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Rocky Mountain flying

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This far south I haven't seen a Standing Lenticular for a long time. But last time I was a-climbing in Northern NM, one formed on top of us and got nasty. After we summited and descended, there were Lenticulars along the East side of every mountain to the north....

One more reason to take the southern route!

One other bit of advice I'd give: don't go to the big international airports. What you want is an airport with a healthy contingent of airport bums who have flown the local area quite a while. There's a reason pilots in the mountains can name every pass, river, and mountain in a fifty mile radius--it matters. This doesn't mean you need to shoehorn your airplane into a 2400' strip or anything, just try to avoid anywhere that doesn't seem like a place with coffee in the pot and a bunch of pilots telling lies in the lobby.

Oh yeah, you hear about the good updrafts for gliders? That air has to come down someplace. Half goes up, half goes down. Make sure you don't end up where it goes down, and always give yourself a healthy ability to turn around out of the going down part.

Dan
 
wow, good thread.... I lost a 1000 feet the other day in a downdraft and thought that was bad...
 
I'd say it depends on your experience.

I have tons of hours in the area between BOI and LAS via OGD, SLC, PVU, CDC and SGU. This is basically a North South route along the mountains. I've been on lots of XC and sent lots of students in these areas at all times of the year. Just don't go East over the Wasatch without doing some planning ahead.

it's not that bad, though. You can stick to airways and still be safe while taking in some awesome scenery.

have fun!
 

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