Going up, going down, going Pop!

Saturday, and the soaring forecast is again not that good. The thought is that we should pack up the gliders in the afternoon ready for the return to Camden on Sunday.

I go for a fly in the DG303, bung off the tow at 2,500 feet and manage to climb to 5,000 feet in a reasonable thermal. But there aren’t many more thermals around and there’s plenty of sink. I amuse myself by taking video with the GoPro, holding it out of the small opening panel in the side of the canopy for a better view. I stay up for 45 minutes.

After landing, it’s all hands on deck for de-rigging the gliders and putting them in their trailers. This is hard work – the wings are heavy and need manhandling into their special cradles in the trailers. There are five club gliders and we also help de-rig a few of the privately-owned gliders.

Over Cootamundra airport.

Over Cootamundra airport.

The 330k drive back on Sunday is uneventful for a start, a gentle 80km/h progress through Harden and past Yass onto the Hume Highway towing the long trailer. But about an hour from Camden, there’s a “Pop!”sound and the trailer starts to weave. I pull over onto the verge. I’ve blown a tyre. Luckily it is the left hand one, because the trucks and cars are flying by at 110 km/h just a couple of feet from the side of the trailer. I drive forward  and find a slightly wider verge. I jack the trailer up and replace the shredded tyre with the spare. It’s scary because the trailer sways on the jack whenever a truck whizzes by. But I survive and make it to Camden.

There is a silver lining. I’m late arriving and most of the gliders have been rigged by the time I get there. Yay!

Camp is over. A good experience despite the weather not being helpful for distance flying. I had five flights in the week with a total of 11 hours in the air.

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