Me and my mate Spiny used to make an annual paragliding pilgrimage to Andalucia, Spain. We enjoyed classic flying conditions most of the time and even squeezed some climbing in on the odd occasion when the weather wasn't flyable.
Our mates Baz and Samantha live out in Algodonales near to Ronda, only a 3 hour EasyJet flight away from Liverpool. It's a cracking place for cross country flights and only one hours drive from El Chorro and some fantastic sport climbing in the spectacular gorge there. This is a short account of a trip from way back in 2002 to give a flavour of the sport on offer over there...
Nova Carbon – a great wing in 2002! |
Banked up in a thermal |
Climbing with Baz |
Me, Mick and vulture on another trip |
Then it was back to some class flying in fantastic surroundings and in really close company with the ever present Griffon Vultures. If you ever saw Steve Leonards' 'Extreme Animals' programme on BBC1 you'll have seen the bit where he was tandem flying a paraglider in the Himalayas with pilot Bob Drury. Well, you don't need to go as far as Nepal to see exactly the same amazing bird as they're prevalent in Andalucia too! You can join them in thermals and follow them around and despite their huge size and fearsome appearance they're really sociable and can show you the best lift and when to leave it. We've never had any problems flying with them despite being only six or seven feet away from them at times and there being flocks of vultures thirty plus strong!
Typical Spanish terrain |
One of the joys of this trip was being able to log the longer
flights on our GPS's and then analyse them afterwards. My unit was a Magellan
SporTrak Pro which together with the MapSend software provides an exact plot of
the flight distance and height profile. The example below is one flight only and
the units on the graph are miles flown along the horizontal axis and height
gains in feet on the vertical axis.
Read out from one flight of about 25 miles |
2002's visit to Andalucia was finished with a chilled one hour
flight in smooth(ish) evening air above Lijar in company with about 20 Griffons
and after landing at the Bull Ring, me and Spiny had the mother of all
waterfights with the remaining ballast!!!
Cheers to Baz and Sam at the Andalucian Experience, Bill, Rene, Rick and Denise, Mark and Anders for a lot of fun amongst all the frightening bits!!! And of course to Spiny – another top flying trip with the old boy – can't wait to go back if Lizzie lets me..."
Cheers to Baz and Sam at the Andalucian Experience, Bill, Rene, Rick and Denise, Mark and Anders for a lot of fun amongst all the frightening bits!!! And of course to Spiny – another top flying trip with the old boy – can't wait to go back if Lizzie lets me..."
Rare shot of UK flying! |
POSTSCRIPT:
Since 2002, Spiny and me have been out many times to fly in Southern Spain with Baz and Sam and had more amazing flying as our knowledge of the area has developed and the gliders have improved year by year. The big problem with UK paragliding has been the increasingly bad weather which makes the number of flyable days very low.
Without the opportunity to fly abroad, a lot of us would be climbing the walls with frustration but luckily Europe offers stunning and exciting flying in a huge variety of terrain and temperatures.
One of these days I'll write a new blog about more recent flying trips – maybe in the Alps and illustrate it with photos from the new crop of wide angle cameras like the Go Pro which give brilliant results when carried on a glider – see the grab opposite from a video when scratching around on Pule Hill above our village.
Since 2002, Spiny and me have been out many times to fly in Southern Spain with Baz and Sam and had more amazing flying as our knowledge of the area has developed and the gliders have improved year by year. The big problem with UK paragliding has been the increasingly bad weather which makes the number of flyable days very low.
Without the opportunity to fly abroad, a lot of us would be climbing the walls with frustration but luckily Europe offers stunning and exciting flying in a huge variety of terrain and temperatures.
One of these days I'll write a new blog about more recent flying trips – maybe in the Alps and illustrate it with photos from the new crop of wide angle cameras like the Go Pro which give brilliant results when carried on a glider – see the grab opposite from a video when scratching around on Pule Hill above our village.