Hillside landings are an important technique for cross-country flying. You never really know where or when you are going to get drilled on a cross country flight. When winds are light or turbulent near the ground, you may enter a downwind component once you have committed to your approach. Or you may find obstacles such as boulders, uneven terrain or brush at your expected touch-down point. Or you may discover that what looked flat from the air, ain't!
A counter-intuitive technique is to land against the slope of a hill. Pilots who practice hillside landings have many more options available to them at the critical moment of decision-making during emergency out-landings. During my years of XC flying in Owens Valley, I would deliberately seek out hillsides to practice up-slope landings. After a while, I came to realize up-slope landings, even with a light tailwind, were often safer than flat field landings.
You are not going to overshoot You are going to plant your hang glider right there. There ain't anywhere else to go.
You are not going to fly into the hill The first time you do this, it may seem like you are barreling straight into a wall, but that is not how it works. Your flare will be greatly - seemingly magically - enhanced due to two factors.
1) In a flat field landing, the angle of your wing to the ground at flare is 50 to 70 degrees. Your glider is pushing air ahead of it and that air is happy to be rolling away from you as you are hoping to stop. But on an up-slope landing, your wing-to-ground angle is much less, say 30 to 40 degrees, and the air is being pushed more toward at the ground, creating a cushioning bubble that stops you rapidly. I remember how amazed I was when, after reading
In Search Of World Records by George Worthington, I started landing up-slope and began a long series of perfect landings - not even dropping the base tube.
2) If you are in a light tailwind, the upslope component will add a little lift at flare to counter, somewhat, the added speed. Your timing, to your amazement, will be perfect. As you approach your flare point, every cell in your body will be screaming, "I'd better do this right or I'm going to die!" Either way, you are going to stop quickly.
*Note: If you are still flying Torrey Pines, this may not be for you. As for strong downwind upslope landings... can you spell C R A T E R?