The wind direction forecasted for the day and the reality were significantly different. So instead of SW we got SSE which meant we wouldn't be able to fly from Mt Leinster to Croghaun and a few other turn points as I'd planned the task the day before.
The new task consisted of the take off turn point and another one over Blackrock approx 3.5km away after which we had to fly the as far as possible. It was more like an XC task than a classical "race to goal".
Window opening was set up for 1 o'clock.
Big Mark - the CL leader - launched as the first one and bombed out few mins later. A bit later a few other pilots tried, of which Rafal "Vox" managed to stay in the air and after a long lasting fight he eventually regained the height and after getting into the take off cylinder headed towards the BR turn point. More pilots geared up and got in the air,
so did I.
The new task consisted of the take off turn point and another one over Blackrock approx 3.5km away after which we had to fly the as far as possible. It was more like an XC task than a classical "race to goal".
Window opening was set up for 1 o'clock.
Big Mark - the CL leader - launched as the first one and bombed out few mins later. A bit later a few other pilots tried, of which Rafal "Vox" managed to stay in the air and after a long lasting fight he eventually regained the height and after getting into the take off cylinder headed towards the BR turn point. More pilots geared up and got in the air,
so did I.
I got in a strong thermal immediately. It was broken up and it took me a good while to ride it to the cloud base. I got quickly to the first cylinder and looked for the Blackrock where I could see Rafal Vox hovering pretty high. He left the hill way before I got there. On my way back I saw a few other gliders flying along the Blackrock ridge: Sebastian, Lubor, Greg and Big Mark who launched for the second time this day. It seemed like good company for a good XC.
It was my first time to fly with the lk8000 instead of my Garmin and I wasn't sure if I'd completed the BR turn point. I changed some settings and decided to fly into it again. That nearly grounded me as I couldn't make it back over the ridge. Then I noticed Seb around 100m away centering a thermal- that was my salvation!
While there was blue sky over the mast we had a pretty nice cloud street over Blackrock which worked excellently. I picked up a nice developing cloud and few mins later I could enjoy my favourite view: Mt Leinster mast from 1200m - gorgeous.
Now was the time for the most difficult decision: to leave the hill or not to leave? I left.
I stayed in one thermal until I passed Slaney river. Once it was gone I flew downwind under the cloud street coring every little lift and most of the time just 0m/s lift letting the wind push me further and further from Lenny.
I saw Lubor approx 200m below me and from now on we flew together for 20km helping each other in searching for any lift. Small gaggle is better than no gaggle.
While doing my best to stay in any lift I saw a hang glider (Jim Dowling) was approaching us from the south
and Seb to the north struggling hard along the small ridge. Jim caught up with us but was way higher. I tried to follow him whenever I saw him coring but Lubor kept searching on his own. Eventually Jim stayed in one thermal for a few more circles - it had to be a decent one. I got there quickly and availed of the same thermal - 3m/s to the base - sweet. I could relax a bit now. I couldn't find Sebastian. Jim disappeared somewhere in Keadeen direction. Lubor was at the base few kilometres in front of me. That gave me some comfort as I could just watch him and follow thermals that he marked. It worked just once.
While heading north I could see Lubor very low in desperate search for any lift in the Askanagap valley and before I caught up with him he was landed after 44.4km - less then 5km away from the TMT Award - what a pity!
I was getting lower and lower and when I got over Lubor I was below the tops surrounding the valley. I found a very broken thermal that I couldn't stay in. I got few collapses but managed to gain some height.
To the left I saw the Croaghanmoira hill that was just bathed in the sun. By its shape it looked like a classic collector and trigger point. I decided to chance it and after a while got in 3m/s sink and started accelerating significantly. "There must be something" I thought. And was indeed! 4m/s lift straight to the cloud base at more than 1300m. I had to run away from that as less than 100m above me the controlled airspace started. To the right I could see Wicklow and to the left Wicklow Mountains - the most beautiful view in Ireland unfortunately available to just view. I couldn't help staring at it but my GPS warned me: I'm heading towards Dublin CTA that starts from 3000 feet up. After quick assessment I decided to go towards the N11, avoid any cloud suck and stay below 900m - it was around 55km from Mt Leinster. The chance to break the official Irish record became a reality! I headed for the nearest bright field hoping for some bubbles, than another one.
I passed Ashford and in front of me had nothing but forest. I wasn't sure if I would make it to the big meadow behind it but got into a spike and gained a few meters - that was when I realised: Eoin is not the record holder any more - sorry Eoin...:)
Tom Cardas
