Re: [RCSE] Getting Bombed at MOSS Field

2006-10-09 Thread Jeff Steifel
Same in Reading, PA yesterday at the ESL end of season. Some of the 
spiders were sizable, most were not seen, just the spider web.



Ben Wilson wrote:

Hi Tom --

Same thing in Louisville, KY today!  President Ed was up in Muncie and 
said he had never seen so many.  I guess they all got word via the PSE 
(Parachute Spider Exchange) that it was lift-off day :)


Aside from the air being thick with spiders, they did provide as handy 
thermal detectors.


Tom Nagel wrote:
It was a beautiful early October day at MOSS field, the little 
berry patch out northeast of Columbus that our new member Gil Perez 
calls The Tree Farm
 
We had clear blue skies, light winds, lgreat thermal lift,  a 
handful of club members, a few visitors to the field and spiders.  
Lots and lots of SPIDERS!
 
I think these things are called parachute spiders.   They sit in 
the bushes and tree tops and spin out long lengths of spider silk, 
and when a thermal comes through they go sailing off across the 
sky.   Our planes were coming back with hundreds of strands of spider 
silk (and presumably some pretty pissed of spiders) draped across the 
wings.
 
 
Tom H. Nagel

Judicatum Procurator Recuperatio
 
   


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--
Jeff Steifel

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[RCSE] Getting Bombed at MOSS Field

2006-10-08 Thread Tom Nagel



 It was a beautiful early October 
day at MOSS field, the little berry patch out northeast of Columbus that our new 
member Gil Perez calls "The Tree Farm"

 We had clear blue skies, light 
winds, lgreat thermal lift, a handful of club members, a few visitors to 
the field and spiders. Lots and lots of SPIDERS!

 I think these things are called 
parachute spiders. They sit in the bushes and tree tops and spin out 
long lengths of spider silk, and when a thermal comes through they go sailing 
off across the sky. Our planes were coming back with hundreds of 
strands of spider silk (and presumably some pretty pissed of spiders) draped 
across the wings.

 One of the families that 
strolled by on their way to hike down by the lake had two sons; so we broke out 
the Air Hogs and did some recruiting. Dad and the older boy both flew air 
hogs successfully and I have a feeling we may see them again.

 And we got bombed. I 
have been wanting to experiment with "bomb drop" as an event for our electric 
flying. I had made up some fiber board disks about 2 1/2" in diameter, 
painted white with a big red X and a hole drilled in the midde. We 
strapped light dowel rodsto the fuselage of some planes just aft of 
the wings (vertically, like little antennae) and dropped a bomb disk onto the 
dowel.

 The idea was to fly over the 
target, loop or roll or whatever, and let the disk fall off the dowel onto the 
target.
 The best Bill Hoelcher or I 
could do was about 25 yards from the target. I am sure Gordy will have 
plenty advice for us about getting bombed. Practice practice 
practice. 

 I hope you all had a good 
afternoon, too.

Tom H. NagelJudicatum Procurator 
Recuperatio

 


Re: [RCSE] Getting Bombed at MOSS Field

2006-10-08 Thread David Wrinkle

Tom

Those are some spiders, we had the same phenom at Muncie today

Cheers

On 10/8/06, Tom Nagel [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:



It was a beautiful early October day at MOSS field, the little berry
patch out northeast of Columbus that our new member Gil Perez calls The
Tree Farm

We had clear blue skies, light winds, lgreat thermal lift,  a handful of
club members, a few visitors to the field and spiders.  Lots and lots of
SPIDERS!

I think these things are called parachute spiders.   They sit in the
bushes and tree tops and spin out long lengths of spider silk, and when a
thermal comes through they go sailing off across the sky.   Our planes were
coming back with hundreds of strands of spider silk (and presumably some
pretty pissed of spiders) draped across the wings.

One of the families that strolled by on their way to hike down by the
lake had two sons; so we broke out the Air Hogs and did some recruiting.
Dad and the older boy both flew air hogs successfully and I have a feeling
we may see them again.

And we got bombed.   I have been wanting to experiment with bomb drop
as an event for our electric flying.  I had made up some fiber board disks
about 2 1/2 in diameter, painted white with a big red X and a hole drilled
in the midde.   We strapped light dowel rods  to the fuselage of some planes
just aft of the wings (vertically, like little antennae) and dropped a bomb
disk onto the dowel.

The idea was to fly over the target, loop or roll or whatever, and let
the disk fall off the dowel onto the target.
The best Bill Hoelcher or I could do was about 25 yards from the target.
 I am sure Gordy will have plenty advice for us about getting bombed.
Practice practice practice.

I hope you all had a good afternoon, too.

Tom H. Nagel
Judicatum Procurator Recuperatio



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Re: [RCSE] Getting Bombed at MOSS Field

2006-10-08 Thread Ben Wilson

Hi Tom --

Same thing in Louisville, KY today!  President Ed was up in Muncie and 
said he had never seen so many.  I guess they all got word via the PSE 
(Parachute Spider Exchange) that it was lift-off day :)


Aside from the air being thick with spiders, they did provide as handy 
thermal detectors.


Tom Nagel wrote:
It was a beautiful early October day at MOSS field, the little 
berry patch out northeast of Columbus that our new member Gil Perez 
calls The Tree Farm
 
We had clear blue skies, light winds, lgreat thermal lift,  a 
handful of club members, a few visitors to the field and spiders.  
Lots and lots of SPIDERS!
 
I think these things are called parachute spiders.   They sit in 
the bushes and tree tops and spin out long lengths of spider silk, and 
when a thermal comes through they go sailing off across the sky.   Our 
planes were coming back with hundreds of strands of spider silk (and 
presumably some pretty pissed of spiders) draped across the wings.
 
 
Tom H. Nagel

Judicatum Procurator Recuperatio
 
   


RCSE-List facilities provided by Model Airplane News.  Send subscribe and 
unsubscribe requests to [EMAIL PROTECTED]  Please note that subscribe and unsubscribe 
messages must be sent in text only format with MIME turned off.  Email sent from web based email 
such as Hotmail and AOL are generally NOT in text format