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What soaring pilots have been talking about for some time has happened.
Yesterday, in startling clear weather, with visibility measured in dozens of miles or more, a Hawker jet ran into a sailplane at about 13,500' (5,000' AGL or more) some 10 miles east of Minden airport. The sailplane pilot had come from Japanto enjoy several days of the world's very best soaring. He was not disappointed: he towed into the air around 1:00 p.m. and flew with several other pilots some fifty or so miles south. The group of sailplane pilots was just returning to Minden several hours later, talking to each other on the radio, when they noticed the Japanese pilot was no longer answering their calls. Shortly thereafter a Hawker jet landed at Carson City with pieces of a sailplane wing embedded into its nose. The Hawker pilot said he had hit a glider about 40 miles south. Local search and rescue groups were called out and the sailplane wreckage was found on the east slope of the Pine Nuts around 6:00 p.m. A LifeFlight helicopter was flying through the area (totally unrelated to this search) and headed for the wreckage. He saw a parachute on the ground and set down near that. The pilot was not in the parachute, so all of us following the search on radios on the ground figured the pilot was walking out. Sure enough, he was found just before 7:00 p.m., walking out with minor cuts and bruises. This story ended with lots of sighs of relief but it could have been a real tragedy. This was a totally VFR situation, where see and be seen should have been in effect. I don't know yet what equipment the sailplane had on board, but I know it was a very recently built plane. The sailplane pilot was experienced and in good physical shape. I don't know anything about the Hawker crew or what the NTSB will find about their operation. My fear, though, is that the talking heads who form much of Americans' opinions will start speaking out about the lack of sophisticated equipment on board the sailplane. You know the kind: "if that glider had an encoding transponder on it, this never would have happened." When you hear that, please point out to the speaker that the sailplane pilot was following all the regulations, was flying in great visibility near an airport that is maked on sectionals with a glider symbol and is known worldwide for its fantastic soaring, and that the Hawker ran into the saiplane, not the other way around. And then offer up a little prayer that this won't happen again soon -- or to anyone you know. Fred |
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