22 Jun 12

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Hmmm - wonder if this will work...?


Mont Viso

The air today was described at briefing as dry and stable, but there would be enough heat in the higher mountains to provide 4,000 metre thermals. The trick, as always, would be getting there.

Cock-up number 1: when at the front of the grid and a second tug appears unexpectedly to whisk you away from terra firma, continue to take your time. I rather rushed it, which resulted in my drinking tube being wedged either under my parachute or, worse, behind the seat pan. And I was getting thirsty - this could have resulted in a return to base for a relight, and possibly the most expensive sip of water.....in the world.

Happily, with a bit of wriggling and some light swearing, the drinking tube was recovered and I could now concentrate on some proper soaring.

Except that I wish I knew how to soar 'properly'. There was some north in the wind, which on blue days is not my favourite combination. I always felt not quite high enough to move onto the next mountain, but after a couple of hours I had cracked it, finding a belter at the Blayeul which launched me to 10,000ft and some kind of freedom.
Franco-Italian border

Cock-up number 2: when having a go with your brand new in-cockpit GoPro HD camera, learn how to use it first. That way you won't accidentally take several still photographs having omitted to select the movie option. And the mounting of the camera could be improved, unless the viewer has some interest in the contents of my right ear.


Frozen lake, Viso

I joined the parcours near the Trois Eveches, crossed over to the northern edge of the Barcelonnette valley and cut across to the the east of the col de Vars. A large strip of thickening cirrus had damped down the Ecrins, but the route to Viso was in full sun, so I headed in that direction. The eastern rim of the Queyras continued to work its magic, sunny on the French side, low cloud on the Italian. 

I found some proper wave (as opposed to yesterday's fake wave) near Guillestre. Taking it to 14,000ft, I decided I had enough height to see what would happen if I tried to cross the central part of the Ecrins via the pas de cavale. That was into wind, directly towards the highest ridge-line in the area. 


Wave, 14,000ft

Cock-up number 3: if you think that something you are about to do might be seriously 'tricky', best not to give it a go. That way, you won't spend fifteen scary minutes in a threshing machine banging through huge lumps of sink and lift (but mainly sink), wondering if you'd ever reach that col. I managed to get through with a good margin, with the added bonus of some insight about what I should have done.

Oh well, bag of luck reduced, bag of experience increased...

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