Let'sgoflying!
Touchdown! Greaser!
phew, you boys likes your wind in Denver. That was a handful.
I'm south of Boulder so we're getting Boulder farts!
At least I'm in good company here. I just registered for this forum after scrubbing my planned flight for wind, for the third time in as many weeks.
I went out to KBJC with plans of taking the wife up in a rental C152 today. The winds were a mere 5 knots as I walked into the FBO, but quickly gusted up before I could even head out to the ramp for a preflight. Oh well, I figured it might quickly pass, so I stick the lady in the plane and start doing my dance just in case things calm down. As I'm doing my preflight I see another plane from the FBO taxiing out for takeoff… they returned about 10 minutes later, reporting that the tower was reporting gusts above 40 knots when they were ready for takeoff.
I called the AWOS number again to verify what I already could feel on my face: wind was 270 @ 33, gusts to 44. Not terribly far off of runway 30R, but 44 knots didn't sound fun in a 152.
First post....
Welcome to POA...
Thanks! I wasn't sure if there was a first post thread or not, but I immediately gravitated to the Denver wind thread and figured I'd just use it as a place to introduce myself.
At least I'm in good company here. I just registered for this forum after scrubbing my planned flight for wind, for the third time in as many weeks.
I went out to KBJC with plans of taking the wife up in a rental C152 today. The winds were a mere 5 knots as I walked into the FBO, but quickly gusted up before I could even head out to the ramp for a preflight. Oh well, I figured it might quickly pass, so I stick the lady in the plane and start doing my dance just in case things calm down. As I'm doing my preflight I see another plane from the FBO taxiing out for takeoff… they returned about 10 minutes later, reporting that the tower was reporting gusts above 40 knots when they were ready for takeoff.
I called the AWOS number again to verify what I already could feel on my face: wind was 270 @ 33, gusts to 44. Not terribly far off of runway 30R, but 44 knots didn't sound fun in a 152.
You know you're in trouble when the winds at DIA are worse than on Monarch Pass!
Hi Kevin, you're now on our CO-POA list.
No doubt! It has been crazy out here for a few days now. Curiously, we left KBJC after abandoning our plans for flying today, and then went immediately to the barn where we board our horse. That barn is located just south of Standley Lake, still well within the Class D for KBJC. But, there at the barn it was as close to calm as you could hope for (3-5mph breeze at best). I was curious, so I called the AWOS number again and noted that it was still blowing like crazy up at the airport. I swear they built that airport as a natural wind tunnel!
Anyway, thanks for adding me to the list!
Isn't it nice they also built the entire city downwind of a nuclear weapon trigger plant that regularly got rid of things by sticking them in incinerators? Right down the road from BJC... Hehehe.
But, there at the barn it was as close to calm as you could hope for (3-5mph breeze at best). I was curious, so I called the AWOS number again and noted that it was still blowing like crazy up at the airport. I swear they built that airport as a natural wind tunnel!
And the landowners all around the plant were compensated for their loss of value and next thing you know, McMansions all around.
If you are getting sick, you must be downwind of the Coors brewery....I'm getting sick of it. It feels like Wyoming down here! (Sorry Ben)
I'm getting sick of it. It feels like Wyoming down here! (Sorry Ben)
I actually had a computer terminal (Model 37 ASR) that had a Rocky Flats property tag on it.
I learned to fly at BJC. 20G33 was good student solo weather. Other than that except for the transient thunderstorm the weather was perfect. You could see forever and you could fly around those little thunderstorms.
My wife learned to fly at IAD. Winds are usually fairly mild, but 5 miles in haze is the standard summer visibility.
For a long time, if it was windy I'd fly, if it was hazy she would. That worked until I got my instrument rating. Then she decided if the weather was nice it should be her turn as I'd get to fly if it was bad.
I took a ground tour of Rocky Flats in order for them to show me the buildings they didn't want me crashing into while I was doing aerial survey. It was required with the contract. This was well before 9/11. Probably around 1990.
I was with Oracle on contract at Rocky Flats from 90-95ish ... luckily most of the time was off-site. Did end up donating an Oracle laptop to them when it was carried into one of those "nothing leaves this building" locations.
The last year on-site was in a couple of buildings that had yellow caution tape on all the stairwells, walls, etc ... gives one a creepy feeling ... "trust us! It's safe!"