Gliders battle thunderstorms and wildfire smoke at women's world championship | Emma John
Briefly

Anne Soltow led much of a Women's World Gliding Championships race but ran out of altitude and landed in a farmer's field a kilometre from the finish. Her single-seater sailplane features a long fuselage, canopy and 15-metre wings; engineless gliders rely on thermals to stay aloft. Landing out is common when pilots fail to find upward-spiralling thermals across long courses. The event in the Czech Republic includes 17 countries with some nations fielding a single pilot. Few women compete in open world gliding, prompting a women-only championship since 1979. Gliding requires a solo licence and is highly weather- and time-dependent, with flights lasting up to eight hours.
Anne Soltow's glider was leading the field all day. Now it is in an actual field and a kilometre short of the finish. The single-seater sailplane looks like a giant alien bug: long slender fuselage, a canopy encasing the cockpit like a single eye, epic wings, 15 metres tip to tip. They were all that was keeping Soltow's engineless aircraft in the sky until 10 minutes ago.
The pilot is furious with herself. She had been in the air for nearly four hours and in first place before running out of altitude on the final run back to the airfield. Landing out is common in gliding, where testing courses are spread across hundreds of kilometres (think orienteering in the sky). You stay airborne by climbing naturally occurring, upward-spiralling cylinders of warm air known as thermals. Fail to find these and the ground comes to meet you
Read at www.theguardian.com
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