Sunday, March 22, 2015

Saturday March 21, 2015 Vernal Equinox - First Day of Spring

WEATHER
Visibility+30 mi
Wind: Light and variable
Altitudes: 4000+
Time Aloft: Hour+
Max Lift: 400 fpm
Temperature: mid-Eighties
Comment: Lots of visitors from Lemoore NAS
Tow pilot: Julie Butler, Harry Davies, Harold Gallagher.

The weather was beautiful, the field was in great shape and I'm excited that now the days will be longer than the nights. Or did you forget that is the definition of Vernal Equinox. Just a reminder.

There were numerous observers out there today. Our member Chris, his lady Annalee, and another pilot, Sean, arriving in a Cessna 172. Another group arrived in a Piper Warrior including Steve, his wife Rebecca, a corporate pilot, and Jamie, another pilot.

Chris arriving in a Cessna 172 and flew several flights with friends Jamie and Annalee.
Also, early on, Harry Davies arrived via car and had a good time both flying and towing. He checked out in the 1-26 and his flight looked great with no PIO's on takeoff. Now he can schedule out of the 2-33 making more room for others earlier in their training.

Yes, the 1-26 is back on line, with a huge thanks to Martin Caskey and Jan Zanutto, and with the help of other of our members too numerous to mention. They did a fabulous job of repairing and refurbishing the 1-26 and it handles well having been test flown by Martin.

Martin Caskey is test flying the 1-26 after he and Jan and others worked hard to get it back on line.

Alex Caldwell and Mel Council flew a series of training flights including one or two that involved some pretty good soaring based on what we could see from the ground and their time aloft. Yutaka Buto helped Alex and Mel where necessary and then flew the 1-26, or the 2-33, I'm not sure which.

Mel and Alex searching for thermals.
Looks like they found a good one and stayed aloft longer than others.
No, they didn't land out although it looks like it. Just a telephoto taken from the patio that shows the high grass in between. You can see Mel Council, Alex Caldwell, and Yutaka Buto preparing to haul the Orange Crush back to the launch area.

Julie and Morgan towed and mowed. Finally they headed back to SLO in the Cessna 152 they are partnered in. During their stay here, Julie did about 8 tows and Morgan mowed the grass in the center strip between Runways 31L and 31R. Thanks to you both for all that effort. And for the burrito you gave me during the day, Morgan. Delicious.

Julie and Morgan heading home in their Cessna 152.

Early in the morning, Jeff Richardson and Larry Johnson headed to Harris Ranch for fuel since Coalinga is out of fuel and not likely to have any soon. They got back in time for Jeff and I to fly the necessary three flights to complete his Biennial Flight Review. On the first flight I thought I'd surprise him with a 200 foot simulated rope break but he was ready instantly, turning in the right direction and holding airspeed and heading right back to the runway, with enough energy to roll back to the launch area. Great flying, Jeff.

Richard Walker is at it again with his wonderful construction skills, this time preparing a trailer to haul the 1-26 since we expect our members to begin cross country flying in that ship. That trailer will be a big help to free the flights away from home base. Without it, going cross country is a real risk of landing out an no good trailer to get it back to Avenal.

Our newest member, John Morris, flew his second and third flights today and is just about ready to declare the tow skill has moved to his subconscious and therefore easy to control. I suspect he'll be soloing in just a few more flights based on completion of the required maneuvers for solo. Nice flying John.

 Jim and Debby Rickey arrived in their Cessna 210 and while they didn't fly gliders, they helped out wherever necessary and then headed back to Hanford.

Jim and Debby Rickey in their Cessna heading back to Hanford or somewhere.
No that's not a gear problem, just Cessna's way of retracting the gear. Not technically neat.
But Jim loves his Cessna 210 in spite of the gear mechanism

Peter Sahlberg and his daughter Jamie, were hard at work both removing and replacing rivets on the 1-26 tailcone. They, along with others, helped get the 1-26 back on line with just a minimal few days without it being on the schedule. Thanks Peter and Jamie.

For those of you who travel the Avenal cutoff and are bored by the long, straight, flat, road of about 20 miles, here's another view of that road suggesting it isn't all that flat, straight, and boring.

The Avenal Cutoff taken from just east of I-5 at the beginning of the straight stretch.


If I have forgotten anyone who was there yesterday and helped out or flew, sorry. I was busy training and towing and didn't take many pictures that otherwise would have helped me remember who was there and what was accomplished. See you all next weekend. The thermals are getting stronger each weekend.





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