Volcano erupts in Iceland

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Steve Smith

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also if we spend to long outside of Great Britain the Government blows up our heads.

Also British people need to get back to Britain as quickly as possible as the tea is not the same in the rest of Europe and the personal supplies they took with them will be running out soon.


Steve.
 

Ian Grant

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Don't forget the people who've been visiting the UK and other restricted areas in Europe who need to fly home to the US, Far East, Australia etc.

It's simply not the same as the rest of Europe because the UK is an Island.

Ian
 

paul_c5x4

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[What I really don't understand is that a few extra departures, possibly over night, of all the ferries can't solve this, and they would need an aircraft carrier to do the job.

There is a certain irony in laying on an aircraft carrier to rescue stranded travellers...
 

Thingy

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Also British people need to get back to Britain as quickly as possible as the tea is not the same in the rest of Europe and the personal supplies they took with them will be running out soon.


Steve.

OMG! I fancy been stranded in Spitsbergen, but what would I do when my Fortnums tea supply ran out. With no flights I wouldn't be able to have it flown out specially! :sad:

[The other} Steve :D
 

Q.G.

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Holy Smoke, Batman! What are all those streaks across the sky i see today?!

They are con trails, produced by airliners flying overhead, Robin.
And don't use Smoke's name in vain!

Have you heard the news? Flying again. Since yesterday evening.
 

marco.taje

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Whew! Wanted to let you guys know -Q.G., you were really worried about me, weren't you?- that I managed to fly across Europe today, first time after the "volcano effect", and with both engines running and dumping dirt trails!!

;-)
:-D
 

sanking

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Whew! Wanted to let you guys know -Q.G., you were really worried about me, weren't you?- that I managed to fly across Europe today, first time after the "volcano effect", and with both engines running and dumping dirt trails!!

;-)
:-D

Good news for me. I am about to leave for Madrid, with final destination La Coruña in northwestern Spain. I was not concerned about Madrid as it has been open to flights from the US, but a few northern airports in Spain had some flights cancelled due to the volcanic ash. Hopefully they will all be open tomorrow morning when I am ready to take the connecting flight.

Sandy King
 

Sirius Glass

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Why, even gliders are grounded! (And you know how high they go, and how many engines they have that could fail.)

Last time I checked, gliders need tow planes. Do you know another way that I do not know? :wink:

Steve
 
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The saga continued. Here in Australia, Qantas has maintained that it will not be flying out of the UK or Europe today (Wednesday), despite UK and Europe airports re-opening, the reason given that it's a long haul flight and it needs to guarantee departures, which it can't do due to "conflicting, puzzling reports". I'm wondering how the mail gets through on the UK-Australia/Europe-Australia run? Maybe it hitches a ride on the HMS Ark Royal — how snazzy... :tongue:
 

resummerfield

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Last time I checked, gliders need tow planes. Do you know another way that I do not know? :wink:

Steve
As opposed to the US, where most gliders are launched by an aero tow, in Europe most gliders are launched by large winches on the ground.
 

Q.G.

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Last time I checked, gliders need tow planes. Do you know another way that I do not know? :wink:

Yes, i do. :smile:

A winch.
A long cable, stretching from one end of the strip to the other, hooked to the glider. A winch that starts reeling in that cable, towing the glider along the strip at speed.
You'll be amazed how quick they get up in the air that way. Very steep too.
They unclip the cable when level, and a small parachute attached to it makes it fall down a bit gentler as it otherwise would.

Using a motor plane to pull them up requires somewhat of a 'grown-up' airfield, with all bells and whistles. The local club can't afford to run such a thing. They can't afford a tow plane either, and have been winching gliders up since the 1930s.

They can't get up very high, need to gain altitude by doing what the sport entails: find and use thermals.
And that cable has to be towed back to where the planes are waiting to go up after every launch.
But it works fine.

Yet, they were grounded...


P.S.
Obvious that i didn't read on and see resummerfield's answer, isn't it? :wink:
Sorry for the redundancy.
 
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