On a wing and a prayer : a baptist minister sets sail on the monster thermals above owens valley

On a wing and a prayer : a baptist minister sets sail on the monster thermals above owens valley

Play all audios:

Loading...

<i> Dan G. Myers is senior minister at Lancaster's First Baptist Church</i> “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