XC – Retrieval Tips - 2004 by Andre
Odinius
I sat at my PC feeling a little sad that I had 18missed a
great day at Talybont Wales late in April 2004. But I
then thought of how I would be able to get back to the car after an epic day,
being stranded in the middle of Wales,
especially as the last couple of XC’s in 2003 were rather arduous when it came
to making my way back to the car.
Anyway, I quickly posted a message on EUROPG and the AVON CLUB forum and
had many responses with in hours. There
were lots of good ideas and many I had not thought of.
Thanks to Tim, Rich, Nev, Raphael,
Andrew, Will from the Avon forum and Neil, David, Michael, David, Matthew,
Fergus, Helen from Europg for your contributions. –
Apologies if I have forgotten anybody.
See below a list of Tips consolidated from my own experience
and the many e-mail / messages that have come in. Most of them are common sense, but it sometimes
difficult to remember the most obvious things to do. I hope they will make your
journey back to the car easier and maybe get you to fly again on the same day.
Planning
- Ensure
you have a local map of the area you are likely to land in.
- Have
a list of Taxi companies for the area you land in but more importantly for
the town / village near your take off site (where you car is parked)
- Make
sure your mobile is fully charged and you have credit - phone boxes are much rarer than you
think.
Landing
- Don’t
fly the last 2K if you know you are not going to make it, especially if it
takes you away from a main road, you just have to walk it back.
- Try
and land near people and strike up a conversation, they maybe able to tell
you where you are more accurately and where there is a good spot to catch
a lift, or with a bit of luck give you a lift some of the way.
- Landing
near children will mean that parents are likely to be near, also the
children are likely to call them over to see the strange person that has
just fallen out of the sky and may offer some help.
NOTE: Please make sure you always
land safely away from livestock and people so you don’t endanger them.
Public Transport
- If you are happy to try public Transport, find out
where the nearest bus stop or train station is, it may get you part of the
way back to the car. Remember your
air map shows railway lines and train stations.
- Make
sure you have enough money on you for Train, bus or Taxi fare. £20-£30, the old plastic can come in
handy too. If you don’t spend it you can always buy yourself that hard
earned beer, cider or cup of tea J
Hitch Hiking
The majority of us no doubt will use this method to get as
close to our parked car as possible and possibly supplement it with a short
Taxi ride as necessary. Try any or all of the following ideas to improve your
chances of getting a lift, in no particular order:
- Always
show your glider bag
- Have
a sign saying Glider Pilot, and /or a destination sign (Pen & Paper may be required to
write a sign to where you want to go for each leg of your journey, or have
them pre-printed for you favourite flying sites.
- Take
off your sunglasses
- Smile
at oncoming traffic and mouth the word please when they can see you.
- Try
and look reasonably clean and tidy, nobody will take you if you look like
a smelly / scruffy tramp.
- Show
how happy you are, after all you just had a good XC (even if it was only
5k)
- Stand
relaxed, with an open stance
- Make
eye contact when ever possible
- If
you happen to walk, and it is towards oncoming traffic, walk with a little
wobble in your step, this will help them to see you and slow down, you can
also get the sympathy vote for carrying that heavy glider bag (soz hangies)
- If
you walk past people that are getting into a car strike up a conversation,
they may offer you a lift.
- Try
wearing your flying suite, this makes you look more interesting
- Always
position yourself somewhere where the traffic is slow, near a roundabout
or 100 ft after a corner are good positions. On straight roads people tend to go too
fast to stop. Bus stops and lay-bys
are good positions too.
- Petrol
stations are another possibility; you can stand at the exit or even ask
people filling up, but be careful some proprietors don’t like it.
- If
you don’t mind going on a motorbike show your helmet.
- Don’t
look too needy while waiting, maybe read a book.
- Once
in the car, be safe, make a quick phone call (pretend if you want) telling
a friend you have found a lift and are on your way. You can always text car details to a
friend too.
- Once
in the car be enthusiastic and polite but don’t bore them to tears, they
may not be interested in flying.
- Also
don’t be too pushy to make them go out of their way; if you are humble
they will more likely take you that extra mile.
Walking
- Well,
we all have legs, so use them, especially to get to better positions. You
are better off investing 20 – 30 minutes to walk to a good spot on a road
then stand somewhere where you are unlikely to get a lift.
Happy flying, Andre Odinius –
register.odinius@dsl.pipex.com