Hmmm... sounds like the Truckee pilot is a candidate for the popular
British sport "Ferret Legging":
***
Spectators stuff their pant legs inside their socks and women pull
their skirts tight around their legs so they won't become part of the
game. When the time comes for the game, tables are moved back and
everyone who wants to enter puts a ten pound note on the bar. Then
they get into a huddle like a football team. When everyone is ready,
they dump their ferrets down their pants and hang on to one another.
Within seconds the chase is on with ferrets racing up one pant leg,
over the top and down the other, not caring whose pants they are in
nor whether their needle sharp claws are attacking fabric or bare
skin. The attrition of players is rather rapid as they dance out of
the ring trying to shake ferrets out of their pants. The last man with
ferrets in his pants wins. Ferrets are returned to their cages while
the winner picks up the money and buys drinks for the house. It's a
lot more fun to watch than a chug-a-lug contest.
***
"Bob Korves" bkorves@winfirstDECIMALcom wrote in message ...
We had a pilot at Soar Truckee who was flying a Diamant on a 500K out and
return badge flight. After takeoff he felt something crawling up his pant
leg. After he got up well into oxygen altitudes, the crawling up his leg
subsided, but continued again each time he got lower. Needless to say, he
tried to stay as high as he could! He was able to complete the flight, but
at the end of the landing rollout he jumped from the cockpit and pulled down
his pants. A chipmunk ran off into the bushes. He deserved the badge...
-Bob Korves
"Mike Lindsay" wrote in message
news
In article , Chip
Bearden writes
Not just rodents. Many years ago in a 1-26 contest in the U.S., one
poor pilot flew several days barely able to tolerate the smell from a
dead bird somewhere in one wing. I'm not sure how he removed it but I
seem to recall that part of the solution (no pun intended) was to
partially fill the wing with water from the root rib, slosh it around,
then stand the wing up on the tip of the spar and pour it out.
Chip Bearden
ASW 24 "JB"e
I heard a story about someone who felt a tickling sensation on his right
knee at the top of a thermal.
Looking down, he saw a mouse sitting on his knee.
--
Mike Lindsay