On cloud nine (and ten, and eleven . . .)

LS7

LS7 after landing at Lake Keepit

I’ve had two more days of lovely flying at Lake Keepit.

Saturday had broken thermals in a blue sky – not much cumulus – but I managed 2 hours 43 minutes of local soaring. Sunday was a better weather day so I flew the 100 or so kilometres from Keepit to Manilla to Gunnedah and return to Keepit and was up for just over 2 hours 32 minutes.

I’ve had some great flying, very satisfying indeed, and in a lovely aircraft, the LS7. I’ve learned a lot about thermalling, handling gliders and reading the detailed weather forecasts and thernalling predictions (including the Skew-T Log-P diagram, which as you probably know provides for a large angle between isotherms and dry adiabats). I’ve also learned about GPS loggers which enable you to download your flight and examine it in detail using a program called SeeYou. You can even replay the whole flight track in 3D – that would be good to show your friends at dinner parties!

I said farewell to Lake Keepit on Monday morning and drove home via Tamworth through some lovely scenery. I’ll return to Keepit. It is a five-hour plus journey,  but it is a great place to fly and the accommodation is just $29 a night!

Flying over Gunnedah airport.

Flying over Gunnedah airport.

The wildlife is also good. I saw lots of birds on the ground and a wedge-tailed eagle joined me in a thermal at one time and a couple of swifts in another. While having a beer and a chat outside on Saturday after flying, a curious currawong came close. A mouse approached and the bird ran across and stabbed it, then ate some before flying away with it. Nature eh? Tough!

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1 Response to On cloud nine (and ten, and eleven . . .)

  1. How was the currawong drinking its beer? Did it pay for it by putting it on its bill?

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