Camphill
has excellent Hill, Wave and Thermal Soaring ....------- Hill Soaring
Camphill
is a hill top site on the south-west corner of a plateau
with three sides forming appreciable slopes to the North,
West and South. The East side is cleft by a valley that
runs down to join the Hope Valley (of telephone exchange
fame) at Hathersage. The major slopes all produce good
lift and hill soaring is available straight off the top
of a launch in winds from northerly through west to
southerly.
To the
north of Camphill, as well as the Hope Valley, there is
Edale (another valley) and the valley containing the
Derwent resevoirs. All have soarable slopes usable in one
wind direction or another. Soaring these is not difficult
and is fully described in the club's Pilots Manual - as
are the local fields which are not as small as is
rumoured!
For the
more experienced pilot the whole of the Peak District is
open for exploration from Chatsworth in the south to
Saddleworth Moors in the north, from Kinder Downfall in
the west to Howden Moors in the east. Those who like to
mark their prowess by the distance flown in one flight
can fly nearly one hundred kilometres on the Dark Peak
hills and only backtrack for about ten of them.
Wave Soaring
The prime
wave generators are the flanks of the Pennines. However
at a lower level each major hill produces some local wave
which usually feeds into the main wave at some point
where they are in phase with each other. Camphill, in the
heart of the Peak District, is so situated that our hill
lift is nearly always in phase with the best waves that
are generated in winds from southwest to northwest.
Frequently a winch launch to 400ft or so is all it takes
to start a flight that may take you to levels where
oxygen is required and you can venture forth to join the
pilots from Sutton Bank at Thirsk flying in wave over the
North Yorkshire Moors.
Our good
climbs are made to the North and East where the cloud
gaps tend to be bigger and the airspace more open.
Although the best wave is in winds predominantly from the
west, just as there is a soarable hill accessible from
Camphill in any wind direction there is accessible wave
in about any wind as well. You just may have to make a
step to a local hill to find the way into it. Silver,
gold and diamond heights are all to be had at Camphill
within gliding range of the site, cloud cover
notwithstanding. The height record for Camphill is
23,000ft. The only real limiting factor to high wave
soaring over the Peak District is the presence of
controlled airspace above and to the west, related to the
Manchester CTA.
Thermal Soaring
From our
airfield at Camphill we regard the area from the Vale of
York down to Grantham as our back yard for thermal cross
countries. However thermal flying in the hilly country is
very different from that over flatter terrain. The hill
slopes catch the sun's rays earlier than the flatlands
and correspondingly do so as the day ends so the thermal
activity is often prolonged. There is frequently a breeze
and often superimposed wave. Flying at Camphill is
characterised by a rich mixture of all three classical
forms of soaring which is challenging, rewarding and
endlessly fascinating.
Because of
the influence of the wind and hills the thermals often
behave unpredictably, or so it seems. Learning the way
they behave and developing the skills to successfully
soar them and use them as the stepping stones into the
lee wave is one of the reasons why Camphill is one of the
uniquely interesting and challenging gliding sites in
England .
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