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Date: 03 décembre 1997 De: Louis Bastarache (234) Sujet: New member |
From: L-Soft list server at U. Laval (1.8c)
Sent: Tuesday, December 02, 1997 11:47 PM
To: Louis Bastarache
Subject: Output of your job "basl"
Martine Coulombe <fetevolib@QUEBECTEL.COM> has been added to the VOL-LIBRE
list. Notification has been sent to fetevolib@QUEBECTEL.COM.
Date: 03 décembre 1997 De: Patrick Golliot (24) Sujet: Bienvenue à martine |
que
du parapatente, elle a de l'énergie à revendre.
Patrick Golliot
56, rue Louis Ouellet
Mont-Saint-Pierre, Québec
G0E 1V0
E-mail : carefour@quebectel.com
Internet : www.carrefouraventure.com
Téléphone: 418-797-5033
Date: 03 décembre 1997 De: Louis Bastarache (234) Sujet: Bienvenue a martine |
> Bienvenue a Martine dans le groupe de discussion, meme si elle ne fait =
que
> du parapatente, elle a de l'energie à revendre.
Energie a revendre??? Combien pour profiter de son energie ;)
Louis Bastarache
Concierge opportuniste
Date: 03 décembre 1997 De: Louis Bastarache (234) Sujet: My crazy dream |
From: Brown, Russ
Sent: Wednesday, December 03, 1997 5:45 AM
To: hg list
Subject: My crazy dream
I went to sleep last night in my usual way, imagining I was circling in lift.
Smooth, wide lift.. higher,... higher.....z zzzzZZzZZZZZZZZZZZZ
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
I pulled up to the Elsinore LZ and noticed something was different. There's a
comfy clubhouse (!) in the LZ equipped with an actual BATHROOM! Also, the
license plate tags on all the vehicles say "04".... Hmmmm.
Just then, Marc Whisman greeted me. He was wearing a USHGA cap and matching
t-shirt.
"Hey, Russ! I haven't seen you in a while! Good news! This is now a
USHGA-regulated site! Let me show you around..."
He pointed east to the Ortega Oaks Market where we buy our beer.
"That's now the Exxtacy factory. Turns out that a couple of years ago the
kickbacks to the Russian mafia got to be too much, so they left the Ukraine and
bought our LZ! I would say they saved the site, but it turned out not to matter
much since Bill Gates' tragic death last year. You probably heard that he left
his entire estate to the Koscis Site Fund."
"You don't say..." I mumbled.
"Let's get you set up with the latest in instrumentation," he said, handing me
what looked like a half-size Palm Pilot computer. "Let's just enter your USHGA
number here. There. Listen, they PAY YOU a minimum of 5 bucks a flight to fly
with this on your basetube!"
I weighed it in my hand. "You don't say..." I mumbled.
After launching I pressed the terminal's "on" button. A window popped up on the
full-color active matrix screen: "Press <Enter> for first-time instructions,
else <backspace>"
"I don't need no stinkin' instructions," I thought. But as I went for the
backspace key I was bumped by a bubble and accidentally hit Enter. "Doh!"
The instructions scrolled up.
"Welcome, Russ Brown, to the Gates Foundation's Elsinore Micrometeorology
Survey. Although no known technology can yet see thermals, the scientists here
at the Gates Foundation have designed this device to mark and catalog in
real-time any lift that you find. The database created from a multitude of
these terminals, coupled with data from a grid of over 5,000 windtalkers will
provide a valuable endowment of knowledge to future generations of hang glider
pilots. Thank you for participating as one of our micrometeorological
surveyors."
It continued:
"This is a Differential GPS radio tracking device accurate to within 2 cm. Your
mission is simply to find thermals - the terminal will automatically send your
flight data to our mainframe's database. By flying with this unit, $5.00 will
be deposited in your personal bank account. In addition, every thermal you find
will be rewarded with cash based inversely on how many other pilots have found
that same thermal.
"For example, the Elsinore house thermals are presently worth $.0001. Certain
thermals 2 miles across the lake are presently worth from $2.00 to $6.00. The
best thermal found within the last 3 months and within 50 miles of launch was a
$2000.00 beauty caught just ahead of the shear in a canyon North of Anza Valley.
Truly a trophy thermal."
"ARRRRRGHHHH!" I screamed. "Shit! I almost flew into that guy! I better get
my nose out of this monitor and fly! Say... I know a spot where I'll bet no one
has been. Man, I could make some real dough today with a little luck..."
It began turning into a near-epic day. One pilot is reporting getting to 8,500
MSL and heading east. I rush to catch up. My goal is to work my way 40 miles
east to a spot on Southern California's largest mountain, San Gorgornio, where I
think I can find a thermal worth 2 thousand bucks, easy. Maybe 3!!
I snag thermal after thermal over the flats. I see about 10 other guys racing
around. Wow! I just hooked one over Perris worth $4.50 and my bank account is
now up to $19.80! This is like stealing!!
An hour later I'd squeaked over the Lamb Canyon badlands and was entering prime
thermal hunting grounds. San Gorgornio was looming ahead, still capped by snow,
and protected by 2 foothill ranges. I aggressively flew into the desolate grasp
of the first range and was greeted by the sweet sound of my cash register, ah, I
mean my vario. A $26.00 thermal, not bad! But I was after bigger game.
Alone now, I pushed ever deeper into the mountains. There was no way I could
glide out now, I was committed. $150.00, $225.00, the obvious spine thermals
must have been worked a few times before. I needed to glide in deeper. My
drift clued me that there was a chance I could find a lee side thermal off a
granite face inside a box canyon I spotted just a mile deeper in.
A $340.00 thermal allowed me the altitude to glide over a lone windtalker on the
ridgeline and into a tree-studded canyon. A little voice in the back of my head
was yelling at me but I knew the big one was now within reach. Closer, closer,
I was now nearing the granite face. The air was getting turbulent. It better
be here... BOOM!! A 200 fpm lifesaver!! I looked down at my terminal and
read... $10,000.00!!!! I now had $10,893.00!!!
"YEEEHAAA!! I'm rich! Now I can buy a new Exxtacy!" I screamed. Climbing back
over the ridgetop, I slipped out of the lift and back to safety of the valley.
Just then I realized I had made a mistake in my excitement. I HAD ANOTHER RANGE
TO CROSS. I should have worked that lift longer... but now I can't get back!
No problem, I'll go back to the thermal I worked in this canyon just a half hour
ago. But something was wrong. The wind had changed and the thermal wasn't
there now!! I was getting lower, lower. I've never had to make a tree
landing... shit!! I need lift!!
Something flashed on the terminal which caught my eye: "Based on windtalker and
temperature data, there is a 95 percent probability that thermal number 4510
will be working. It is within your glide range. Cost to you: $3000.00. Press
<Enter> to accept."
"What??!! This thing is now CHARGING ME?!!" I said, "I'll be darned if I'm
going to give up a brand new super-rigid wing just to find a thermal!!"
I refused with 'backspace' as I zoomed over to a circling bird. "C'mon baby!!
This is my last hope!!" The damned hawk started flapping just as I got close
and now I was really sweating bullets. There was nowhere to go and I was more
than desperate.
The display flashed: "Thermal 4510 within your glide range. Cost to you:
$11,000.00"!! With no other alternative, I pressed 'Enter' and arrows on the
monitor immediately directed me to thermal 4510. Instantly my panic subsided
and I worked the 50 fpm lift to the top, my concentration so intense that I
momentarily forgot about my lost money, and my vanished dream of a new glider.
45 miles away, back at the clubhouse in the LZ, the laughter was subsiding as
the pilots who landed in the regular LZ, merrily drinking beer, turned away from
the big screen map of glider icons. The last XC pilot had safely landed for the
day, another newbie that had just learned an old lesson: he may occasionally
throw you a bone, but the little guy NEVER wins against Bill Gates.
Russ Brown
Date: 03 décembre 1997 De: wilsonbe (10) Sujet: Bienvenue_à_martine (2) |
De : Patrick Golliot <carefour@GLOBETROTTER.QC.CA>
À : VOL-LIBRE@LISTES.ULAVAL.CA <VOL-LIBRE@LISTES.ULAVAL.CA>
Date : 3 décembre, 1997 12:55
Objet : Bienvenue à Martine
>Bienvenue à Martine dans le groupe de discussion, même si elle ne fait que
>du parapatente, elle a de l'énergie à revendre.
>Patrick Golliot
>56, rue Louis Ouellet
>Mont-Saint-Pierre, Québec
>G0E 1V0
Je me joint à Patrick et les autres pour souhaiter la bienvenue à Martine.
Attention la gang vous aller être envahie par les USES ( gens de
Mont-St-Pierre )
Wilson Bernatchez
wilsonbe@globetrotter.qc.ca
>E-mail : carefour@quebectel.com
>Internet : www.carrefouraventure.com
>Téléphone: 418-797-5033
>
Date: 03 décembre 1997 De: Richard Noel (34) Sujet: Bienvenue_à_martine (2) |
> =
> -----Message d'origine-----
> De : Patrick Golliot <carefour@GLOBETROTTER.QC.CA>
> À : VOL-LIBRE@LISTES.ULAVAL.CA <VOL-LIBRE@LISTES.ULAVAL.CA>
> Date : 3 décembre, 1997 12:55
> Objet : Bienvenue à Martine
> =
> >Bienvenue à Martine dans le groupe de discussion, même si elle ne fa=
it que
> >du parapatente, elle a de l'énergie à revendre.
> >Patrick Golliot
> >56, rue Louis Ouellet
> >Mont-Saint-Pierre, Québec
> >G0E 1V0
> =
> Je me joint à Patrick et les autres pour souhaiter la bienvenue à Mar=
tine.
> Attention la gang vous aller être envahie par les USES ( gens de
> Mont-St-Pierre )
> =
> Wilson Bernatchez
> wilsonbe@globetrotter.qc.ca
> =
> >E-mail : carefour@quebectel.com
> >Internet : www.carrefouraventure.com
> >Téléphone: 418-797-5033
> >
Mais qui est cette célèbre Martine ??? Elle semble très populaire.
Dick
Date: 03 décembre 1997 De: Marco Levasseur (143) Sujet: Encore martine et martin... |
Et bien oui...bienvenue
Et à Martin aussi, qui est à la même adresse.
Toute une réception à nos 2 organisateurs de la dernières Fête du vol libre.
Bienvenue dans notre liste à ceux qui nous recoivent si bien à Mont
St-Pierre
Bye
Marco
Allez dériver dans le plus sérieux des sites de vol libre Québécois sur le
WWW.
http://geocities.datacellar.net/Pipeline/Ramp/9870/flaq.htm
nuage@minfo.net
418-338-6531