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2023 Senior Soaring Championship Report
From
Rich Owen@21:1/5 to
All on Sat Mar 11 05:57:48 2023
It’s Time Again for the Big Show,
The last week of Pre-Seniors activities ended last Thursday and today was the first practice day. For a week, we have been conducting a Sailplane Grand Prix 2.0 event that lasted 5 days. This was a type of race based on the World Sailplane Grand Prix.
It was developed in the Truckee area so all pilots, no matter what type of glider they flew, could participate. It is a handicapped, Assigned Task event, that uses varying diameters of the turn circles to even out the performance of the gliders. It was
amazing, that after a 2.5 hour flight there were so many ships, of varying performance, on final glide together. Everyone enjoyed the event but we cannot divulge the winner since it will be announced at the awards banquet this Friday. The winner is
presented with the John Farrington Memorial Trophy. John was my crew for many years when I first started racing. He also crewed for many National Champions in his earlier days. He also crewed the Race Across America celebrating the 200th anniversary
of the Wright brothers first flight. The trophy is typical of John, it depicts an old man smoking a cigarette. We found it in his garage after he passed away. We all miss John and we felt this is a great way to honor his many years in the soaring.
We also did a series of fun races that were organized by Ken Sorenson. We used the same task in the SGP event, except the SGP pilots use a start finish line. Having all the participants fly roughly the same task gave the pilots a way to measure their
performance among several ships on the OLC.
If that wasn’t enough, we did Competition Director and Scorer training to give pilots who may want to participate in contest management, some training to prepare themselves for the job. It was the first time we offered this as a pre-Seniors option,
but it seemed everyone got a lot out of it. Thank you to Sandra Danoff who answered a late night call to save my bacon. Also, many thanks to John Godfrey for covering the actual scoring of flight logs and Ken Sorenson for all the fantastic tasks and
stepping in when I had to leave the gliderport for a day. It is wonderful to have such a support crew, but that is typical in the soaring community.
Well, now it is time for the Big Show. Yesterday we had the practice day for the Senior Soaring Championship under mainly sunny skies with breezy conditions. Many of the pilots have been flying every day leading up to this event, so some took the day
off to rest. It is a contest manager’s dream to tire out the field with good flying so they have to take a rest day before the contest. It was also my dream to have a fantastic contest manager run the contest while I fly. Over the years I have been
very lucky to find a core group of wonderful and very competent contest managers to allow me fly. This year I was lucky to get Ms. Kerry Huffstutler to step forward. Kerry has run numerous contests in Uvalde Texas, including 2 World Gliding
Championships, so the Seniors is like a walk in the park. You should hear the story on how she agreed to do the job. It involves a Mexican dinner, margaritas and glider pilots in Hobbs NM.
The pilots meeting started on time and John Good is again our CD. I love working with John and I’ve learned so much about being a CD from him. We covered the usual items and set the pilots loose on the skies over Central Florida. It was a slow climb
to 4,000ft but he lift was good some times and down right terrible in others. The first leg to Chalet Suzzanne was very slow for some people. The clouds cried, come to me, only for the pilot to be greeted with sink. A nice line of clouds formed well
to the east of the usual fast track down highway 27, but the Class B airspace prevented some later pilots from using it. On the run to Green Swamp, it was a little easier. The clouds were more honest, cloud bases higher and the lines a little clearer.
Going to Gore was a big choice, go further to the nicer clouds or head home for the P7 beer truck early. The journey back to the field was nicely boring, with high energy final glides and everyone clearing the runway safely. After logs were sent in,
ships tied down, the usual groups went to town. Dinners at Chuy’s, Coyote Rojo, Pepe’s, and the Clermont Brewery were well attended. At 8pm the RV parking lot was like it was at midnight last week. Everyone is looking forward to a great contest
and I hope we will be able to provide a fun, safe event.
Stay high, fly fast and come home!
Rich
Team 98 Backseater
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From
Craig Reinholt@21:1/5 to
All on Sat Mar 11 11:44:54 2023
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From
Rich Owen@21:1/5 to
All on Sat Mar 11 18:04:19 2023
Day 1
We Had Cu and We Had Blue
The first day of any contest is a tough situation. You are not going to win a contest on the first day but you sure can put yourself on the back foot. Personally, I love to come from behind, sneaking up on the unsuspecting leaders. Well, we
accomplished our goal today.
John Good did the usual Mandatory Safety Brief today and went over all the things that pilots have done to ruin their day at the Seniors. From flying into trees after a low energy pull up, landing gear up, calling for an aero retrieve from a different
airport than what the pilot was in, to flying a great task and finding out it was yesterday’s task. We have to add another story after today, but that comes later.
Our task was a TAT beginning at Start A, I4&Hwy27, Winter Haven, Mabel, Lake Ridge and then Finish. Nominal distance was only 93 miles with a minimum time of 1:30 due to a poor weather forecast. Fernando said the sky would be devoid of Cu but there
would be lines of convergence that we could take advantage of. At the start, climbs were a little weak and getting to the maximum start altitude of 4,000 feet was going to be tough. Once everyone got up, they left the start cylinder and headed out on
course. The view to the south around I-4 was great. High Cu with fine definition was in the distance if we could only make it there. The climbs got a little better by Flanders and there were numerous markers down track. At I4&Hwy27 the speeds started
to go up and smiles appeared on most pilot’s faces. Some maximized this turn area to gain some extra miles with very blue conditions up north. Heading to Winter Haven (a notoriously bad area for gliders with many lakes) there were several Cu that
reached almost 5,000 feet. Going deeper in this turnpoint helped several of our leaders. The leg that separated the score sheet the most was going to Mabel. Several pilots ran a convergence line that was unmarked by Cu, going most of the way to Mabel
without circling. If you found this fast track, you were golden! Final glides all seemed to be relatively stress free with many gliders approaching at high speeds.
In the end, a group of “older” gliders took the big prizes. In third place flying a Discus 2a was our Brewmeister, Gary Ittner with a handicapped speed of 50.61mph. Joe Reeves, flying an LS-4B, completed the task at 51.61mph which placed him in
second. Winning the day, flying an LS-4 was Greg Shugg posting a 52.29 handicapped speed. Congratulations to these fine aviators for their great performance. Now Greg, lets try not and land out this contest.
Unfortunately, the day was marred by an incident where a pilot landed out in the start cylinder and damaged his glider. Staying closer to the gliderport in weak weather conditions is pretty standard in competition. Worse yet, he tried to thermal too
low and ended up in a new citrus tree field. The good part of the story is that he is ok and he will have a good story to tell his glider students.
This evening we had a fine dinner provided by Seminole-Lake Gliderport. Texas Roadhouse out did themselves with beef skewers and pork chops with all the trimmings. Wine and beer rounded out the offerings. Of course, the P7 Brewery was open serving a
fine Vienna lager and Miss Turnpoint Ale. We were also treated to a presentation to Mister Peter Teuber who generously donated a Discus-2ct which will be used by junior pilots in contest and cross country flying. Thank you Peter for your gift to
support the future of our sport. Looks like this turned into a quiet evening with everyone going to bed early. Tomorrow is another day to excel.
Cheers,
Rich
Team 98 Backseater
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On Saturday, March 11, 2023 at 9:04:21 PM UTC-5, Rich Owen wrote:
Day 1
We Had Cu and We Had Blue
The first day of any contest is a tough situation. You are not going to win a contest on the first day but you sure can put yourself on the back foot. Personally, I love to come from behind, sneaking up on the unsuspecting leaders. Well, we
accomplished our goal today.
John Good did the usual Mandatory Safety Brief today and went over all the things that pilots have done to ruin their day at the Seniors. From flying into trees after a low energy pull up, landing gear up, calling for an aero retrieve from a different
airport than what the pilot was in, to flying a great task and finding out it was yesterday’s task. We have to add another story after today, but that comes later.
Our task was a TAT beginning at Start A, I4&Hwy27, Winter Haven, Mabel, Lake Ridge and then Finish. Nominal distance was only 93 miles with a minimum time of 1:30 due to a poor weather forecast. Fernando said the sky would be devoid of Cu but there
would be lines of convergence that we could take advantage of. At the start, climbs were a little weak and getting to the maximum start altitude of 4,000 feet was going to be tough. Once everyone got up, they left the start cylinder and headed out on
course. The view to the south around I-4 was great. High Cu with fine definition was in the distance if we could only make it there. The climbs got a little better by Flanders and there were numerous markers down track. At I4&Hwy27 the speeds started to
go up and smiles appeared on most pilot’s faces. Some maximized this turn area to gain some extra miles with very blue conditions up north. Heading to Winter Haven (a notoriously bad area for gliders with many lakes) there were several Cu that reached
almost 5,000 feet. Going deeper in this turnpoint helped several of our leaders. The leg that separated the score sheet the most was going to Mabel. Several pilots ran a convergence line that was unmarked by Cu, going most of the way to Mabel without
circling. If you found this fast track, you were golden! Final glides all seemed to be relatively stress free with many gliders approaching at high speeds.
In the end, a group of “older” gliders took the big prizes. In third place flying a Discus 2a was our Brewmeister, Gary Ittner with a handicapped speed of 50.61mph. Joe Reeves, flying an LS-4B, completed the task at 51.61mph which placed him in
second. Winning the day, flying an LS-4 was Greg Shugg posting a 52.29 handicapped speed. Congratulations to these fine aviators for their great performance. Now Greg, lets try not and land out this contest.
Unfortunately, the day was marred by an incident where a pilot landed out in the start cylinder and damaged his glider. Staying closer to the gliderport in weak weather conditions is pretty standard in competition. Worse yet, he tried to thermal too
low and ended up in a new citrus tree field. The good part of the story is that he is ok and he will have a good story to tell his glider students.
This evening we had a fine dinner provided by Seminole-Lake Gliderport. Texas Roadhouse out did themselves with beef skewers and pork chops with all the trimmings. Wine and beer rounded out the offerings. Of course, the P7 Brewery was open serving a
fine Vienna lager and Miss Turnpoint Ale. We were also treated to a presentation to Mister Peter Teuber who generously donated a Discus-2ct which will be used by junior pilots in contest and cross country flying. Thank you Peter for your gift to support
the future of our sport. Looks like this turned into a quiet evening with everyone going to bed early. Tomorrow is another day to excel.
Cheers,
Rich
Team 98 Backseater
Please tell me that I am getting bad info, another PURIST has won the seniors contest on day two, you mean two days in a row that the PURIST has taken the prize for the best flight of the day.; Rich, what the hell is going on, you guys better be thankful
that I was towing today, because your triangles sucked. Now Eileen and I plan on being up at the hovel of Clermont on Tuesday morning and I am bringing the bottle of rum for the PURIST AWARD along with the overall winner award of a one only Bob Virelli
painting. I also will be bringing a cooler full of cold brew for the tow pilots that get no recognition for their great efforts, even when they tow the motorgliders.
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From
Rich Owen@21:1/5 to
All on Tue Mar 14 06:50:09 2023
Contest Day 2
Where to Start
As the morning rose over the Central Florida landscapes…….what a minute, we are at a glider contest! As the covers and ships were being readied all over the gliderport, our friends from Rock Star Donuts were making breakfast. Every morning they
have been serving breakfast sandwiches to the pilots the crews. They are also our preferred donut provider for this year’s Seniors. These are not your Dad’s Dunkin Donuts. If you have ever seen a Voodoo donut, that’s what these looks like. Huge,
overflowing with all kinds of delicious chocolate, sprinkles and gooey insides.
The winds were not favoring us today, so we had to grid at the north end of the runway. This is always a little problem and we can always tell who and who did not read the pilot kit regarding gridding instructions. After everyone was heading to the
grid, the CD sent out the task via Signal, and after a short walk to the grid, our barefoot scorer handed out the paper copies. Signal is the messaging app we use to get the information out to the competitors the fastest. Some still prefer the paper
copy (I like to keep it close just in case), but others get a jump on the game and are able to spend a little more time eating and getting those final things done before launch.
Today’s task is Start B, Grass Roots, CR474/Hwy27, Elephant Walk, Chalet Suzzanne, Green Swamp and Finish. The launches have been going really well even though we are breaking in half of our ground crew. Half of them are experienced, combat hardened
rope wranglers and great kids. Our Lakeland Aero Club volunteers go to an aviation magnet school and are under the tutelage of Mike Z. The have nothing but taildraggers for the youngsters to fly and they also get glider instruction from us at Seminole-
Lake Gliderport. How else would you want your future airline pilots and mechanics to train!
After getting up, which took a little while, the air was fresh and clear. We did have Cu to the south and it looked like it could be a tough but fun day. In the start circle we saw gliders everywhere. Usually, there is a certain area that is preferred
but today, it looked like a free for all. We finally found a good climb to exit the top of the start cylinder and we were off. The first leg was a little slow with several large deviations. There really wasn’t a clear path to follow and we saw
gliders in all quadrants in front of us. The next two legs were a little slow but we had a good number of markers and some of the climbs were reasonably good. It seemed the air was getting more energetic and we were hoping to get our speed up later in
the task. Going to Chalet Suzzanne we took a more westerly track where the clouds seemed to mark a line of convergence. Looking at the bigger picture, it seemed like you could run this line right back north and touch the cylinder at Green Swamp.
Running to the back of the next to last turnpoint, we headed north along the same track. Good climbs and some small deviations had our overall task speed going up. Crossing I-4, we saw some clouds that tended to go to the northwest and it could have
been a change in direction of the convergence. We were able to bend a little and follow a line that had us going up and cruising at 70 knots without turning. Taking that to the end and flying home at a Mc of 4.5, it was a nice ride. Still, the result
isn’t what we wanted, but it was a fun flight, in shorts, in Florida with a great friend. Nothing could be better.
We weren’t done yet. As the sun started to set, we were sitting in an “RV Circle” (one couple sets out chairs and starts drinking, then another group joins, then another, then another.….. you get the picture) and talking about the flight,
upcoming book club meeting, and what the remaining days in Florida were to bring. At the end we had 25 folks all having a great time enjoying the company of others. Nothing brightens life up more than good friends, and in soaring, we are lucky to have
the best.
Some folks chose to have an early night but others headed to various local spots to enjoy the sounds of summer. Team 98 headed to Gloria Estefan’s Cuban Café where we had a fantastic Cuban specialty, mojitos and best of all, a birthday cake for Keith
Baugh. Next year he will no longer be hiding as a guest at the Seniors. For his birthday present, I told him we were moving the Seniors up a week. Just kidding AG, you are going to be part of the “IN CROWD” for 2024.
Well, Monday will be a rest day and I’m sorry I’m a little late for this report. I just needed some time off to relax. Until later today, I’ll let you know what everyone did for the rest day.
Fly Safe,
Rich
Team 98 Backseater
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On Tuesday, March 14, 2023 at 9:50:14 AM UTC-4, Rich Owen wrote:
Contest Day 2
Where to Start
As the morning rose over the Central Florida landscapes…….what a minute, we are at a glider contest! As the covers and ships were being readied all over the gliderport, our friends from Rock Star Donuts were making breakfast. Every morning they
have been serving breakfast sandwiches to the pilots the crews. They are also our preferred donut provider for this year’s Seniors. These are not your Dad’s Dunkin Donuts. If you have ever seen a Voodoo donut, that’s what these looks like. Huge,
overflowing with all kinds of delicious chocolate, sprinkles and gooey insides.
The winds were not favoring us today, so we had to grid at the north end of the runway. This is always a little problem and we can always tell who and who did not read the pilot kit regarding gridding instructions. After everyone was heading to the
grid, the CD sent out the task via Signal, and after a short walk to the grid, our barefoot scorer handed out the paper copies. Signal is the messaging app we use to get the information out to the competitors the fastest. Some still prefer the paper copy
(I like to keep it close just in case), but others get a jump on the game and are able to spend a little more time eating and getting those final things done before launch.
Today’s task is Start B, Grass Roots, CR474/Hwy27, Elephant Walk, Chalet Suzzanne, Green Swamp and Finish. The launches have been going really well even though we are breaking in half of our ground crew. Half of them are experienced, combat hardened
rope wranglers and great kids. Our Lakeland Aero Club volunteers go to an aviation magnet school and are under the tutelage of Mike Z. The have nothing but taildraggers for the youngsters to fly and they also get glider instruction from us at Seminole-
Lake Gliderport. How else would you want your future airline pilots and mechanics to train!
After getting up, which took a little while, the air was fresh and clear. We did have Cu to the south and it looked like it could be a tough but fun day. In the start circle we saw gliders everywhere. Usually, there is a certain area that is preferred
but today, it looked like a free for all. We finally found a good climb to exit the top of the start cylinder and we were off. The first leg was a little slow with several large deviations. There really wasn’t a clear path to follow and we saw gliders
in all quadrants in front of us. The next two legs were a little slow but we had a good number of markers and some of the climbs were reasonably good. It seemed the air was getting more energetic and we were hoping to get our speed up later in the task.
Going to Chalet Suzzanne we took a more westerly track where the clouds seemed to mark a line of convergence. Looking at the bigger picture, it seemed like you could run this line right back north and touch the cylinder at Green Swamp. Running to the
back of the next to last turnpoint, we headed north along the same track. Good climbs and some small deviations had our overall task speed going up. Crossing I-4, we saw some clouds that tended to go to the northwest and it could have been a change in
direction of the convergence. We were able to bend a little and follow a line that had us going up and cruising at 70 knots without turning. Taking that to the end and flying home at a Mc of 4.5, it was a nice ride. Still, the result isn’t what we
wanted, but it was a fun flight, in shorts, in Florida with a great friend. Nothing could be better.
We weren’t done yet. As the sun started to set, we were sitting in an “RV Circle” (one couple sets out chairs and starts drinking, then another group joins, then another, then another.….. you get the picture) and talking about the flight,
upcoming book club meeting, and what the remaining days in Florida were to bring. At the end we had 25 folks all having a great time enjoying the company of others. Nothing brightens life up more than good friends, and in soaring, we are lucky to have
the best.
Some folks chose to have an early night but others headed to various local spots to enjoy the sounds of summer. Team 98 headed to Gloria Estefan’s Cuban Café where we had a fantastic Cuban specialty, mojitos and best of all, a birthday cake for
Keith Baugh. Next year he will no longer be hiding as a guest at the Seniors. For his birthday present, I told him we were moving the Seniors up a week. Just kidding AG, you are going to be part of the “IN CROWD” for 2024.
Well, Monday will be a rest day and I’m sorry I’m a little late for this report. I just needed some time off to relax. Until later today, I’ll let you know what everyone did for the rest day.
Fly Safe,
Rich
Team 98 Backseater
Rich, thanks for the hospitality today at SLGP, Eileen and I enjoyed the nice warm welcome and the meeting of some old friends and fellow glider pilots that we had not seen in 45 or more years. Hopefully next year we can once again visit during the
contest and enjoy the festivities. Again, thanks. Old Bob, The Purist
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From
Rich Owen@21:1/5 to
All on Wed Mar 15 08:34:10 2023
Senior Rest Day
I would like to say we did a whole lot of interesting things on the “official rest day”, but it seemed like more work. In the morning Fernando gave a very informative presentation on how to find the best weather sources/forecast in soaring.
Everyone both enjoyed it and valued the information. We are lucky to have Fernando as our official weatherman for the Seniors.
Over the years we have been fortunate to have the SSA Chairman attend the Seniors. This year our new chairman, Mr. Mike Shakman, led a discussion on how we can grow the sport of soaring. Several pilots who are in clubs that are very successful spoke on
their best practices. Many ideas were discussed and I’m sure the Growth and Retention Committee will put them to good use.
Bif Huss, Sarah Arnold and I led a rules input meeting. This is the first leg on how new rules are formed for the next competition year. We ask the pilots what concerns, changes, clarifications or additions they would like to see in the rules. Bif
started with a discussion on the changes to the 2023 rules and how we arrived at this point. Many questions came up regarding the new rules governing the National contests. We will be looking at how the new rules are being implemented and what
improvements we need to make in 2024. The people on the Pilot Ranking List are the driving force in any changes made. The Rules Committee are the working people who take your input and put it into rules language. The pilot’s inputs form proposed
rule changes and the final rules that get submitted to the SSA Board of Directors for approval. Both the proposed rule changes and the final rule language are presented to the pilots before moving to the next step. The next rules input meeting will be
in Perry SC, at the Region 5 North contest.
Monday was also the US Team night at the dinner. After another great meal from Texas Roadhouse, Pete Alexander led a presentation on what the US Team did in the last two WGC events. He covered what it’s like to be a Captain for the US Team and how
rewarding it can be. Pete also spoke on the preparations that the Club Class US Team did for the WGC event in France from the perspective of
JP Stewart. Sarah did a great presentation on her and Karl’s task 6th win at the Multiplace WGC event in 2022. If you think a restart is a bad idea, you should listen to their presentation. Thank you to the US Team for the desert, the superb
program and everything you do to represent the US soaring pilots in the World Gliding Championships.
I would like to thank Bob Youngblood for brining a number of very fine gifts to add to the winner's purse in the Seniors. The original painting, wooden plaques, together with a great bottle of rum, will certainly make our winner a very lucky pilot.
Fly Safe,
Rich
Team 98 Backseater
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From
Rich Owen@21:1/5 to
All on Wed Mar 15 10:13:15 2023
It was a beautiful day, till it wasn’t
When the day broke over Central Florida, the warming sun gave us hope that the early forecast was wrong. The expected breezy conditions did not materialize and we even saw Cu in the distance. Everyone made the trek to grid at the south end of the
runway and the squat began. It’s always good to walk the grid and see folks you haven’t spoken to in a while. I had a chance to see Bo Michalowski at work. Bo has been doing the photo journalism aspect of the Seniors for a long time. Her morning
gliderport photos with the mist have been seen all over the internet and Soaring magazine. She was sneaking around the grid taking clandestine pictures of the pilots and crews preparing their gliders. We use these and many more when the magazine
article on the Seniors comes out around July.
Bill Foster and Dewey Clawson took this time to do some training for new ground crew members. The tow pilots were relaxing in their hangar and generally just chilling out. The action started around 1:30pm when the sniffers were launched. As everyone
waited by their radios for word of conditions, not much was heard. Due to the hard work of John Godfrey, our OGN network is really good. The CD only had to consult his iPad to see what the conditions were. Since not everyone is as tech savvy as John
Good, he also asked questions on the radio to help those who cannot type in a URL for Glidertracker. Soon, the order for another 6 sniffers was sent out. It was easy to see that the gliders were not getting to 2,800ft AGL at the time required to launch
the fleet and still have time to complete the task. With 8 aircraft aloft, the day starting to get late and performance that was not sufficient to start a task, the CD justifiably cancelled the day. After we recovered the brave folks that went in to
the air to test the waters, we all hooked up and returned to the trailers. So goes the first day of grid squatting.
The RV circles were going again, with many friends sharing a meal or just a few drinks. The Team 98 group headed for Chuy’s, one of our favorites. We took 7 folks with us tonight which is one more than usually allowed due to the difficulty of getting
swift service and seating for a larger gang. It was heard in the quiet of the evening something about “I have your 33 in my hangar”. Papa 7 gratefully accepted the invitation to join us.
That is all we have for Tuesday the 14th of March.
Cheers,
Rich
Team 98 Backseater
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From
Rich Owen@21:1/5 to
All on Wed Mar 15 19:50:26 2023
Gridding Under an Overcast
Many glider pilots will tell you, when the sun isn’t shinning in Florida, there will not be any soaring. Well today was an exception to the rule. At today’s pilot meeting, many thought today would be our second grid squatting day or the second
cancelled day. John (CD) and Fernando (weatherman) seemed to know something that no one else had seen.
Before the meeting was over, we did get a few laughs. During the pilot introduction portion, Henry Retting said that he was from southeast Florida and his wife bought him a glider with a motor so she didn’t have to crew for him anymore. He also said
that since he had a motor he would be happy to retrieve anyone who landed out that did not have a motor. Well, you can imagine the remarks after those comments. Werner Ruegger stood up and said he didn’t have a crew but was happy that more than 50%
of the Seniors would come pick him up. This year more than 50% of the participants are equipped with motors of some kind. Greg Shugg then stood up and asked for Henry’s wife number so she could buy him a glider with a motor. It went down hill from
there.
With all the levity we did have some special work related business to cover. During the 2022 Open/15 Meter Nationals in Hobbs New Mexico, the ground crew needed some coaching. Melissa Indrebo and Jennette Baugh provided that and much more. Taking a
dozen tween and teens and turning them into an efficient and safe launch crew was not good enough for these fine ladies. They also took them to lunches, ice cream and mentored them about life goals. For their hard work, both of them were rewarded with
the Charlie Spratt Award for advancing the sport of sailplane racing. Melissa received her award at the Reno convention and Jennette received hers in front of the Seniors pilots. Great job Jennette and Melissa!
So, that was how the morning proceeded with smiles on the pilot’s faces, a well-deserved award presented by Michelle Sorenson, full stomachs from the donuts and breakfast prepared by Rock Star Bakery and gray cloudy skies.
At 11:50am we were told to start sending the ships to the runway and expect a first launch around 1:15pm. The skies were still overcast and but some blue appeared in the distant north. Wouldn’t you believe it, the sun came out and the ground started
to heat up rapidly. It was starting to get warmer by the minute and soon the sniffers were taking flight to see what none of us expected. The first climbs were slow but soon the sniffers were going up above 3,500ft and the fleet was launching. Covers
that were left on expecting an early cancellation were flying off like clothes on a drying line in a hurricane. The entire fleet was launched in under an hour and soon the task was opened.
Looking around the starting area, there were ships in all quadrants. Some were high but most were on the low side. I saw one ship very low with no chance to land back at the airport over the Green Swamp. They made it out of there but it was a very
risky choice. We saw a number of ships around 3,700ft starting, but no one looked like they had reached the 4,000ft maximum altitude.
Our task for the day was of course, a Turn Area Task (TAT) from Start B, Grass Roots, Inverness, Flying Baron and Finish. The minimum time was 1:30 and that was all we could realistically do given the late start to the day. The weather was severely
blue with the first leg having some good climbs. Most pilots went direct or slightly west of the rum line to Grass Roots. The turn to the west and Inverness had a couple of choices. Some of the faster ships had to get more distance and headed slightly
northwest, while the lower handicapped ships could go due west. Jared Granzow in his ASW-27 went due west and found a good energy line to the south of Inverness. It was so good, he just turned around and went to Flying Baron on the same line. The
only problem was, it put him back at the gliderport a couple of minutes early.
I do have some good news on the ground crew front. Ms. Emma, the best line crew person we have at the Seniors for years, was released from the hospital after a bout with a kidney stone. She is feeling much better and will be returning to her normal
routine soon. Emma routinely runs like a mad woman hooking up gliders and diving under the wing to get them launched faster. Her enthusiasm and outgoing personality makes her a leader on the line.
We had a few land outs and engine starts today, but everyone was able to make it home undamaged. The score sheet has undergone its normal upheaval today with a big turnover at the top. The winner of today’s task was Jared Granzow with a handicapped
speed of 47.98mph. Since Jared is a Guest and isn’t old enough to be in the Seniors as a regular entry, the win goes to John Murray with a handicapped speed of 47.00mph. Second went to Susan Simmons and Sarah Arnold with third being held by Ken
Sorenson. The top 10 are only separated by 127 points so it is anyone’s race over the next two days. The next 10 pilots are only separated by 63 points! This is pretty typical of the Seniors. We are expecting better weather and it should be very
interesting, so please stay tuned.
Well, I’m caught up with all my reports finally. Sorry for some of the delay, I’ll try and stay ahead of my deadlines. It’s just I’m having so much fun flying with a great friend even though we are not at the top of the score sheet. Tomorrow
is another day and another race.
Good Night All.
Cheers,
Rich
Team 98 Backseater
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From
Rich Owen@21:1/5 to
All on Fri Mar 17 06:12:53 2023
Contest Day 4
Last but not least
It is the last day of the Seniors which means the fun will have to stop for a little while. Today is one of the busiest days for the contest staff. Besides getting ready for the launch, we are also preparing for the awards banquet. Lots of things to
give away from Seminole-Lake and also from Treasure Coast Soaring Club in Vero Beach.
As most of you know, we have an award called the Uf Da. It means something in Norwegian and that was the heritage of Knut Kjenslie who last owned Seminole-Lake Gliderport. We joking give this award to the pilot who did something they were not proud of.
It is an audience participation award where the volume of the crowd clapping picks the first-place winner. I was lucky enough to win this award one year but I’ve been in good company. Doug Jacobs won last year.
I am writing this report a day late since we went out to dinner last night and returned too late to sit at the desk.
The pilots meeting saw the CD give credit to his task advisors for their great work over the contest. Jim Frantz and John Lubon were a big help in crafting the task the day before when no one thought we would fly. The Ground Crew was introduced by Bill
Foster, our OPS Chief. These fine young women and men are the future of aviation and we are in good hands. They worked hard and have given the pilots an opportunity to enjoy their sport. Thank you!!! The tow pilots were also introduced and given a
chance to receive the appreciation from all the pilots. This group have been flying together for many Seniors, our Chief Tow Pilot has been towing the contest for almost the entire 33 years. Thank you Ray, Tom, Izumi, Martin, George and Walter. The
funniest thing was when Eric Lambert gave our Contest Manager, Kerry Huffstutler, a beautiful Hawaiian style shirt (it was Senior’s picture day) from Blue Ridge Soaring depicting gliders and Pawnees in flight. Kerry looked at the size and saw it was
an extra-large. She remarked to Eric about the very large size and he said “you will grow into it someday”. I think this is an UF Da award nominee!
Yesterday the weather turned for the better and we had a great day. The task was a 2:30 TAT from Start A, Avon Park, Streamsong, I4&Hwy27, Green Swamp and Finish. The launch went smoothly with 58 aircraft getting airborne in 58 minutes, nice job crew.
Getting up in the blue skies over Seminole was not as hard as the other day. Soon there were several groups trying to find the best start. The east side of the start cylinder is generally the best place to start for a southerly route. It is closer to
highway 27 which we call the Florida Ridge. The infrastructure always provides the best lift and is further away from the lakes around Winter Haven. Seems like everyone had a little bit of a slow start on this leg. Once you passed Lake Wales things
started to pop. Wisps and some Cu came up to help the pilots pick the better lines. Lift strength was in the 4’s-5’s and we all got to around 5,000ft. At Avon Park there was a lift line that took you almost to the back of the cylinder but you had
to worry about the restricted area which is the Avon Park bombing range. No way were we straying into an area where they use live weapons and getting blown up, now that is a penalty! Streamsong is a weaker area heading west due to the phosphate mines so
everyone tried to avoid going to far into this circle. Returning to highway 27, we saw more clouds and visible indications of lift. The next turnpoint had another good lift line that the winners took advantage of to gain extra distance and keep their
speed up. Many had final glide from here and it was just a timing drill to head to the last cylinder and home. The arrival was a little exciting for some when unexpected sink for a good way affected a few final glides. All in all, it was a great day.
Today we did not have a formal dinner and many took part in a burger cookout put on by our official on-site food vendor, Rock Star Bakery. Thank you Eric for all the great food and service! I’m looking forward to your pancakes this morning. All this
typing is making me hungry.
In a repeat of the day before, a guest won the day, but because he is not old enough, he gets an honorable mention. Way to go Jared! In third place with a handicapped speed of 55.25mph is my good friend, Jim Lee. In second place was a Canadian, Joerg
Stieber. Winning the day with a handicapped speed of 55.88 was Robin Clark, an adopted local of Seminole-Lake. That’s right, the top three were separated by only .63mph. Now, do you really want to take that one extra turn at the top of dying lift?
That was about the difference between 1st and 3rd.
The overall standings are very close. In third place is Ken Sorenson, second is Team P Sarah Arnold & Susan Simmons and in first place is Jim Lee. Jim and Ken are past winners of the Seniors, so they are familiar with the pressure going into the last
day. Jim has an advantage by flying John Seaborn’s JS-3 A8. It would be great to see Jim and A8 at the top of the podium again. The top 10 are separated by 141 points, but the top 3 are only 57 points apart. We have a race ladies and gentlemen and
the results will not be known until tonight, so stay tuned. Once the banquet is complete, we will release the last report around 10pm EDT.
Fly Safe, Make Good Decisions
Rich
Team 98 Backseater
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-
From
Rich Owen@21:1/5 to
All on Fri Mar 17 19:16:06 2023
Contest Day 5
Honey, the Race is Over, Please Turn Out the Lights
Well, the final race of the 33rd Annual Senior Soaring Championship is in the books, the ships are all safely home and the crews are packing up. We still have the awards banquet tonight so we get to see what glider pilots look like in khakis and some of
the crews in dresses. It is amazing to see the transformation of a woman or a guy with white electrical tape pieces on their pants, grease circles on their trousers, funky white hats with dark sunglasses into their nicer clothes.
It takes a lot of work by a lot of volunteers to put on this contest. No one is the key component to success. In every department we have the very best people who willingly give up their free time to support the racing pilots of the SSA. The young
adults that work the line are very interested in a career in aviation or they just want to help the airport. Most are pilots or in training to be a glider or powered pilot. Some are working to gain their A&P license. So, here are some of the folks you
may not know. Bill Foster and Dewey Clawson have run Operations for the last several years. They are a great team that takes care of the kids and ensures their safety. Jack Brinckerhoff is always ready to fill any holes in the operations scheme. Mark
Oberg was critical in getting the transponder checks complete very fast so all the pilots could fly. We were able to get a great deal for these avionic inspections due to the large number of ships that signed up. We plan to do that for next year. Ted
Haller and Anne Mongiovi again did a fine job on the retrieve desk. All of our pilots are grateful of the service and fast action of this very experienced team. Chris Carter and her group of volunteers proved that registration does not need to take
forever, as long as the number of pilots that don’t read the on-line registration guidance, does not grow. Ray Smith, our Chief Tow Pilot deserves special recognition for his work in getting the tow pilots out of the hangar and to bed early. Thank
you Ray, Tom, Izumi, George, Walter and Martin.
Well the day was going to be really nice today and pilots do not go to glider contests to sit and eat dinners. We were going to race today and this was not going to be a banquet task. John Good called a 3 hour Turn Area Task that began from Start,
Chalet Suzanne, Bonny Plant, Inverness, Flying Baron, Green Swamp and then Finish. Nominal distance was 198.1 miles and the speeds should be really good. Cloud bases were getting to 5,000-6,000ft and 5 knot lift was not uncommon. There were a number
of good energy lines to string together but decisions on what route to take were critical. The run to Chalet Suzanne was nice but there were a few blue holes to account for if you left from the western section of the start cylinder. Once south of I-4
the clouds were plentiful and lift was strong. Most of the folks went deep to bank miles for the weak turnpoints of Bonny Plant and Flying Baron. So, making the turn at Chalet Suzanne the clouds started to thin out over the phosphate mines so most turn
a little early. The run west to Bonny Plant was a little tougher. The rest of the task was pretty easy.
I would like to stop right now since my laptop experienced a power failure and I lost 40 minutes of work. So, the short version is:
Today’s top 3:
1. Sarah Arnold and Susan Simmons
2. Bif Huss
3. Jim Lee
Top 10 for the Senior Soaring Championship
1. Jim Lee
2. Team Papa (Sarah Arnold & Susan Simmons)
3. Ken Sorenson
4. Joerg Stieber
5. Karl Striedieck
6. Henry Retting
7. Peter Scarpelli
8. Bob Fletcher
9. Hal Woodruff
10. Gary Ittner
Tomorrow I will try and put more color into the report. Right now, I’m going to get a drink!
Good Night!!
Rich
Team 98 Backseater
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From
Mark Mocho@21:1/5 to
All on Fri Mar 17 19:48:58 2023
Nice reports! Congratulations to the organizers, crews, tow pilots, ground operations crews, caterers, beer dispensers, scorers, retrieve operators, retrievers, party animals and finally, the damn fool pilots that need this amount of support to hold an
iconic social scene cleverly designed to disguise a party as a glider contest. Almost makes me think that I should try entering a competition.
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From
Andy Blackburn@21:1/5 to
Rich Owen on Sat Mar 18 15:07:41 2023
On Friday, March 17, 2023 at 7:16:08 PM UTC-7, Rich Owen wrote:
Contest Day 5
Honey, the Race is Over, Please Turn Out the Lights
Well, the final race of the 33rd Annual Senior Soaring Championship is in the books, the ships are all safely home and the crews are packing up. We still have the awards banquet tonight so we get to see what glider pilots look like in khakis and some
of the crews in dresses. It is amazing to see the transformation of a woman or a guy with white electrical tape pieces on their pants, grease circles on their trousers, funky white hats with dark sunglasses into their nicer clothes.
It takes a lot of work by a lot of volunteers to put on this contest. No one is the key component to success. In every department we have the very best people who willingly give up their free time to support the racing pilots of the SSA. The young
adults that work the line are very interested in a career in aviation or they just want to help the airport. Most are pilots or in training to be a glider or powered pilot. Some are working to gain their A&P license. So, here are some of the folks you
may not know. Bill Foster and Dewey Clawson have run Operations for the last several years. They are a great team that takes care of the kids and ensures their safety. Jack Brinckerhoff is always ready to fill any holes in the operations scheme. Mark
Oberg was critical in getting the transponder checks complete very fast so all the pilots could fly. We were able to get a great deal for these avionic inspections due to the large number of ships that signed up. We plan to do that for next year. Ted
Haller and Anne Mongiovi again did a fine job on the retrieve desk. All of our pilots are grateful of the service and fast action of this very experienced team. Chris Carter and her group of volunteers proved that registration does not need to take
forever, as long as the number of pilots that don’t read the on-line registration guidance, does not grow. Ray Smith, our Chief Tow Pilot deserves special recognition for his work in getting the tow pilots out of the hangar and to bed early. Thank you
Ray, Tom, Izumi, George, Walter and Martin.
Well the day was going to be really nice today and pilots do not go to glider contests to sit and eat dinners. We were going to race today and this was not going to be a banquet task. John Good called a 3 hour Turn Area Task that began from Start,
Chalet Suzanne, Bonny Plant, Inverness, Flying Baron, Green Swamp and then Finish. Nominal distance was 198.1 miles and the speeds should be really good. Cloud bases were getting to 5,000-6,000ft and 5 knot lift was not uncommon. There were a number of
good energy lines to string together but decisions on what route to take were critical. The run to Chalet Suzanne was nice but there were a few blue holes to account for if you left from the western section of the start cylinder. Once south of I-4 the
clouds were plentiful and lift was strong. Most of the folks went deep to bank miles for the weak turnpoints of Bonny Plant and Flying Baron. So, making the turn at Chalet Suzanne the clouds started to thin out over the phosphate mines so most turn a
little early. The run west to Bonny Plant was a little tougher. The rest of the task was pretty easy.
I would like to stop right now since my laptop experienced a power failure and I lost 40 minutes of work. So, the short version is:
Today’s top 3:
1. Sarah Arnold and Susan Simmons
2. Bif Huss
3. Jim Lee
Top 10 for the Senior Soaring Championship
1. Jim Lee
2. Team Papa (Sarah Arnold & Susan Simmons)
3. Ken Sorenson
4. Joerg Stieber
5. Karl Striedieck
6. Henry Retting
7. Peter Scarpelli
8. Bob Fletcher
9. Hal Woodruff
10. Gary Ittner
Tomorrow I will try and put more color into the report. Right now, I’m going to get a drink!
Good Night!!
Rich
Team 98 Backseater
--- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
* Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
-
From
Andy Blackburn@21:1/5 to
Rich Owen on Sat Mar 18 15:10:19 2023
Thanks Rich for the timely, informative and always entertaining reports.
It takes thought and commitment to put them together and I for one appreciate it very much!
Andy Blackburn
9B
On Friday, March 17, 2023 at 7:16:08 PM UTC-7, Rich Owen wrote:
Contest Day 5
Honey, the Race is Over, Please Turn Out the Lights
Well, the final race of the 33rd Annual Senior Soaring Championship is in the books, the ships are all safely home and the crews are packing up. We still have the awards banquet tonight so we get to see what glider pilots look like in khakis and some
of the crews in dresses. It is amazing to see the transformation of a woman or a guy with white electrical tape pieces on their pants, grease circles on their trousers, funky white hats with dark sunglasses into their nicer clothes.
It takes a lot of work by a lot of volunteers to put on this contest. No one is the key component to success. In every department we have the very best people who willingly give up their free time to support the racing pilots of the SSA. The young
adults that work the line are very interested in a career in aviation or they just want to help the airport. Most are pilots or in training to be a glider or powered pilot. Some are working to gain their A&P license. So, here are some of the folks you
may not know. Bill Foster and Dewey Clawson have run Operations for the last several years. They are a great team that takes care of the kids and ensures their safety. Jack Brinckerhoff is always ready to fill any holes in the operations scheme. Mark
Oberg was critical in getting the transponder checks complete very fast so all the pilots could fly. We were able to get a great deal for these avionic inspections due to the large number of ships that signed up. We plan to do that for next year. Ted
Haller and Anne Mongiovi again did a fine job on the retrieve desk. All of our pilots are grateful of the service and fast action of this very experienced team. Chris Carter and her group of volunteers proved that registration does not need to take
forever, as long as the number of pilots that don’t read the on-line registration guidance, does not grow. Ray Smith, our Chief Tow Pilot deserves special recognition for his work in getting the tow pilots out of the hangar and to bed early. Thank you
Ray, Tom, Izumi, George, Walter and Martin.
Well the day was going to be really nice today and pilots do not go to glider contests to sit and eat dinners. We were going to race today and this was not going to be a banquet task. John Good called a 3 hour Turn Area Task that began from Start,
Chalet Suzanne, Bonny Plant, Inverness, Flying Baron, Green Swamp and then Finish. Nominal distance was 198.1 miles and the speeds should be really good. Cloud bases were getting to 5,000-6,000ft and 5 knot lift was not uncommon. There were a number of
good energy lines to string together but decisions on what route to take were critical. The run to Chalet Suzanne was nice but there were a few blue holes to account for if you left from the western section of the start cylinder. Once south of I-4 the
clouds were plentiful and lift was strong. Most of the folks went deep to bank miles for the weak turnpoints of Bonny Plant and Flying Baron. So, making the turn at Chalet Suzanne the clouds started to thin out over the phosphate mines so most turn a
little early. The run west to Bonny Plant was a little tougher. The rest of the task was pretty easy.
I would like to stop right now since my laptop experienced a power failure and I lost 40 minutes of work. So, the short version is:
Today’s top 3:
1. Sarah Arnold and Susan Simmons
2. Bif Huss
3. Jim Lee
Top 10 for the Senior Soaring Championship
1. Jim Lee
2. Team Papa (Sarah Arnold & Susan Simmons)
3. Ken Sorenson
4. Joerg Stieber
5. Karl Striedieck
6. Henry Retting
7. Peter Scarpelli
8. Bob Fletcher
9. Hal Woodruff
10. Gary Ittner
Tomorrow I will try and put more color into the report. Right now, I’m going to get a drink!
Good Night!!
Rich
Team 98 Backseater
--- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
* Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
-
From
Charlie M. (UH, Pi & 002 owner/pilo@21:1/5 to
Andy Blackburn on Sat Mar 18 15:32:41 2023
On Saturday, March 18, 2023 at 6:10:21 PM UTC-4, Andy Blackburn wrote:
Thanks Rich for the timely, informative and always entertaining reports.
It takes thought and commitment to put them together and I for one appreciate it very much!
Andy Blackburn
9B
On Friday, March 17, 2023 at 7:16:08 PM UTC-7, Rich Owen wrote:
Contest Day 5
Honey, the Race is Over, Please Turn Out the Lights
Well, the final race of the 33rd Annual Senior Soaring Championship is in the books, the ships are all safely home and the crews are packing up. We still have the awards banquet tonight so we get to see what glider pilots look like in khakis and some
of the crews in dresses. It is amazing to see the transformation of a woman or a guy with white electrical tape pieces on their pants, grease circles on their trousers, funky white hats with dark sunglasses into their nicer clothes.
It takes a lot of work by a lot of volunteers to put on this contest. No one is the key component to success. In every department we have the very best people who willingly give up their free time to support the racing pilots of the SSA. The young
adults that work the line are very interested in a career in aviation or they just want to help the airport. Most are pilots or in training to be a glider or powered pilot. Some are working to gain their A&P license. So, here are some of the folks you
may not know. Bill Foster and Dewey Clawson have run Operations for the last several years. They are a great team that takes care of the kids and ensures their safety. Jack Brinckerhoff is always ready to fill any holes in the operations scheme. Mark
Oberg was critical in getting the transponder checks complete very fast so all the pilots could fly. We were able to get a great deal for these avionic inspections due to the large number of ships that signed up. We plan to do that for next year. Ted
Haller and Anne Mongiovi again did a fine job on the retrieve desk. All of our pilots are grateful of the service and fast action of this very experienced team. Chris Carter and her group of volunteers proved that registration does not need to take
forever, as long as the number of pilots that don’t read the on-line registration guidance, does not grow. Ray Smith, our Chief Tow Pilot deserves special recognition for his work in getting the tow pilots out of the hangar and to bed early. Thank you
Ray, Tom, Izumi, George, Walter and Martin.
Well the day was going to be really nice today and pilots do not go to glider contests to sit and eat dinners. We were going to race today and this was not going to be a banquet task. John Good called a 3 hour Turn Area Task that began from Start,
Chalet Suzanne, Bonny Plant, Inverness, Flying Baron, Green Swamp and then Finish. Nominal distance was 198.1 miles and the speeds should be really good. Cloud bases were getting to 5,000-6,000ft and 5 knot lift was not uncommon. There were a number of
good energy lines to string together but decisions on what route to take were critical. The run to Chalet Suzanne was nice but there were a few blue holes to account for if you left from the western section of the start cylinder. Once south of I-4 the
clouds were plentiful and lift was strong. Most of the folks went deep to bank miles for the weak turnpoints of Bonny Plant and Flying Baron. So, making the turn at Chalet Suzanne the clouds started to thin out over the phosphate mines so most turn a
little early. The run west to Bonny Plant was a little tougher. The rest of the task was pretty easy.
I would like to stop right now since my laptop experienced a power failure and I lost 40 minutes of work. So, the short version is:
Today’s top 3:
1. Sarah Arnold and Susan Simmons
2. Bif Huss
3. Jim Lee
Top 10 for the Senior Soaring Championship
1. Jim Lee
2. Team Papa (Sarah Arnold & Susan Simmons)
3. Ken Sorenson
4. Joerg Stieber
5. Karl Striedieck
6. Henry Retting
7. Peter Scarpelli
8. Bob Fletcher
9. Hal Woodruff
10. Gary Ittner
Tomorrow I will try and put more color into the report. Right now, I’m going to get a drink!
Good Night!!
Rich
Team 98 Backseater
Totally agree...good daily contest reports are great for those there, as well as those of us living vicariously through the reports.
I was "spoiled" by the "Sprattman" doing the dailies he was at as well as his newsletter.
I had the pleasure of knowing him, flying his contests, and having my son get to be a "line rat" under Charlie.
I understand many things are volunteer for a contest, I applaud those that give their time. I give a shout out to J9 for her reports as well as others.
I started crewing in mid '70's, as well as running the line.....now, I have a bucket hat and grease stains on my pants...
Fortunately for most, I don't show up in contest pictures....LOL...
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