by Marge » Sun Feb 01, 2009 6:51 am
Well, how come no one ever told me about 7 falls? What an awesome place, not a bad place to be forced to hike down through.
So I got up at launch but couldn't seem to get more than 200 over and every time I started to make a move I'd hit some major sink. After about 25 minutes of looking around and trying to find it, I finally had about 4200 and saw wings getting up at Lacumbre and pilots going on glide from launch and not losing too much on the way. I started toward LaCumbre, staying near the ridge. Once I hit the rock ledge face and got enough incentive from my vario, I started to make a couple of figure 8s and ended up lower and farther away from the ridge. Continuing on, i still saw glider ahead of me getting up, however, I was going down, that awful sink noise. "Mistake number 1."
I got to the ridge pretty low but with great anticipation of getting something as I approached. Nothing, nothing, more of nothing. The winds were so light and the sun was hitting the rock ledge on the other side. I thought of a lot of the cross country pilots I've spoke to who told me that you need to look for the signs and know the area, and believe. Well, I thought I knew a good sign, I knew I could believe, and I know Santa Barbara. I went through the saddle pretty low and was really woken up to the fact that I don't know Santa Barbara at all. Mistake number 2
At first my vario seemed to be telling me, I'd be rewarded by my new found cross country knowledge, but once again I got "suckered in". I guess I must have had sucker written on my wing today. Mistake Number 3
Really low now, I didn't think I could go back to the saddle and I didn't think it would be a good idea to go into EJ bowl. I searched a bit and milked it for quite a while, but was having a difficult time even maintaining what little height I had.
Near the tree tops with no signs of even a schetchy LZ in sight, I made my way down the revine and looked for an area to land. I settled on a treed area towards the bottom of the ravine. I chose this spot because I could see a clear space or two under the trees so it was not too thick of an area and it looked like I could get the wing out because the trees were lower. I was into what little wind I had and kicked a branch out of the way as the wing landed in the tree and I gently dropped to about a foot off the ground.
I tried to get the wing out but the ledge it was near was shale and it kept breaking under my feet. I decided to leave the wing for later and hike out. After bouldering down for about 1/2 hour, I ran into a bunch of people at this outrageous water fall and pool. I had to roll my backpack down a ledge to them. A bunch of guys volunteered to carry the bag down for me. I was very grateful, it would have been difficult to do parts of the trail with the pack alone. Bob came up and met us at the bottom of the creek and took the pack the rest of the way.
Lessons One
Don't turn in sucker pop and don't think you know an area unless you really know an area (I think that proably takes a million hours of flying an area).
Hammer said he saw the whole thing and I think his first thought was "why is she ridge soaring there, it's only a sucker pop".
Little John said to me "oh yeah, I haven't stopped there in years".
Double D said, something about the sucker pop there.
"Yeah, I never stop and turn there we just dolphin through", Bob told me after he met me hiking down.).
Lesson Two
Ask a lot of questions. If I had asked about that area before I made my first attempt I might had learned about the sucker pop (I don't think that would have made a major difference but it might have helped).
Lesson Three - A Santa Barbara Lesson -
Don't fly out the East side of Cathedral if you're low. Stay at LaCumbre Peak Saddle in zeros until something comes through, apparently it eventually does.
Post Incident Good Decisions -
Being Prepared - Remembering water, charged cell phone and fully changed radio battery (Dean has a great article in this month's USHPA magazine about being prepared).
Don't take unnecessary risks - Initially, I thought I should have worked harder to get the wing out but risking getting hurt retrieving a wing when you were lucky enough to land unharmed in a tree is not too smart.
Have good friends - Thank you all your caring, concern and help.
Beautiful day for a hike!