Steve, maybe you can help with this-
What Tim and I were wondering about was of possibly due to the density of the air, 30* and foggy overhead, that the turbulence was greater and/or not dissipating as it does on warmer days. Maybe there's no more to it than that?
Thanks,
Tom
(The other c/l guy near Oregon City)
Just as a guess, the denser the air, the longer the patch of turbulence would rotate around? I've noticed the same thing, and recall just this Autumn hitting wake turbulence in level flight, where no trick had been done on any previous lap. One could speculate that this turbulence was from some other cause, but it didn't seem likely at the time. Quite possibly, that patch of turbulence migrated from where a trick had been done. A ball of evil air, if you will. This is a good time to adjourn the meeting, to await a better day.
Strange stuff does happen. You being a glider flier, Tom...one time a bunch of us F1A & F1B guys met at Harts Lake Prairie and flew for a German Postal contest. We agreed to fly one at a time, so no piggybacking. One plane in the air at a time. We also agreed that we'd fly in hour long rounds, tho we didn't have to do either. We had, as I recall, four flying F1A's and two flying F1B's, so 6 flights...a lot in an hour. Turned out that we all flew in one thermal. For two consecutive rounds...same thermal. If I remember right, it was a nice Autumn day, and retrieves were about 100'-200' or less. A very extraordinary experience. We placed very high, if we didn't win it outright.
I've previously mentioned flying F1A at the Sierra Eagles' field near Rancho Cordova, CA. This one day, up to about 50', the wind was blowing one direction, rather gently, but above 50', the wind was blowing 180* opposite and quite a bit stronger. My solution was to start towing 'upwind', sprint to get the glider up to full line length, and reverse field, trying to keep it above 50' as I circle towed and searched for lift. I wish I could remember if that was '79 or '81. Freaky! It would have been very ugly to fly stunt in that situation.

Steve