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| Beer-battered Flathead. Yum! |
We are now into late fall.
It’s a great time for teaching and Godfrey is busy with classes. The weather is so consistent and conditions
so good they can get students up to a P2 rating in a week.
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| Ridge soaring with Godfrey's students |
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| Washed and waxed |
Wednesday May 30th was my last available day to fly. One of my flying buddies managed to get a great climb up over the back from the east launch and could have gone west quickly. But he probably figured that if I didn’t go Mary Beth would not be available to retrieve him so he headed back to the mountain. It took me ten to 15 minutes to find the thermal to take me up but I managed to get a good climb out from launch just as he was coming back. I headed west and found some reasonable lift and one good thermal before running out of altitude and thermal triggers at the gap just short of Bogabri. 25k in one hour and 16 minutes. I just need to put four of these together next year.
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| Here I am Mary Beth! |
One thing that we thought we could skate on but turned out not to be the case was the allowable baggage weights on the train. For some reason they only allow 20 kilos per bag on checked bags on the train as opposed to the 23k on airlines. At the train station in Tamworth we had to take items out of our 4our checked bags and put them in my glider pack which I carried on the train.
The train ride to Sydney was quite pleasant. Once we got to Sydney things got a little hectic getting tickets and finding the correct track to board the train from Central Station to the Airport while pulling our wheeled suitcases and me with my glider pack.
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| Still smiling on the train to the airport |
We had been to Sydney before so we didn’t have a big list of things to do. I wanted to go up in the tower of the harbor bridge and get a Sydney Hard Rock CafĂ© T-shirt. Mary Beth wanted to shop. All these things were accomplished. I got my T-shirt and Mary Beth had another Black Opal.
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| View from the bridge tower |
Climbing up in the tower and walking all day put some strain on Mary Beth’s knee but she persevered. We ended the day with a nice dinner at one of the restaurants in Darling Harbor. Alcohol and Advil seems to do wonders.
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| Darling Harbor at dusk |
Saturday, things at the airport went smoothly. I had expected a long line and a wait when I presented the paragliding harness to the tax refund office at the airport. There was no line and the inspector didn’t even want to see the harness. We had lots of time to spare.
The flight back with Qantas was on an A380. I like them because they are much quieter than the 747s. All I can say about the flight was that it was long and there were lots of movie choices. Just none of them good.
We had lots of time in LAX before the flight to Portland and
it was a good thing. Things started out
well. Mary Beth’s cane got us special
treatment and instead of waiting in line for 20 minutes at immigration we were
whisked through the air crew line. After picking up the bags we
went to where the Alaska Airlines terminal used to be last year only to find
out they had moved. We managed to get on
a bus to the right terminal and made the flight easily. Mary Beth got a ten minute wait for a female
TSA employee to do full body search thanks to her artificial knee and
cane. Still plenty of time for the flight.
Finally we arrived back in Portland. Emily picked us up outside baggage claim and the long day was over. Great to be home.
Australia 2012 trip statistics:
117
|
Days traveling
|
42
|
Days doing things other than flying
|
16
|
Days lost due to weather
|
59
|
Days flying
|
79%
|
of days available to fly were "flyable"
|
66.70
|
Total hours in the air
|
91
|
Total flights
|
83k
|
Longest XC
|
392k
|
Total XC I bothered to record
|
More pictures on Picasa







