My phone rang yesterday and it was Annika and Arvid, two wonderful visiting pilots who come from Sweden originally, but have been working six years for Microsoft in Seattle. They are doing what we all dream of: Quit their jobs, bought a sailboat, loaded the Great Dane (Pluto) and the wings on board and are sailing down the coast to Mexico, happy to just enjoy life and meet new adventures until the money runs out. Chris Grantham gave them my number and Bob Hurlbett and I treated them to a grand sledder from Skyport to St. Mary's on Saturday in sweltering conditions. Despite the underwhelming day, we met for dinner at the Brewhouse (including Pluto, who discreetly ordered off the doggie menu), had great conversation and they generously paid for everything.
We apologized for not being able to show them better of Santa Barbara's soaring potential and promised to call in the morning, despite a poor prognosis for flying on Sunday. Well, it seemed like the Swedish saints (?) aligned when we read the forecast for Ojai this morning. A 29 degree spread with potential of getting up to seven or eight grand. OJ came to the rescue with a second vehicle in addition to Robin driving the elderly Suburban. Bob and I grabbed Annika and Arvid and met up with a large group of venerable pilots at Nordhoff. Now, when you get some older pilots together and somebody mentions the "P" word, the adrenal glands gear up, pupils dilate, the salivary ducts open full bore and it is hard to redirect the conversation anywhere else. I want to protect the innocent, but we all know it was Tom Pipkin who let the genie out of the bottle with his suggestion to go to Pine. How could we refuse? If only the Swedes knew what was in store for them. First of all, we were all expecting T-shirt flights and the wind chill would put it down to freezing at 12,000 feet should we be that lucky.
Hospitality, indeed.
OJ agreed to the venue switch and we rolled into launch an hour later. Light cycles. But the same guy who suggested "P" bullied me into taking off early, with half the cycles east or down. I ran out the launch to make up for the lack of lift and glided in the eerie sink over to the spine. Nothing. I crept over to the bonzai tree and got that feeling I was on the edge of something scary, kind of like lying down to sleep in a strange place. Then, of course, the fun started.
We have a lot of adjectives for crummy/scary air: "Trashy," "ratty," "uneven, "rough," " "bumpy," "turbulent," "violent," "nasty," etc. I have a different word for today's air: Evil.
I have flown Pine Mountain scores of times and today was the most intimidating. The wind screeched and howled, like early arrivals for Halloween. Our wings danced all over the place, absolutely possessed. High pressure, edgy thermals, demonic influence - call it what you will. There were half a dozen aborted takeoffs, precipitous falls out the sides of thermals and strong winds thwarting every intent. Four of us left the haunted house and struck out for Ojai with 10,500 feet. At first, we were making 35 mile ground speed toward Nordhoff Peak with the strong north tailwind. But nobody wanted to challenge Nordhoff Ridge in the spooky air with 12 mph east wind down low and risk a landing in Wheeler Gorge. We opted for CalTrans. Tom landed flat on his back on highway 33 when the bottom fell out; Bob had to make a 180 degree turn and dump it in the bushes when the wind changed direction while he was 50 feet above the ground and Arvid had his wing fail in the strong east rotor and dropped into the 15 feet deep chaparral 200 yards off the highway. I hit four figure lift twice over CalTrans, rising to 7,700 feet from 5.000, but was beaten back both times by Dry Lakes ridge from crossing over.
It took OJ, Tom, Bob and I two pitchers of beer back in Ojai before Annika and Arvid got his wing out of the brush and back down to the 33.
It sounds like the Chief crew also got the Halloween willies.
My wife was happy I missed our 1:00 PM BBQ get-together.
Respect for the mystique and power - and Halloween mischief - of Pine grows with every flight.