Gang -
On Friday, Rodney and I went down to Laurinburg to meet with site manager Randy Hoffman. He took us to our new area of the site to show us around. We're now adjacent to the Golden Knights drop zone, which most of you should recognize as the area with the shelter close by, close to where you first enter the paved part of the site.
Before anyone asks: No, I don't yet know for certain what parts of this pavement we're going to set up courses on. Rodney and I have some ideas, but nothing definite yet.
So please be patient with us as we learn how to best use this new area. The below descriptions and photos are meant to show the basic lay of the land, and the condition of the pavement. This is not intended to describe the layout of a course
Our area is shaped more or less like a figure eight, fatter at the top of it where the main runway is. The photos below start at the corner where the shelter is. This is more or less how it goes, walking clockwise:
1-) Start, at the shelter
2-) From there, the pavement takes a 70 degree or so right.
3-) As you drive further down, you'll pass the taxiway on your right hand side, while making a gentle bend to the left.
4-) After this it's a right hand turn onto the main runway.
5-) Down the runway and right onto another crossover
6-) Crossover T's at the same taxiway mentioned in item 3; we'll turn right, and eventually end up back at item 3
I took pictures, so here they are. You can ignore the debris that was hidden behind the lens of my camera - it was a thread from something, probably my camera bag.
Here is the Golden Knights' crest, which is adjacent to the shelter. Let me be perfectly clear. DO NOT TOUCH THIS. At all. With anything. Mr. Hoffman made it very clear to Rodney and I that this area is considered sacred ground; I didn't ask why, and it doesn't matter. Just stay off of it. No adults, kids, cars, dogs, bicycles, anything.
Here's the Golden Knights shelter, which I'm pleased to report we can use.
The shelter is now to our right, barely out of frame. At the far end of this photo, in the distance, you can see the 70 degree right hand bend the pavement takes, which I described in item 2 of the above list.
Better view of the right hand bend. To the right, we can see that the pavement is pretty broken up, so we'll be driving people around this.
Here, we've exited the right hand bend. The pavement here is quite good. That thing at the near right is a little stub, like a miniature cul-de-sac.
A little further down now, with the cul-de-sac thing directly to the right, and the shallow left hand bend just ahead of us. You can also see a road that goes 90 degrees to the right, at the exact point of the left hand bend; that's the taxiway.
We're approaching the main runway here. The right half of the road we're standing on isn't usable. The left hand side is; however, we will need to monitor its wear closely, and possibly patch it up in the future.
Right hander onto the main runway. Pavement is in pretty good shape here, plenty of possibilities:
Can't go super far to the left entering the runway, as some of the pavement is broken up. Don't be deceived by this photo, though, there's plenty of room for a nice sweeper here. We've already done it this way once before.
(Continued, next post)