Chelan Butte Dust Devil Blender....
West Coast Soaring Club
Martin Henry - 2010/07/08 04:50 UTC
Chelan Butte Dust Devil Blender...
Ooooh and next week they are going to fly Paragliders from the same launch... some with just two risers!
Hang Gliding on Chelan Butte
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_FDJTApk5Hw
tamingthekat - 2010/07/06
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Seriously, for the record... one of the spectators knocked down during this incident broke nine ribs and a nose and sustained liver damage... and was in critical condition. Hope they get some mellow air for the comp.
Martin Henry - 2010/07/08 15:46 UTC
Second angle of the same incident:
GEDC0616.MOV
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-TolD-vfG6I
tamingthekat - 2010/07/07
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What pilots need to realize is the top of the Butte acts like a magnifying glass and is the focal point where the thermals finally break contact with the mountain. Devils forming on the surrounding slopes accumulate on the top. I believe this video was shot close to 3pm... a very bad time to be sitting around waiting to fly.
Thomas McEachryn - 2010/07/08 20:17 UTC
Mission, BC
Couldn't help but notice the very helpfull gentleman with the grandson? extending a warm helping hand to the injured ...unbelievable!!
Matt - 2010/07/08 20:30 UTC
Ocean Park, South Surrey, BC
The grandfather did exactly what he is supposed to do - keep his grandson away from a dangerous situation and prevent him from seeing someone with possible head injuries. There are enough other people around to help.
Damn Feathers - 2010/07/09 04:51 UTCYep, I gotta say, I was thinking the same thing. I guess it's hard to be critical without actually seeing the whole story - but I'm always amazed when I see clips of accident footage, just how many people stand and stare, long after any danger has passed.Couldn't help but notice the very helpfull gentleman with the grandson? extending a warm helping hand to the injured ...unbelievable!!
Having spent a good bit of time @ that launch the last few years, that's pretty much par for the course - big dusties on launch every 10-15 minutes on a good day. Anybody who doesn't tie there stiffy down (there are rows of permanently placed cables in the set up area for this reason) prior to folding out their wings and setting up (or leaving a PG unpacked and unattended) is crazy. We saw a similar scene last year at the Classic where 4 guys held an HG down (it was actually tied down too) and the dusty had enough power to decisively bend the leading edge.
No to be argumentative ( ), but this footage does nothing to indicate this day is dangerous for PG's. The best days I've flown in Chelan have had dusties like that one cruising through launch regularly starting @ ~ 11pm, not to mention monsters all over the flats. As with HG's you just gotta be careful when your near the ground.
The nice thing is, when a dusty does have it's way with an unattended bag, it doesn't break by-standers bones!
annelies - 2010/07/13 15:01 UTC
Victoria
Hi Martin,
Its like you new what was coming.
Well, I think anyone who has flown Chelan in the heat of summer, on a paraglider, and had any sort of incident could have predicted...
Day two of a week long paraglider comp -
Two crashes and one reserve deployment - both crashes involved hospitalization and one an airlift...
Fly safe everyone.
http://www.hanggliding.org/viewtopic.php?t=18037Martin Henry - 2010/07/13 17:42 UTC
Annelies,
I'm way out of my league when it comes to having a knowledge based judgment as to "if" or "when" paraglider pilots can or should fly the Butte. I have thousands of hours on a hang but just recently passed my 100 hour mark on my PG. Along with having just completed an SIV, I do feel very comfortable admitting that the Butte is no place for me on a PG (mid day, when the place is full on). Perhaps late evening, on a no wind, stabilizing day I would be willing to spend some time, but I would want to be sure of what weather held in the cards.
The day of round two, US Nats. From my perspective (out on the flats and armed with all of the available forecasts) I thought it was a bit of an insane day to call a pg task. I flew my Rigid wing from the tow site east of Mansfield, there was a forecast that included wind and a -3 thermal index set @ 10,000+ feet. After my first climb I immediatly recorded SW 15-18mph. Over 7500ft this jumped up to 26mph. The air had a real edge to it.
I don't normally fly the flats when the wind is up, so I punched a headwind to Mansfield, climbed to 10,000, then punched further west to Toehey... I was not enjoying the flight so decided to run back to Mansfield.... time for a cold can of Busch.
On the ground winds gusted between 10-20 out of the SW. It was rough all the way to the ground.
Just after breaking down (and it took the assistance of two other pilots on the ground to help me break my big bird down) I saw a small wave of comp PG pilots arriving over Mansfield. I've got allot of respect for the pilots that fly these hot blade wings in this monster air but you've got to one hell of a pilot to being flying in these conditions. (seriously made me wonder if I was just a great big sissy on my rigid wing if there were paragliders flying?... when you get old you start thinking about flying tomorrow?)
Problem is, comps tend to drag lesser experienced pilots into the mix. Not really sure if this is the place to be learning and expanding your skills? (Kind of like trial by "fire"). This is a very big place. If you don't respect it.... well it can kill you (could put a damper on your future airtime).
As to some of the other comments above regarding the cow like behaviour of the tourists up on the Butte... First off, I can't recall any sort of warning sign that says it is a dangerous place. You really can't expect the "Pear People" to have any sort of a clue as to what is going on.
Worse, having them grazing around your wings and expecting the bovines to react correctly when things get exciting is not realistic. Case in point, one of the bystanders helping had his elderly mother up on the Butte to enjoy the view... she can been seen walking toward the spinning glider... oblivious to the danger. The bystander mentions in a email on the CBCC that his mother suffers from a minor level of dementia. They were all up on the Butte to enjoy what is a very public place. Unfortunately something bad took place and everybody found out what dangers lurk in the real world.
Of course, that's just the way "I" see it... perhaps Kelly is right when she says "I'm such a drama Queen"......
Cheers, Martin
Dust Devil from Hell
Holger Selover-Stephan - 2010/07/08 16:35:05 UTC
Portland, Oregon
From what I heard, a 58-yo bystander came to help holding down this glider and suffered seven broken ribs and a punctured lung. He was airlifted out and moved to ICU. A pilot received wire burns to his hand, needing stitches. Two others were knocked around, too.
There are tie-downs at Chelan Butte and this glider was tied down until the pilot removed them to move his glider to the launch.
He was a SPECTATOR? Sorry, MOTHERFUCKER, I missed the frame in which he was SPECTATING. All I saw was a guy doing everything possible and everything right to keep somebody else's six thousand dollar U2 from being destroyed - just like I would have.Seriously, for the record... one of the spectators knocked down during this incident broke nine ribs and a nose and sustained liver damage... and was in critical condition.
Yeah Martin, that was my response too when I heard what happened to this guy. Sure hope they have a nice paragliding competition next week.Hope they get some mellow air for the comp.
Yeah. They know that big dusties blow through launch every ten to fifteen minutes on a good day but what they really need to realize is that the top of the butte acts like a magnifying glass and is the focal point where the thermals finally break contact with the mountain. If only they could understand that this sort of thing would never happen.What pilots need to realize is the top of the Butte acts like a magnifying glass and is the focal point where the thermals finally break contact with the mountain.
Fuckin' moron.
And an even worse time to be trying to help a total stranger save his glider.I believe this video was shot close to 3pm... a very bad time to be sitting around waiting to fly.
Yeah, let's hear your take on the cow like behavior of the TOURISTS up on the butte - you arrogant, brain dead, sociopathic piece o' shit.As to some of the other comments above regarding the cow like behaviour of the tourists up on the Butte...
Yeah, that was the problem, Martin. None of the stupid TOURISTS had any CLUE that that tornado chewing its way up the slope towards the gliders had any potential for danger whatsoever.First off, I can't recall any sort of warning sign that says it is a dangerous place.
Fuck you.You really can't expect the "Pear People" to have any sort of a clue as to what is going on.
- You wanna talk stupid, oblivious, cud chewing, herd animals? Try hang checkers, Aussie Methodists, backup loopers, standup landers, 130 pound Greenspotters, and pin benders - fer starters.Worse, having them grazing around your wings and expecting the bovines to react correctly when things get exciting is not realistic.
- Wanna see some interesting herd behavior?
-- Declare a spot landing contest.
-- Put a stuff bag with a hundred bucks worth of goodies in it on top of a traffic cone at the finish line of a Flytec XC competition.
I'm having a little trouble with this concept of yours that someone HELPING can be labeled a BYSTANDER. Maybe if you pile into the LZ sometime and start bleeding to death you can look my way to see what a REAL bystander looks like.Case in point, one of the bystanders helping...
Yeah....had his elderly mother up on the Butte to enjoy the view... she can been seen walking toward the spinning glider... oblivious to the danger. The bystander mentions in a email on the CBCC that his mother suffers from a minor level of dementia.
- The elderly mother with dementia who's very slowly approaching to twenty-five yards from and perpendicular to the track of a dust devil moving at a quarter mile an hour is a total moron.
- But the glider owner who runs for and grabs the control frame a second before the glider gets re-engulfed by the dust devil and gets spit out and slammed by the wing four seconds later is a quick thinking genius.
Yeah. And some of the public up on that very public place that afternoon didn't bring anything that could half kill and destroy the lives of any other of the public.They were all up on the Butte to enjoy what is a very public place.
Yeah. Nobody had ANY idea what could happen when that dust devil hit that glider. Well, now we're all as smart as you are, Martin.Unfortunately something bad took place and everybody found out what dangers lurk in the real world.
Just how long do you think it would take someone a bit slow on the uptake like Yours Truly to become a certified Industry Standards Expert? Asshole.Toronto Sun - 2012/05/07
The association has named industry standards expert Martin Henry as the official investigator.
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