The data provided on this site is for informational and planning purposes only.
Absolutely no accuracy or completeness guarantee is implied or intended. All information on this website is for informational purpose only and must not be used and trusted 'as is'. Please understand that it may be outdated, unclear, or simply wrong !
We hope you are aware that you can not trust anything you read on the internet: the website owner can not be held responsible for any decision taken on the basis of the information presented here : please always consider getting fresh and official legal information from the flying sites local people, clubs and/or authorities and consider the weather carefully before you go fly !
Plus, we use as little cookies as possible, we assume you're ok with it if you continue using the website. Absolutely nothing is done with the data you provide.
This beeing said, fly happy and safe ! ;)
A work in progress to make a simple map based collaborative database of paragliding sites, clubs and pros worldwide.
The data provided on this site is for informational and planning purposes only.
Absolutely no accuracy or completeness guarantee is implied or intended. All information on this website is for informational purpose only and must not be used and trusted 'as is'. Please understand that it may be outdated, unclear, or simply wrong !
We hope you are aware that you can not trust anything you read on the internet: the website owner can not be held responsible for any decision taken on the basis of the information presented here : please always consider getting fresh and official legal information from the flying sites local people, clubs and/or authorities and consider the weather carefully before you go fly !
This beeing said, fly happy and safe ! ;)
This work and your contributions are licensed under Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported License.
Starting December 10th of 2024, new contributions will also be added in a separate database licenced under ODbL 1.0.
Website built with Leaflet, from a bootleaf basis.
A big thank you to the "Ducks Parapente" pg club in Grenoble - fr, for offering hosting to the project.
A big thank you also to paraglidingforum.com for having kindly offered pgearth a free hosting for over a decade ! Bless you, guys !
And of course a big thank you to all contributors !! :)
We care about your privacy : our code is google tools and facebook buttons free so no-one at gafam will ever track you here !
Don't thank us, it's our pleasure !
This beeing said, we tried our best, but they must know you're here anyway... ;)
We also try to use as few cookies as possible, which is why you have to login at every connection, sorry for the inconveniance.
Expenses | € | Income | € |
---|---|---|---|
hosting | 43 | hosting offered by guc parapente | 43 |
domain name pgearth.com | 10 | ads on the site | 0 |
domain name pg.earth | 31 | ||
membership script bought on code canyon | 13 | ||
total | 97 | 43 |
Funded : 42%, missing 51 €, updated : sept. 2017
pgearth on paypal.
You want to see a new feature ?
You found a bug ?
Please let us know on our git . (registration required)
takeoff | Grass hill with lots of space. Hang gliders take off on the lip of the hill in front of the Gibbet; Paragliders take off l00m to the West. Rig on top, but paragliders should take off at the 'break' in the slope to avoid being pulled onto the fence and damaging it. Note the areas being used for take off on the day and avoid flying in front of them. |
---|---|
landing | |
weather | If bottom landing; pilots should note trees, slope of field (especially in a North Westerly), proximity of road, hedges, lines and other pilots! The site becomes rough in any wind east of north. It can be flown in such conditions but only by very experienced pilots with at least Pilot rating. Always fly actively; on a sunny day, if you feel yourself going up, turn away from the hill into the thermal you have just found and see how far up it takes you. Ridge soaring close to the ground can be dangerous on a thermic site such as Combe. Rotor is reliably found within l00m of the trees beyond the west end of the site. Don't ridge soar there. |
rules | Check airspace to the south for XC Status Combe Gibbet is now OPEN for HG and PG and closes 1st September 2011. First pilot on the hill for the season please turn the sign on the gate to open. The site is open from 2nd February until 31st August each year. It is CLOSED from 1st September to 1st February. The definitive status is on the gate at the site. Please check the notice on the gate before flying. It is used for pheasant rearing and shooting the rest of the year. The site will be lost if you fly outside these times. This site is restricted by our agreement with the landowner to members only (Full, Reciprocal or Guest) so non-members wishing to fly the site should obtain Guest Membership status by contacting a committee member (a phone call will do) before flying. More details on guest membership can be found on this page. Wind Direction / Details NW-N. 1km ridge, 95m high. Restrictions This site is suitable for all levels of pilot. Sensitivity This is one of the best XC sites in the South of England. Pilots of all experiences love to fly here. The site is of great value to the land owner because of the pheasant shooting and is closed from 1st September to 1st February. If the notice on the gates says closed then do not fly it. Please ask anyone who is ignoring the sign to stop flying immediately. Try to avoid flying east of the Gibbet, as this is designated for use by model flyers. Location OS Grid Ref SU 362 623, Landranger 173, Pathfinder 1186. BHPA Site Ref: 1.002 (for notifying mid week flying). Leave M4 at Junction 14. Take A338 towards Hungerford. At first mini roundabout turn right. Straight over the second. Turn left at the third into Hungerford High Street. Take the first left, half way up the High Street, after going under the railway bridge. Drive onto Hungerford Common and take the first right. After 4km along a country road you will come to a T junction. Turn right then immediately left. Follow this road to the top of Combe. Turn right at the top of the hill onto the ridge track. Parking Park your car on the track either before or after the Gibbet. Park clear of the gate and styles – leaving space both next to and opposite the gate for emergency vehicles to turn. |
access | From Hungerford on the A4, drive towards and through Inkpen. As you leave the village, the hill is in front of you. The road goes to the top. Last bit is gravel. Park on the gravel near the Gibbet (wooden pole with horizontal bar at the top). |
comments | Gets very busy on weekends. Only open in the Summer and access restricted - see club web site. Thermals usually stream off the hill in three places; the nose directly in front of the Gibbet, the nose to the west that is becoming covered in gorse and thorn bushes, and further west where the takeoff field meets the old woodland. When you leave the hill it is better to fly along one of the two spurs that run either side of the valley rather than over the villages of Combe and Faccombe. In a northerly or north-westerly wind, fly towards the east side of Andover. You can usually find a thermal to top up your height over the woods as the ground rises to the south of Hurstborne Tarrant. Avoid Linkenholt (Sinkenholt)! Follow that ridge East alongside a splendid valley to Whitchurch. Just before Whitchurch and the A34 there is a very obvious pig farm which has proved to mark a very reliable thermal source. The pig farm is on the south west side of a wooded hill, it works because it is sheltered in a Northerly, and aimed at the sun. After that the next thermal is usually found somewhere south of Popham. There are large wooded areas there and the thermals tend to trip from the fields upwind of the woods. The area around the junction of the A34 and the A303 also seems to be a reliable thermal source, but be careful you are close to Solent CTA. At this point in the flight you should be aiming for Butser, which is a conspicuous hill on the horizon if you are low. The best route sticks to the high ground because it is chalky and dry - so the thermals are better. Fly around the NE corner of Solent CTA, east of New Alresford. New Alresford has the obvious pond and is also conspicuous because the south-south-east side of the town is limited by a main road so the town has a straight edge there. This area appears to be a reliable thermal source. Carry on past Petersfield and on towards the coast. If your timing is right you can pick up the sea breeze convergence and fly to Brighton! On light wind days it is possible to fly forward towards Hungerford or to the east or west along the ridge. |
contact | |
web | |
tourism |
Courtesy of windy.com
sites modifications.
new pictures.
new members.
clubs modifications.
pros modifications.
If you know a gps point and want to magically jump to it, just use the form below.
Use the form below to report inapropriate content to moderators.
You are apparently trying to watch a page that doesn't exist on pgearth... Sorry for that :(