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- <text id=93TT2033>
- <title>
- July 19, 1993: Sailing Seas Of Air
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- July 19, 1993 Whose Little Girl Is This?
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- ADVENTURE, Page 56
- Sailing Seas Of Air
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>High above the California desert, pilots soar and dive for the
- championships of hang gliding
- </p>
- <p>By JOHN SKOW/OWENS VALLEY
- </p>
- <p> "Dust devil!" someone yells, and a stinging, 30-ft.-high spiral
- of sand, sagebrush, shale bits and a lizard or two snicks up
- the cliffside. Everyone grabs for the gliders, fluttering half
- assembled and helpless an hour before launch.
- </p>
- <p> "We've got good instability today," a lean fellow with the quick
- eyes of a race-car driver says with satisfaction. He's an American
- hang-glider pilot named Jim Lee, and he is talking about air
- masses, not temperament. Instability, good to violent, is what
- the high desert of California's Owens Valley, near Bishop, is
- known for. Very hot, light air, cooking on the valley floor
- and over the canyons, rises at great speed in columnar thermal
- currents; and from upper altitudes, cold, heavy air sinks fast
- in compensation. You can "peg" your variometer here with no
- trouble at all--i.e., rise faster than the 1,000 ft. a minute
- that the beeping rate-of-climb gauge will register. But great,
- eddying roils of turbulence called rotors wheel across the 14,000-ft.
- ridges of the Sierra Nevada and White Mountains, sometimes shearing
- the big thermals and otherwise raising hell. "It's the roughest
- place in the world for hang gliding," says Lee, a member of
- the six-man U.S. team, here with pilots from 40 other countries
- for the World Hang Gliding Championships.
- </p>
- <p> Lee isn't woofing. Some flyers feared that countries new to
- the sport would send pilots not experienced enough to handle
- the valley's big air. As things turned out, two expert members
- of the top-ranked British team were tumbled upside down in separate
- incidents. When this happens, the pilot, who in normal flight
- dangles below the wing, can fall into the glider's underside
- and break the delicate structure of tubing and wires. The magical
- flying contraption instantly becomes wreckage, and the pilot
- has to deploy his emergency parachute. So it went for the two
- Brits, each of whom survived with minor injuries.
- </p>
- <p> Lee came close to parachuting. Flying out of the fast-rising
- center of a thermal, he was struck by heavy, cold air that bashed
- downward with more force than he had ever encountered. The nose
- of his glider was knocked from a 3-o'clock position, level flight,
- through 6 o'clock, full dive. This is called "going over the
- falls," and it's not a surprise to a good pilot. But Lee's glider
- was shoved so hard that it pivoted on to 9 o'clock, completely
- upside down. A few more degrees of rotation--10 or 11 o'clock--and he would have fallen. Instead, as he pulled hard on the
- control bar to shift his weight forward and gain airspeed, the
- glider sank back into a controllable dive. "I've always said
- that gliding was safe," Lee mused later. "This was as near as
- I've come to backing my opinion with my life." (A few days later
- U.S. team member Brad Koji went over the falls, slammed into
- his glider and parachuted safely to earth from 14,000 ft.)
- </p>
- <p> As risk sports go, hang gliding does seem to be fairly safe,
- and highly cerebral. A competitor's arms and shoulders ache
- after flying, but most of the wear and tear is mental. "It's
- three-dimensional chess, with a few invisible pieces," says
- Pete Lehmann, nonflying captain of the red-hot U.S. team. The
- U.S. had never won the World's, but after preliminary competition
- last week, Lehmann's bunch was first in the team standings.
- And tied for the individual lead with Aussie Steve Moyes, a
- former world champion, was lanky, long-haired Chris Arai of
- Oakland, California, an electronics engineer when he's not flying.
- (Each race is over a set course, usually of 80 to 110 miles,
- taking around 3 to 3 1/2 hours. After several days of competition,
- the best cumulative time wins.) As everyone is aware, it's possible
- that neither Arai nor Moyes would be leading if the current
- world champion, Tomas Suchanek, a pale, slightly built aeronautical
- engineer from the Czech Republic, had not been forced to land
- prematurely in the preliminaries.
- </p>
- <p> Cross-country flying in any kind of powerless craft is a matter
- of finding a thermal and riding it up (18,000 ft. is the FAA
- ceiling here), then gliding till you find another thermal. A
- good hang glider sinks 1 ft. for every 10 ft. it travels. In
- uncertain air, a ridge line is surer than open country. When
- the world champion made his mistake, an observer recalls, "he
- was ahead of the pack, at about 14,000 ft. The rest followed
- the ridge. Tomas headed straight for the goal. He had 10,000
- ft. to play with, and he didn't need much more lift, just a
- bit, to cross the goal. But there was nothing, and he burned
- out." To burn out is to lose your magic and to sink all the
- way to earth. Then you radio your chase crew and wait in the
- sun to be retrieved. Suchanek lost that day, but since then
- he has been relentless: two firsts, a second and a third.
- </p>
- <p> Today's chess game is about to begin here at 8,200 ft., on a
- shoulder of White Mountain, 4,000 ft. above the valley floor.
- Hang gliding is a tiny subculture, and everyone at the launch
- knows everyone else. Kari Castle, a tall, athletic blond who's
- horsing around playing Hacky Sack--yup, the one in the peach
- bikini--is the holder of the women's long-distance record:
- 209 miles. On current performance she should be selected for
- the next U.S. team (there are no women in this year's competition).
- John Heiney, a thin, indrawn man who once, grandly or madly,
- flew a world-record 52 consecutive loops, is readying his glider
- to shoot aerial photos.
- </p>
- <p> And hang gliding's first birdman is on hand to watch his son's
- launch. Steve Moyes' father Bill, now 60 and a manufacturer
- of gliders, was an Australian water-ski pro who first became
- airborne in the mid-'60s. He used a kite towed by a motorboat.
- That had been done before, but Moyes' kite was an innovative
- delta model, built for him after a design thought up by an American
- NASA engineer, Francis Rogallo, to aid spacecraft re-entry.
- Moyes' motorboat was supposed to lower him back to water level
- by slackening speed, but one day a driver headed him toward
- high-tension wires, and Moyes released the rope. He glided easily
- back to the water, completing the universe's first hang-glider
- flight. By 1970 he had flown off the south rim of the Grand
- Canyon. "The rangers were displeased," he recalls amiably. "They
- threw me in jail for three days."
- </p>
- <p> Today's task is a 100-mile dogleg flight to the edge of Death
- Valley and back to a field near Bishop. Everyone knows the
- turn direction, which is left today. When 60 or 80 gliders spiral
- up in the same gaggle (as these lovely and frightening formations
- are called), prudence directs that everyone turn the same way.
- </p>
- <p> Now the flyers have an hour's window in which to launch. At
- the hour's end, a big tarp is uncovered in a field, marking
- the start of the race. Each pilot must photograph the tarp from
- above. A sequence of designated turning points must also be
- photographed. In addition to a camera, pilots carry oxygen,
- water, a map, a two-way radio and an array of instruments. Launching
- early in the hour-long window gives time to rise high above
- the start tarp, but that's additional time in which to grind
- the edge off your mental fresh ness. So competitors wait, trying
- to outguess the wind and one another. Now and then someone
- shoulders his glider by the V-spreading downtubes, takes a big
- breath and charges straight downhill. It's an awkward, galumphing
- run, and the chrysalis-like harness, or body sack, hanging
- out behind, gives the pilot the look of a half-molted insect.
- As each glider comes airborne and alive, the whoosh of wind
- in its wires rises to flight pitch.
- </p>
- <p> Everyone gets off safely, though later in the week Italian pilot
- Andrea Noseda would be helicoptered to a hospital with three
- broken vertebrae, after becoming airborne, then whirling back
- to earth in the swirl of a large dust devil.
- </p>
- <p> Hang gliding is only briefly a spectator sport, but the moments
- are spectacular. The gaggles shift and re-form, climbing for
- position over the start tarp, with the mighty Sierra ridge line
- in the background stretching toward Mount Whitney to the south
- and Yosemite to the north. Sun illuminates translucent Dacron,
- and the spiral of colors seems lighthearted and serene: heavy,
- fragile men transformed as birds. Anthropomorphic bosh, of course;
- birds aren't especially serene, and the pilots are busy turning,
- conniving, wondering who has found good lift and how to grab
- some of it. From below, the view fades to blue as the pilots
- head north, then west to Death Valley.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
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