Final report XC-expedition Sertão
The Paragliding Swissleague supports elite-level competitions in Hike & Fly, Acro, and Race-to-Goal. But there is one more discipline where no organized competitions exist: XC. The Swiss XC League does not train for competitions but is pursuing a dream—flying 600 kilometers.
Since 2018, the XC League has made several trips to Caicó in the Sertão. Supported by the professional crew of FlyWithAndy, a dozen pilots have managed to fly more than 500 km, even 550 km, but never 600. The only one who has ever surpassed the 600 km mark is Sebastien Kayrouz in Texas in 2021.
One big problem seems to be the Plateau towards the end of the flight, as it often delivers weaker thermals. One approach to overcoming this problem would be a different takeoff, for example Tacima, where the world’s second-longest flights were made by a group of Brazilian pilots in 2019. However, the terrain behind Tacima is known for being tricky, so this year we made an effort to find a different takeoff.
This year’s crew consisted of: Sebastian Benz, Jérôme Kägi, Noah Kiener, Patrick Meyer, Christoph Richert, Pit Vollenweider, and Stephanie Westerhuis. Our idea was to stay on the well-established Caicó route but take off further upwind. In our first week, we made a trip towards Soledade, where we spent a day scouting possible launches that we had previously identified using satellite images. In the end, we found one field of about 700 m length with only low vegetation, close to Olivedos. We managed to fly from there, but it turned out tricky: as the terrain is higher than in Caicó while the cloud base is similarly low, we did not have much altitude to work with in the morning. Furthermore, the first 20 km feature many landing options, but afterwards the terrain is hilly and full of jurema. And if you make it past this region, the ridge of Parelhas follows, which is also not easy to overfly early in the morning. Hence, we let go of this idea and returned to Caicó.
We had many days with few clouds and early bomb-outs. Then came the third-to-last day of our trip: Sebi and Paddy made the flights of their lives, flying 588 and 592 km! Find their flights and reports below. The key was the exceptionally high cloud base at the end of the flight, which made crossing the Plateau easy. Sebi did not fly particularly fast, but by using the full day, he managed 11.5 hours in the air. Paddy flew faster but landed a bit earlier. We are now convinced that flying 600 kilometers—and maybe even breaking the current Free Flight World Record in the Sertão—is possible when flying long and fast!
Huge thanks to FlyWithAndy who was a visionary to start towing in Caicó many years ago, has the longest experience in towing safely and high and has always supported us in pursuing this dream together. Let's keep on dreaming!
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