring out 33 metre
glider, announcing, The Sailplane to end all
Sailplanes," Schleicher factory strafed by
squadrons of Venti, Nimbi and Jani; Henry
Kissinger called in to arrange non-aggression
treaty. Editor of S&G gets Club News from
Dunstable: another record broken.
December: General astonishment that this
month is somewhat colder than August; Tom
Bradbury blamed. S&G's Almanac for 1991
faxed from Alice Springs, under the mysterious pen name of Dingo; S&G readers complain all the seasons seem back to front.
In the January before this almanac was written,
John Jeffhes and Robin May in an ASH-25
(mine!), without any life-saving gear or flight plan,
took off from Sleap in Shropshire and ventured
upwind in wave to within easy reach of Dublin.
The wave was from the Wicklow Hills and steadi
ly improved as they approached Ireland.
Discretion took over from valour when they were
1 7 miles from the Irish coast. They turned back
and arrived over the Welsh coast at 7, 000 ft.
A 31 metre glider is expected to fly in 2000,
only ten years late. See "The new supership for
2000 AD" under Travel Broadens the Behind.
Platypus actually did achieve the British twoseat 500 km triangle record in December 1990 in
Australia, and he did remember to take a pas
senger. He also set a 300 km Out-and-Return
record. More predictions gone wrong!

Are glider pilots mad? (1981)


For Dr Brennig James, self-confessed hero of
innumerable, but not untold, gliding
escapades in many countries, including an

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."

ting, would do well in the mileage stakes. Let


us therefore encourage the National Ladder
and any other scheme that puts a premium on
maximum utilisation.
As to cost, I was impressed by the argument of Prof R. Eppler16 that for the cost of a
flapped 1 5 metre wing one can build a much
more efficient unflapped wing of 18 metres,
or more. A 1981 equivalent of the Dart 17 or
SHK will not be built however, because there
is no place for them in National and
International contests. A pity, since it would
almost certainly be the most efficient
machine by the criteria I have suggested. I've
just had a thought: why don't we persuade the
owner of an ASW-20L to fly with tip extensions but with flaps fixed in one position (to
simulate a 16.5 metre unflapped glider)
against an ASW-20 without tips but having full
use of all the flappery? My money would be
on the unflapped version - except for landing
in small fields where the flaps are superb.
However that does not really affect the argument, since on a purpose-built unflapped glider a cheap but effective airbrake system is
quite feasible. You see (If he says it again I
swear I'll scream Ed.) - oh all right, out of
respect for her feelings I'll say it under my
breath: Th*r*'s n* s*bst*t*t* f*r sp*n
Now we have an 18-metre class and a wonderful
unflapped 18-metre glider in the stretched LS8

Careless can mean earless (1988)


A fellow member at our club has just had his
car stolen from a fairly remote launch point,
not very accessible to the general public.
Naturally the keys had been left in the ignition;
we all do that in case we land out or in case, on

Unmarketable impediments.

142

I have seen the future ... but I'm not sure it works

our small and congested site, the car is causing


an obstruction and needs to be moved.
Perhaps our friend paid the penalty of having a car that was far too tidy. The typical glider pilot's car is so full of junk, much of it
heavy, bulky and utterly unmarketable
impedimenta, that anyone wanting to steal
the vehicle would be appalled by the problem
of how to get rid of it without drawing attention to himself. Where do you hide, or how do
you explain to the gendarmes if they stop you,
the possession of (not to mention the purpose
of), a seven-foot-long tubular steel device with
a tow-hitch on the end, assorted dollies with
red fibreglass mouldings, the front end of a
bicycle, eighty feet of wing covers, six 10-gallon drums and a set of angle-iron tripods?
Much of this stuff is on the front seat. The
reason most people driving to the launch point
don't offer you a lift when they see you heading there on foot is not that they have no manners, but that by the time they had made space
for you to sit down you could have walked
there anyway. The reason someone doesn't
offer you a lift on the way back from the
launch point may be that he is stealing one of
those very rare, tidy cars...
After I scut tliis item off to Sailplane & Gliding /
heard that Scottish police had very efficiently
found the car quite unharmed a day or so later. I
realised that I had probably met the perpetrator.
I had found myself talking to an amiable
Glasgow truck-driver who had strolled off the hill
to express an interest in gliding. Spectators often
do tins, Dunstable being a natural amphitheatre.
He said he had delivered a truck to in London
and was now making his way home by hitch-Ink
ing. I then busied myself with other things. About
the time the car vanished, so did he. Let's amend
stolen to borrowed.

Gliding as mass entertainment:


Chapter IV from the Centenary
History of British Gliding, pub
lished 2029 AD (1982)
In 1999 the British National Gliding
Championships achieved for the first time the
distinction ot the highest television rating of
all sporting events. Motor racing's audience
collapsed when the oil began to run out and

petrol reached 75 a gallon, far beyond the


reach of ordinary wage-earners on 1,000 a
week. Silverstone was empty of spectators and
TV viewers found little excitement in watching cars travelling at 25mph all day in the fueleconomy marathons which were the only
form of competition the government permitted between internal combustion vehicles on
land, sea or air.
The technical problems of conveying the
thrills of gliding to the lay public were at first
thought insuperable, but one magic ingredient
quickly solved them - money. In the late
1980s advertisers, desperate to sponsor popular shows, offered the EGA ten million pounds
on condition that an audience of ten million
could be reached. The now Lord Rolfe of EGATV promptly hired a shy, retiring genius - of
whom no proper record now exists, but whose
name in some old manuscripts has been deciphered as P. Latipuss - to use all modern techniques to capture the masses for soaring.
Ladbrokes soon matched that sum, the Grand
National and the Derby having been abolished
after the nationalisation of all horses by the
Ministry of Transport. Betting money soon
poured into the Totternhoe Tote.
A transcript of a 1999 TV broadcast conveys some of the flavour of those early
attempts to bring soaring into the homes of
ordinary gambling people:
'It's a beautiful day here at Dunstable
Downs, viewers. You can see the giant doubleskinned solar-heated launch balloons gently
swelling in the noonday sun - and yes, there
goes the Barclays Bank balloon and dangling
beneath it the ASW-37 of Air Marshal Sir
George Lee, five times World Champion and
known as the Bjorn Borg of soaring. Because of
his bold decision not to use water-ballast his
glider is the first to leave the ground.
Remember first back round the course is the
winner, regardless of when he starts, so Sir
George has quite an advantage - provided
today's thermals stay weak! Look at the Tote
board in the top left hand corner of your TVwall. Odds against Barclays are whistling down
from 5 to 1 to near evens. Any of you wishing
to bet on a glider, just key in the contest number and your stake. It will all be placed instantaneously at the current odds and your winnings will be paid directly into your bank
account the moment the race is over."

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

The deserted airport.

143

Gliding as a spectator sport


(1992)
Years ago I wrote a futuristic piece of non
sense about gliding as a spectator sport, in
which the public could watch, and bet on, the
progress of the contestants around the course.
The heights and positions of the gliders would
be seen as a three-dimensional holographic
display, little points of coloured light repre
senting each aircraft That is just about feasi
ble right now: I'm not quite sure how the
hologram would work, but in principle the
three-dimensional data can be transmitted,
collected and displayed now. Will all the book
ies interested please form an orderly queue?
Oh, I nearly forgot the best thing of all:
people who steal points from their rivals by
sneakily climbing a few hundred feet - did I
say hundreds? I've seen 'em take thousands in prohibited airspace will be speedily
brought to book and pilloried.
Then what GPS will really come to stand
for is God Punishes Sinners.

will give you the view from his cockpit and a


full readout of all Dave's instruments. Yes, his
infra-red telescope is registering heat from a
field just this side of the deserted airport at
Luton. Just as well the other pilots aren't
allowed to see each other's readouts, and of
course crews cannot talk to their pilots - all
available channels are used by the bookies and
the entertainment media. The Lee and Jones
crews are tearing their hair and pummelling
the ground - with 100,000 in prize-money at
stake who can blame them? Remember folks,
for those stressful moments nothing calms the
nerves better than (strains of Bach's Air on a G
string) a Hamlet cigar..."
Tour o'clock and all's well, viewers. On the
giant display board in the hangar you can see
the update on each pilot. Fitchett has averaged 6.752km/h rate of climb and 213km/h
ground speed and has arrived back at
Folkestone first but at only 200 metres.
There's 5 million in bets riding on the
Spiller's cake-mix (It Doesn't Just Rise, It
Soars!) glider and he won't be popular if he
lands out now. Those reinforced cockpits
aren't just for heavy landings - it's to keep out
the disappointed punters till the cops arrive. If
there is a lynching, viewers, watch for action

144

I have seen the future ... but I'm not sure it works

replays by courtesy of your friendly local


underwriters - our motto, You Can't Take It
With You, So Why Not Leave It All With Us?"
The special attraction this year is the huge
three-dimensional holographic display which
represents the whole of Northern Europe, or
any chosen section of it enlarged. This occupies the new Joe Coral Geodesic Dome and
projects the position of each glider as a spot of
light, green if climbing, red if descending, suspended over the ground. The gaggles look like
little revolving Christmas trees, while tiny red
lights streak between one green cluster and
the next. Talking about Christmas trees folks,
remember there are only 152 shopping days
left and if you press the keys for the electronic shop window../'
'They're neck and neck at seven o'clock,
viewers. As they sweep past the Goodyear
Solar blimp over Tower Bridge we all get a
splendid view of the setting sun, and the varicoloured plumes of ballast-water streaming
from the quadruple vents - see the GreenRed-Yellow-Green for the Watney-Schempp
Nimbus 9 - bringing cheers from the masses
who dash from their sitting-rooms to see their
heroes streak overhead. The odds on Lee are
narrowing to 1.12677 to 1. And the winner
is..."
At this point these spectacular images of
vintage gliding at its best are suddenly
replaced by a message to viewers about bad
breath. When it comes to entertainment it
seems that, then as now, there is no substitute
for being there.

Not only were we able in 1999 to see what the


contest pilot sees via the Internet in real time, but
on-line shopping and betting were established
and fast-growing businesses. The extinction of
Luton airport remains a dream, however.

Bring back virginity (1991)


I told you in our last issue how I would literally go to the ends of the earth to avoid the
after-dinner-speaking season. However I did
not altogether succeed. The chairman of my
club - where I have loyally stayed as a member for a third of a century through thick and
thin, regardless of low launches in the 1950s,
high fees in the 1960s, long queues in the

1970s and oceans of Somme-quality mud


(they should have made puttees standard
issue) in the 1980s - threw himself on my
mercy. He had, he said, desperately searched
for weeks across the whole country for a
celebrity speaker, but had finally come to the
right decision - he'd given up. Would I, faute
de mieux, do the honours for the club's dinner?
It was an historic occasion, remember.
I fought a stiff rearguard action. I pointed
out that a retiring, though hardly shy, member of the club staff was embarking on a brilliant new career as a stand-up comic in the
pubs and clubs, and was exceptionally funny.
True, his material had absolutely nothing to
do with gliding, but since half the people who
come to annual dinners are friends and family of glider pilots and know little about the
sport, this was a great advantage. Surely he
was ideal? Yes, said the chairman, he had
thought so, too. But when the chairman's wife,
club censor and guardian of the club's morals,
saw an advance copy of Bert's spiel, she scissored out all the words that were racist, and
sexist, and blasphemous, and scatological, and
obscene, so Bert's script ended up looking like
a lace doily. Then there was also the embarrassing matter of a fee, now that he'd turned
professional.
Platypus's material, by contrast, was
believed to be more or less printable - relative
to Bert's stuff, anyway - and more importantly was free in both senses of the word: available and gratis.
The chairman briefed me, "Don't go on too
much about the glorious past of the club; people have had a bellyful of that this year, concentrate more on our glorious future." I suspected that was code for, "Don't talk about
yourself, talk about me." That's all right, I'm
not proud. I said to one of my partners the
other day, "I'm just an old has-been," and he
said, "Plat, that's rubbish - you never were
anything!" That's what partners are for, to cut
you down to size.
I had to tell the audience that frankly I wasn't looking forward all that much to the idea of
gliding in the 21st century. Indeed I think that
when the millennium arrives I shall sell my
glider and take up wine, women and song before my voice gives out. I'm always threatening to do that, of course, but something
invariably crops up. This winter, for instance,

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

cynical sophistication to that other age of


freedom, innocence and simple faith. For
instance, when you read the accounts of how
the founders of this club operated, it is evident that they believe that as a special favour
to them God had repealed the law of gravity.
I'm amazed that they survived 12 months, 12
weeks even. Solo training is the most cockeyed way to learn to fly - I started that way
in the 1940s (and had to be completely
retaught when I joined the club in the 1950s
and they still haven't got me sorted out yet).
At least we in the ATC had a high performance machine with crisp controls called the
Kirby Cadet, and one or two of the instructors actually had a few dozen launches in
their logbooks. But in the early 1930s the
blind confidently catapulted the even blinder
off the equivalent of the dome of St Paul's
Cathedral, and on the way down totally inexperienced hands tried to grapple with primitive control circuits that had all the resilience
of so much spent knicker-elastic. Oh, but the
freshness and simple joy of it, nevertheless!
In the greatest book on gliding ever written
Philip Wills poignantly describes the pioneer
members of our club, "We were young, virgin
and ecstatic"
Now look at us...
But you know, even now I quite often feel
like a virgin. I'd better rephrase that. I mean,
I often feel as those pioneers did; there is so
much in gliding that is still novel and exciting.
It was only a couple of months ago that I flew
to the Isle of Wight and back, and got just the
merest taste of what Geoffrey Stephenson had
experienced when in 1939 he launched from
the Chilterns and crossed the Channel, in a
glider of a quarter of the performance that I
had. It was only two years ago that I explored
the Brecon Hills for the first time, and I've not
tried Scotland yet, or soared the South Downs,
or used the sea breeze front over Lyme Bay.
And I still want to do a cross-country in a Kite
1 or a T-21. Our club has given me - given
hundreds of us - a way of life, lots of friends
and always something new to look toward to,
limited only by one's imagination. For that I
shall forever be grateful to the instructors, to
partners past and present, and above all to the
people who all those years ago devoted their
energies and risked their necks to get our club
off the ground and into the air.

146

I have seen the future ... but I'm not sure it works

Try forecasting anything you


like, but not the future (1985)
In New York the rainfall is vastly greater than
in London; the difference is that in London it
descends in a fairly continuous dribble whereas in the Big Apple the heavens open for a few
minutes and drench everyone foolish enough
to be out on foot. (Muggers being the other
deterrent.) Driven to shelter in a bookshop for
half an hour, I felt morally obliged to buy a
book. The one I chose was called The Experts
Speak which is a compendium of crass pronouncements uttered by able, intelligent and
well-qualified authorities. The fact that some
chap has a lifetime of creative achievement
behind him does not mean his crystal ball is
any less cloudy than the next man's. Here are
a few about aviation:
"As it is not at all likely that any means of
suspending the effect of air-resistance can
ever be devised, a flying-machine must
always be slow and cumbersome. . . . But as a
means of amusement, the idea of aerial travel
has great promise.... We shall fly for pleasure."
T. Baron Russell, A Hundred Years Hence,
1905.
"A popular fallacy is to expect enormous
speed to be obtained. ... There is no hope of
the airplane's competing for racing speed with
either our locomotives or our automobiles."
William Henry Pickering, (American
astronomer at Harvard College Observatory),
Aeronautics, 1908.
'The aeroplane ... is not capable of unlimited magnification. It is not likely that it will
ever carry more than five or seven passengers. High-speed monoplanes will carry even
less."
Waldemar Kaempfert, (Managing Editor of
Scientific American and author of The New
Art of Flying.), "Aircraft and the Future,"
Outlook, June 28, 1913.
"Gliders . . . will be the freight trains of the
air. We can visualise a locomotive plane leaving LaGuardia Field towing a train of six gliders in the very near future.
"By having the load thus divided it would be
practical to unhitch the glider that must come
down in Philadelphia as the train flies over that
place - similarly unhitching the loaded gliders
for Washington, for Richmond, for Charleston,
for Jacksonville, as each city is passed."

Grover Loening, (Grumman Aircraft 1944


Corp.).
'It has been demonstrated by the fruitlessness of a thousand attempts that it is not possible for a machine, moving under its own
power, to generate enough force to raise itself,
or sustain itself, in the air."
M. de Maries, Les Cents Merveilles des
Sciences et des Arts, 1847.
"Put these three indisputable facts together:
"1. There is a limit of weight, certainly not
much beyond fifty pounds, beyond which it is
impossible for an animal to fly.
2. The animal machine is far more effective
than any we can make; therefore the weight of
a flying machine cannot be more than fifty
pounds.
3. The weight of any flying machine cannot be less than three hundred pounds. Is it
not demonstrated that a true flying machine
is impossible?"
Joseph Le Conte, (Professor of Natural
History at the University of California),
Popular Science Monthly, November 1888.
"Heavier-than-air flying machines are impossible."
Lord Kelvin, (British mathematician, physicist, and President of the British Royal
Society), c. 1895.
"It is apparent to me that the possibilities of
the aeroplane, which two or three years ago
was thought to hold the solution to the flying
machine problem, have been exhausted, and
that we must turn elsewhere."
Thomas Alva Edison, (American scientist
and inventor), quoted in the New York World,
November 17, 1895.
Written by Christopher Cerf and Victor
Navasky, Pantheon Books, New York.

Sleepless in South West Thirteen


(1999)
I was delighted to find that the gentleman presiding over one of the interminable terminal
enquiries - the usual public wrangle about
whether London Heathrow should have a fifth
terminal, or whether jets should be allowed
to wake us at 4 a.m. - was a Mr Justice
Glidewell.
There is one solitary Glidewell in the
London residential phone directory, by the

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

semi-audible movies on tiny screens, until


they're screaming to be led back to the drawing-board. They'd come up with something.
The biggest difficulty, however, would not
be technology, but people. The general public
do not understand the principles of flight,
and especially they do not understand the
principles of motorless flight. The idea of
hundreds of jetliners milling about in the
dark over central London without power and
without any ground-based air traffic control
might unnerve them.
I would have achieved part of my great
aim; the inhabitants of Battersea and Barnes
(where I live) would no longer be woken up
by airliners. However that would largely be
because they would be too scared to go to
sleep in the first place.

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.

Rain, rain go away, you're booked


to come another day (1987)
I hate to admit it but weather forecasts are getting better. The weather itself is getting worse.
But the glad tidings of yet another washed-out
weekend are coming to us earlier and more
accurately. For this privilege we can thank first
the satellites and other data-gathering systems
and secondly computerised forecasting models.
'What's the *#()$ use of that?" you ask
gloomily as the 1987 definition of a Good Day
slides from the five-knot-thermals-for-eighthours dream to the long-enough-intervalsbetween-showers-to-derig-without-gettingsoaked reality. Well, with better information
we can squeeze better tasks out of the pathetic British climate. And again, if it's not going
to be soarable at all, the sooner I know the
happier I am, because I can arrange to do
something else with my valuable time, like
mangling Chopin's B flat minor Scherzo on
the Yamaha (not the motor-bike, silly, the
grand piano), tasting the contents of my cavernous cellar (the Bulgarian Red Infuriator in
the toolshed), playing with the floppy in my
Macintosh (steady on, family magazine and
all that. Ed.) or even, as a last resort, writing
something for this column ahead of the official deadline. (That'll be the day. Ed.)
In newspaper columns half-baked science
hacks gleefully predict that man will soon be
controlling the weather. That is just an
appalling idea. We could no more control the
weather than a drunk could control a juggernaut on black ice on a winding road in the
pitch dark without lights at 80mph. We could

certainly affect the weather, but that's not the


same thing at all.
Even now the Continentals blame us for all
the filthy weather they get - jokingly, of
course - but if they thought we were doing it
on purpose they'd go to war with us, targeting
three-inch hailstones on all our sporting
events by way of a warning-shot. Then imagine an EEC Commission trying to decide how
to allocate Europe's rain and sunshine. It
would make the squabbles over the Common
Agricultural Policy look like a triumph of harmonious statesmanship by comparison.
BUT - how different it would be if instead
of trying to affect the weather we were simply
able to forecast it a year ahead with perfect
accuracy! Would that not be ideal? You would
then have known that the first half of July
1987 was going to be delicious. So the BGA
could have called the Bristol GC and said,
"Sorry, lads, but we want July 4th to the llth
(eight glorious contest days, yummy,
yummy!) for the Racing Class Nationals, and if
there's any good weather left we need it for the
Open Class and the Standard Class, so you
provincials will just have to fight it out with
the other Regional Competitions organisers for
what falls off the rich man's table."

Picket the BGA.

'That's funny, the line's gone dead."


Furious deputations of Bristolians picket
the BGA offices, demanding, "Give us back our
eight days!", "We won't be second-class citizens! /; etc, threatening they will secede from
the movement and stage unofficial, pirate
competitions in the best weather, and the BGA
can do its damnedest.
Then you'd find all the air displays were
booked into the best weekend days and we'd
be warned off flying near any of them. With

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.

Its the Tower for Plat.

Soon people would have to draw lots to


decide when they were allowed to go on holiday; clubs would spin a roulette-wheel to get
their contest dates. Finally, to dampen the
rage of the losers and lessen the risk of riot
and civil commotion - not to mention a thriving black-market in sunshine, the gathering
and publishing of such forecasts would be
made a punishable offence. Then we'd be
right back where we are now, not having the
faintest idea what Mother Nature has in store
for us when, full of renewed hopes that This
Year Really Is Going Tb Be Different, we send
off our deposits. Oh, bliss.

149

Idiot's guides needed, soon (1987)


The most useful motoring advice for the man
who knows nothing about what goes on under
the bonnet of his car (that is to say almost any
man, if his male pride allows him to be honest)
is to be found in women's magazines. No
woman feels insulted if the writers assume she
is automotively illiterate, so these magazines
set out in simple Noddy-language the five
basic things to do if, for instance, your car
won't start of a morning. Her husband then
takes a quick look at her copy of Family Circle
- and, between sneers, actually learns something he didn't know before.
In the same way Tom Bradbury has cleverly addressed his splendid piece, "A Met Guide
for Beginners", to the aspiring Silver C pilot,
when in fact it ought to be read, studied and
pinned to the wall of the briefing room by
triple Diamond pilots. I have my full complement of gold-mounted rocks, but if I'd sat a
written exam on the content of Tbm's article
before reading it this morning I'd have been
lucky to have scraped a pass: more likely I'd
have been sent off for a remedial course in
soaring meteorology - probably in some very
distinguished company:
'This piece of cardboard, gentlemen, represents a cumulus. No, Mr Platypus sir, hold
yours fluffy side up, please. That's right, the flat
bit goes underneath. All together now, after
me, cuu-muu-luss, cuu-muuluss!" Disorganised
chanting by 50,000 hours' worth of Open Class
pilots, who only know to circle when their
Cambridge computer tells them to.
"Cor Blimey, what a shower - pay attention
at the back there, if you want those leg-irons
removed before tea-time. Now, in this part of
the world cyclones go anti-clockwise, and
anti-cyclones go clockwise. Easy isn't it? What
d'you mean, you don't know what clockwise
is? I see, you're all using those nerdy digital
watches. Well, this large round thing on the
wall is a clock, and you'll see it's got a big
hand and little hand ... if you don't pass this
part of the test you'll all have to fly Standard
Class" - shrieks of abject terror - "and sit the
Bronze C written examination."
Utter panic. One escapee is dragged back
by a Doberman. Trusties (those who can tell
Upwind from Downwind in the practical test,
which consists of standing out on the field and

I have seen the future ... but I'm not sure it works

150

waiting until their noses get colder than their


bottoms, or conversely) manacle the victim to
the wall. "Now, how to detect Signs of Decay:
you lot should be pretty good at this. .."
Well, it'd be no worse than going to one of
those fancy health farms - and a whole lot
cheaper.
Tbm Bradbury's "Meteorology and Flight" was
published by A & C Black in 1991.

The seven deadly sins play:


avarice (1989)
This playlet 2000 was written as the middle sec
tion of a dramatic trilogy with the titles 1999,
2000 and 2001, which in turn formed pan of the
great London Gliding Club Christmas Revue of
1989, where musical performances and comedy
acts delighted an audience that was clearly sev
eral drinks ahead of the cast. The other two parts
of the trilogy were considered seditious and
obscene respectively.
2000

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:

You the manager?

M: Well, manager, proprietor, owner what's


in a name?
P: So you're the landlord?
M: Well, airlord, to be pedantic.
Pilot looks puzzled.
M: I own all the airspace over this site to the
bottom of Amber One. And a real packet
it cost me, I can tell you.
P: You're a lucky man. I've been looking
forward to a day like this for years!
M: (with heavy significance) Me too.
P: Well, I must get airborne toot sweet. As it
says in your S&G ad, "Standard Launch
Price, 10 payable in advance." Here's
my cheque for ten, so I'll...
Manager stares at the proffered cheque in
obvious disbelief and disgust.
P: Nothing wrong with my cheque?
M: (with brutal irony) Nought wrong with it,
nought wrong.
P: Well, that's all right then. I'll get going.
M: (wearily) I mean, there's a nought short.
P: A hundred quid?
M: That is correct, sunshine. The penny, or
rather the pound coin, has finally
dropped in your skull. You have grasped
my message.
P: What about the Standard Launch Price?
That's why I came here!
M: (brandishes arm towards the sky) And I
suppose this is a Standard day? I seem to
have just overheard you wittering on to
yourself about (mockingly), "the day of a
lifetime!" A much above standard day,
squire; accordingly, a much above standard price.
P: They told me at Booker they'd undercut
any price of yours, after being bought by
John Lewis Stores. "Never knowingly
undersold" is their motto - and they're
only 20 miles from here.
M. Look, John, now that the Tring Road is a
six-lane turnpike it'll take four hours to
get there.
P: Is the traffic that dense?
M. No, it's the unemployables that operate
the twelve tollbooths between here and
High Wycombe that are dense. Let's face
it, it's my price or take up tiddlywinks.

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:

I never thought it would be cheaper to


stick to women, gambling and booze.
If you're serious I could fix you up in
those departments: this is after all a fullyequipped leisure centre.
Yes, I've seen your commercial on BBC
television, "Get rid of your complex at
our complex!" No, thanks, I came here to
fly, but a hundred quid!
I can arrange a substantial discount.
Oh?
Just sign this kidney vendor card which
we took the liberty of printing up when
we saw you coming - I mean, when you
arrived at the office
You mean a donor card?
Nothing is donated round here any more,
young man. Everything is for sale; that
way we all benefit. You get a reduction of
15, all the spare parts clinics get your
declaration form on the fax, and I get a
commission.
What do they do with my declaration?
That depends on the state of their coldstore inventory and customer demand.
They either just wait by the phone or
they send out the refrigerated vans on
spec, sort of thing, and listen in on decimal-one.
It sounds a bit macabre. But, what the
Hell, if you're stone dead, who's to
mind?
Hm, I wouldn't be too sure about stone
dead. Some of the cowboys are a bit overzealous. I wouldn't even doze off while
waiting for the retrieve, that's my advice.
Stay high, and if you do hit trouble, stuff
it in properly. No broken ankles or concussion. But forget it, think about the
flight! Where are you heading?
I thought I'd make for the Black
Mountains in Wales, then Ah!
Ah?
A tiny problemette, squire. All the airspace from Tklgarth up to Alpha Centauri
belongs to a syndicate. (Picture of John
Jeffries with wadding in his cheeks projected
on wall.)
Like a gliding syndicate, all helping each
other?
More like a Mafia syndicate, all knifing
each other - same difference. Anyway

P:
M:

P:
M:
P:
M:

P:
M:

P:
M:

151

it'll cost you the proverbial upper and


lower limb to use the wave today.
They won't know I'm there if I'm at
17,000ft.
Want a bet? (Holds up black box) This new
electronic wonder is a mandatory combined transponder and taximeter. Every
time you enter a piece of airspace it starts
counting time and height, and debits
your account accordingly and credits his
account. (Nods towards picture of
Godfather JJ.) Any tampering is automatically detected, in which case my little
remark about it costing you an arm and a
leg ceases to be metaphorical.
How much will a Diamond cost me?
As the man said, if you have to ask, you
can't afford it.
I might run out of money just at the last
moment.
Then you'll hear this (pushes button on
black box). Alarm bell rings. Metallic female
voice: You have exceeded your credit ceiling! Your variometer has been disconnected! You have ten minutes in which to
land safely or negotiate a second mortgage on your house; call 129-decimal-85!
After ten minutes dive-brakes will be
deployed automatically! (Increasingly
shrill.) Come on, dozy, you have nine
minutes I give up! Farewell, gliding! Goodbye,
Dunstable! (Sobs. Turns to leave.)
Hold on, young fellow, if you have championship qualities they might even pay
you. TUrn professional! Join the multimillionaires (picture of Robin May) now
that soaring is the world's biggest TV
spectator sport. Prize money, sponsorship from suppliers (picture of John
Delafield against background photo of giant
RD Aviation warehouse), fees for opening
supermarkets, seats on the boards of
companies...
What ever happened to Wimbledon?
Not for today's audiences. No blood. And
you know how the viewers love
tantrums; when they found glider pilots
had manners that made John McEnroe
look like John Gielgud, well ... (Gets out
pad and pencil.) I'll put you down for next
year's Open Class Nationals. Navigator all
right?

152

I have seen the future ... but I'm not sure it works

Oh yes, that's great!


P2 in a multi-seater in the Open Class is
the lowest form of human life, but you
have to start somewhere. (Licks pencil, fills
in form, gets pilot to sign.) And since I've
taken a shine to you, I will let you fly for
only ten quid today.
P: Brilliant! You're so kind.
M: Well, as your agent for 50% of all takings
from next year onwards (taps signed docu
ment) I mustn't let you get rusty. (Puts
model glider into hands of bemused pilot
and retreats into distance with reel of
string.) Now, all clear above and behind?
Take up slack!

P.
M.

Fade Out. The music of Delius blends with


the swelling birdsong.

Political correctness corrected


(1992)
Just as the tyrannies of Eastern Europe collapse, a new tyranny replaces them over in
the West. No, I am not referring to the use of
the word Compulsory for gliding safety meetings, out of place though it is in a free sport. I
refer to PC, or Political Correctness, in the
written and spoken word, which started in the
USA and is spreading here. Simple words are
becoming taboo, and ridiculous circumlocutions are substituted. Thus fat is prohibited;

Countryfolk at dose quarters.

alternative loody image, is recommended, do


you believe. If you said, 'That fat old girl is
dead drunk," about the only word not calculated to set the Orwellian thought-police
screaming after you is is. The fact that the
sentence was true in every detail would only
exacerbate the crime.
Now some officious woman in England has
pronounced that we shouldn't use expressions like, "I am handicapped by not having a
word-processor/' because it somehow
demeans disabled people. What that dumb
broad (might as well be hanged for a sheep as
a lamb) does not know was that the word
handicap is, and has been for at least three
hundred years, a sporting term.
The Oxford English Dictionary says it
derives from hand-in-the cap, to do with forfeit-money being deposited in a cap when
wagers were being made. It then came to

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

Best of all the National Ladder will be laid


out horizontally so that I can't be at the bottom of it any more - though I might drop discreetly off the right-hand edge.

Positively the last straw (1992)


Talking about atmospheric haze, how do you
feel about the recent and permanent ban on
stubble-burning? A traditional feature of the
late summer months has now been erased
from the glider pilot's repertoire. Those billowing flames will slide into folk memory, in
which the rates of climb and the dangers of
being roasted alive will both be monstrously
exaggerated to impress our grandchildren. I
am in two minds about this deprivation, if that
is what it is, so each of these minds has been
allowed equal time to express in heroic couplets (ie doggerel. Ed) the emotions to which
it gives rise:

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.

Eat ya heart out, Will of Stratford. There's lots


more where those gems came from. (Tb be
published over the dead bodies of the S&G
subscription renewals department.)

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

Cambridge 18, 29, 44, 77


Cambridge University 17, 65, 92
Cambridge University Gliding Clu
Camphill 8, 18, 42
Cannon, Dr Walt 33, 111, 112
Caproni 8, 45, 59, 60, 112, 130
Cashmore, Ron 37
Castle Bromwich 8, 9, 40
Cessna 15
Cessna 152 8, 130, 131
Chesters, Ralph 16
Colditz 11
Competition Enterprise 48
Concorde 66
Cooke, Alistair 91
Gumming, Duncan 129

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

Gantenbrinck, Bruno 104


Carton, Chris 32
German 6, 19, 20, 29, 33, 54, 61, 72, 96, 108,
109, 134
Germans 107
Germany 8, 10, 49, 101, 108, 126
Glaser-Dirks
DG-300 8, 113
Glasfliigel
Kestrel 17 58
Libelle 70, 94, 104
Libelle 301 104, 105, 106
Good, John 8, 117, 129
Goodhart, Nick 35, 42, 101
GPS 29, 43, 50, 52, 53, 54, 65, 78, 88, 97,
103, 104, 105, 106, 122, 134, 138, 143, 147
Grob
103 8, 125
Grosse, Hans-Werner 8, 32, 99, 104, 108,
129
Grunau Baby 10
Guinness Book of Records 65

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

Holighaus, Klaus 113


Horsley, Terence 9
Huffstutler, Mark 112
Hull, Ted 8
Husbands Bosworth 42, 43

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

Lake Hawea 106, 107


Lake Manapouri 106
Lake Mono 125
Lake Tahoe 124
Lasham 8, 21, 32, 42, 136
Le Blanc 84
Lee, George 142, 143, 144
Leszno, Poland 8, 108, 160
LET
Blanik 16
London Gliding Club 8, 10, 12, 24, 26, 57,
150 see also Dunstable
Long Mynd 17
Liibeck 100, 108
Luton Flying Club 16
Lynn, Steve 87, 160

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

Partridge, Rhoda 16, 17


Payne, Jim 120
Philbrick, Pat 121, 122
Piggott, Derek 16, 74, 90
Pin, Francois 131, 137
Piper Tri-Pacer 15
Platypus 6, 8, 11, 12, 13, 15, 23, 24, 26, 28,
32, 37, 39, 40, 41, 43, 44, 53, 59, 60, 62, 63,
64, 65, 67, 68, 69, 70, 71, 72, 73, 85, 97, 99,
103, 106, 107, 117, 119, 124, 127, 131, 140,
144, 149, 160
Platypus, Mrs 8, 13, 45, 67, 68, 71, 110, 160
Portmoak 42, 101
POST task 114, 120
Purnell, Alan 70
Pybus, Andy 112

R
Rackham, Paul

127

Reichmann, Helmut 28, 58, 82


Renner, Ingo 101
Riddell, Mike 8, 10
Rodwell, R R 71
Rolfe, Barry 74, 90, 142
Russell, Mike 58
Russian/Russians 20, 33, 36
Ryan, Laurie 25

Sabino, Tbny 122, 125


Sailplane & Glider 19
Sailplane & Gliding/S&G 6, 7, 8, 9, 13, 16,
21, 39, 42, 47, 68, 70, 76, 80, 84, 85, 86, 88,
90, 91, 103, 105, 106, 117, 124, 126, 132,
133, 134, 140, 141, 142, 150, 153
Saundby, Pete 139
SB-1 58
Schempp-Hirth (generally) 8, 44, 64, 75,
108, 140
Discus 91, 92, 112, 113, 124
Duo Discus 8, 106
Janus C 8, 108, 160
Nimbus (generally) 46, 47, 48, 91, 136
Nimbus 2 8, 62, 64, 82, 94, 110, 133
Nimbus 3 32, 79, 160
Nimbus 4D 137
SHK 49, 141
Ventus CM 118
Schleicher (generally) 64, 104, 108, 140
ASH-25 8, 14, 31, 34, 43, 55, 62, 83, 86,
92, 97, 98, 99, 104, 108, 117, 118, 119,
120, 123, 124, 125, 126, 127, 129, 134,
136, 137, 139, 140
ASW-12 66, 100
ASW-17 8, 32, 104, 105, 106
ASW-20 31, 48, 64, 81, 141
ASW-20L 8, 141
ASW-27 131
K-7 8, 10, 31, 59, 60, 62
K-8 17, 47
Schumann vario 101,102
Scull, Bill 75, 83, 85, 89
Seminole Lake, Florida 8, 117, 119, 131, 137,
160
Seniors Championship 8, 117, 131, 132, 160
Slater, Doc 18
Slingsby 9, 58
Cadet 8, 9, 62, 67, 145
Capstan 8, 26, 27, 52
Dart 49, 78, 88, 154
Dart 17 62, 88, 89, 141
Dart 17R 8, 21

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

Walters, Rick 124


Wasserkuppe 9, 18, 19, 29
Watson, Ron 57
Watt, Dave 143
Welch, Ann 71
Wells, Martyn 74, 89
Wells, Pete 89
Whipsnade Zoo 16
White Mountains 115, 121, 122, 160
Whiteside, Sam 8, 160
Williamson, John 36, 63, 83, 129
Wills, Gavin 8, 106, 107
Wills, Gillian 106, 107
Wills, Justin 8, 71, 74, 100, 104, 106, 107,
131, 160
Wills, Philip 9, 21, 42, 145
Wingfield, Charles 17
Withall, Carr 8
World Championships 8, 14, 49, 51, 52, 53,
54, 58, 101, 108, 110, 111, 124, 127, 128, 131
World Hang Gliding Championships 115

Yosemite National Park in California

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!

nH< .11 Barritt was born in Liverpool during an


'i.ii- mid. She started gliding in the USA in
1964, a year before the birth of her son Darrin
(whom she introduced to soaring and power-flying,
and who now flies 737s for United and F-15s for the
US government). Marion has US Diamond Badge
number 257. For some years she was co-owner of
the Soar Minden commercial gliding operation in
Nevada.
Marion has doggedly ploughed through every
word Platypus has written over four decades and
winnowed the wheat from the chaff. We now print
the chaff. She has proof-read conscientiously, but
Platypus must take the blame for any errors since,
like all authors, he can't stop tinkering with the text
until the exasperated printer finally seizes the stillnot-quite-finished manuscript from Plat's flippers
and yells, "Start the presses!"

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.

^g ui uosjnv

u ijI9Sjno jo uowiqrqxe ITB


rux ss9tun onqnd UT sjooq spqpj. p'B9J ^ou OQ

puiin ^ou op
entl seuii^ ye pu^

S9zzij

PIJOM ^UTJ'BOS 9m S9IOIUOJqO OqM SUOS'B9S H^ JOJ UTSUI 'B SI 9J9q 9A'BI[
'BI[j(VSL -"^AU9 IRLflA. U99jg J9^TJM SUTJ'BOS MOH9J 'B Q^BUI 0^ I[nOU9 S

You might also like