On a Wing and a Prayer : A Baptist Minister Sets Sail on the Monster Thermals Above Owens Valley
- Share via
“I’d just launched from Paiute, a mountain at the north end of the Owens Valley. My instruments were singing a symphony in my ears; the earth began to fall away. My acuity was rising as rapidly as the hang glider. The altimeter read 10,000 feet. In moments, it passed 12,000. I was in a monster thermal, the kind I’d only read and heard about.
My thoughts spun back to 1981. I was leading a tour through the Swiss Alps. We were enjoying lunch at a sidewalk cafe in Liechtenstein and were admiring the magnificent peaks when we noticed, flying high above, a few strange birdlike creatures. But they didn’t fly like ordinary birds; they flew like the hawks and eagles I had seen in North America. They were so graceful, and the multicolored wings that carried them along invisible sky lanes were overwhelming. I was mesmerized. I promised that when I returned to the States, I would find a hang-gliding school and learn to fly.
I found Windsports, a hang-gliding school in Van Nuys. When I visited the shop, my first question was: ‘Is this sport too young for me?’ At 46, I thought that was a reasonable question. ‘Too young?’ replied the owner, a man 15 years my junior. ‘Youth is an attitude.’
I filled out a questionnaire, answering the usual questions about age, address and employment. The owner glanced at the completed form and looked up. ‘Are you kidding? I don’t think we’ve ever had one of you before.’
‘One of what?’ I asked.
‘A clergyman. I guess you won’t have any problem with the faith thing. Let’s see if you can fly.’
Now I was remembering all the beginner take-offs and landings at the beach, the 100-plus launches off the secondary hill at Simi Valley, the first 2,400-foot high-altitude flight at Kagel Mountain in Sylmar. Was it all worth it?
The altimeter had passed 14,000 feet and I was still climbing. Moments later I was above Black Mountain, facing an eight-mile cut across Westgard Pass. Could I make the gap? I didn’t know; I’d never done this. And so, speaking to my kite as I would to a friend, I said, ‘All right, babe, let’s go.’
But it didn’t respond. I started to sink, fast. ‘Hey, what’s the matter with this thing?’ I shouted. ‘I’m falling!’ If I didn’t gain altitude soon, not only would my first flight come to an abrupt halt, but I’d be in for a 15-mile hike to the nearest road. For 10 minutes I flew at 100 feet, scratching for any lift I could find, all the time preparing to land. And then it happened--a giant air thermal caught my sail and I soared up to 17,000 feet. I was now flying south once again, in a straight line across the Inyo Whites, a mountain range to the east of the Sierra Nevada. From the top of the world I could see Death Valley to the left, and to the right was Owens Valley, with its historic towns--Bishop, Big Pine and Independence.
Suddenly I spotted a sail-plane pilot coming directly at me. We passed each other 200 feet apart; he was a blur, I was euphoric. I was circling now at 16,500 feet, directly east of Lone Pine, without the benefit of a CB radio. I had to decide: Should I try for a 100-plus-mile flight and land in the middle of the desert? Or should I be cautious, head for the Lone Pine Airport and delight in a first cross-country flight of 72 miles? I chose Lone Pine. I landed with ease and lay in the grass beside my beautiful flying machine. I remembered the great birds I had shared flight with moments before, and then I recalled the promise of the Prophet: ‘But they who wait upon the Lord shall renew their strength, and they shall mount up with wings like eagles.’ ”
PRODUCED BY LINDEN GROSS
More to Read
Sign up for The Wild
We’ll help you find the best places to hike, bike and run, as well as the perfect silent spots for meditation and yoga.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.