The Snowbird contest is nearly 70 years old |
It went fine, but it was tough to find volunteers for the schedule. Thanks to the 'usual suspects' that volunteer every year and stepped up immediately. You know who you are.
Kvetching aside, on the two days the contest was scheduled, Mother Nature blessed us with 15 knot 90 degree crosswinds and gusts as high as 32 on the anemometer at the Flight Center! Needless to say, no flying occurred and the whole contest was a washout.
What a drag! This was my first Snowbird and I was looking forward to seeing the spot landing contest. We'd laid out the landing zones on the runway and set up the marker cones to see who could touchdown and roll out, stopping closest to the cone. Some years, the difference is decided in under 1 inch from the cone.
The contest is the longest continuously running contest in soaring history at 60+ years but the atmosphere is more like a local event. We have members from Mid-Atlantic Soaring who come pretty much every year and a few others here and there, but by and large it's a chance for our local pilots to get out there and fly on last time before the New Year.
Instead, this year we had a whole lot of hangar flying as we waited each day until about 1pm to call the contest off each day. Someone joked that I was automatically signed up for next year as the contest manager. I don't think so. But I'll be sure to volunteer for a task when the call goes out.
From here on out, it gets colder as Winter takes a firmer grip on the Southern Tier and it won't let go until April. Time to put away those thermal thoughts for awhile until we turn the corner and Spring approaches.
1 comment:
Managing a contest is an overwhelming task, especially if you haven’t handled this kind of task before. But it’s truly a unique experience to be given this kind of privilege. How was the contest, by the way? Was it successful?
>Felix Stendahl
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