Showing posts with label Paragliding. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Paragliding. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 17, 2012

Paragliding Tasmania


I and four other paragliding pilots went to the South West Tasmania in December 2011 to fly. On the first day we looked at the Sentinels then flew 12 Trees (5min flight, unfortunately). On the second day we did a couple of good flights off Mt Elisa. We had excellent conditions, mostly blue skies with a little bit of cumulus. Wind was light and nicely flowing up the ridges. Launching was relatively easy. Some of the thermals were strong but the cores were tight and difficult to exploit for beginners.

Flying with Lake Pedder in the background was amazing. Only Klaus (our Austrian import) had a good flight. He flew down to the last ridge then made his way up, above launch, above Mt Elisa, then eventually above Mt Anne. It was really impressive stuff. The rest of us merely delayed our descents. Nevertheless, it was incredibly good fun.

Photos from the trip can be found here.

After the South West, Mark and I tried to fly Winton (the most accessible site out of Hobart). Unfortunately the wind was high and we didn't have the confidence/experience to give it a go. It was good to watch the locals fly the site, however. Hopefully next time we'll get to fly there.

Wednesday, January 19, 2011

Paragliding

My paragliding adventures took their best turn last weekend. Two days of perfect weather, 3 (of 4) great flights. For the first time, I really felt comfortable flying (though I felt sick on the first day due to turbulence).

I definitely flew my highest too. At a guess, maybe 1200 metres. (Mark probably made it to 1500m.) It started to get a little cold. It's going to be weird when we make it to 3000m.

Launching and landing seem second nature now. The stress has ebbed away and I can focus on making sure I'm safe rather than pandering to unfounded fears. I understand the equipment and I know when it's setup right. I feel like I've got the process down fairly well now.

There are three things Mark and I lack:
  1. Instruments (we need a vario/altimeter and GPS)
  2. Meteorological knowledge
  3. Time in the air (learning how to stay in a thermal, judge distances/height, etc.)