A proposal to increase membership, cross-country pilots,competitors,and world champions (USA).
On Monday, August 11, 2014 6:18:38 AM UTC-6, Kevin Brooker wrote:
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Kevin Brooker
True for some Kevin.
I once called a lapsed SSA member to see why he'd dropped out after a
year. Turns out he was president of a local Corvette owner's club. He
tried soaring for a week, but hadn't soloed and gave it up. His
expectation was way out of line. For some it's simply not a good fit.
For others, given the chance, it becomes a lifetime pursuit. How do we
give them that chance?
Frank Whiteley
Frank,
I was an extremely active glider and power pilot for years; SSA state
record keeper, successful contest pilot, state record holder, and headed
up the committee to make Mt. Washington a National Historic Landmark of
Soaring. My involvement went well beyond trying it for a week and deciding
soaring wasn't a good fit.
What keeps me from flying is the lack of available time to participate in
a way which is meaningful and enjoyable. Soaring requires a lot of
discretionary time and the ability to be opportunistic with respect to the
weather. If a potential pilot works Monday through Friday and only has
weekends to complete domestic chores, and other recreational activities
(go for a bike ride, run, exercise, visit friends/family) there is not
much time left over to head to the airport. If the weather isn't flyable
then the opportunity to get some stick time and feed the interest is gone
past. Have a few weekends in a row with non-flyable weather and the
interest wanes or is replaced by something not so conditional.
When my life changed to where the point of losing the opportunism, flying
went away. I still head to the airport to visit soaring buddies and listen
to storied and keep in touch but I haven't flown anything in at least two
years. My glider sits in the trailer in the yard with hopes of getting the
time to fly it but it is mostly just hanging onto a dream. I should divest
of it or remove the canopy and plant it full of flowers. At least as a
flower pot it will be getting some use.
Learning to fly requires a lot of time, specific conditions (just VFR not
necessarily soarable) on a consistent basis in order to keep the student
interested. There are too many other things to compete with which give
more access. Learning to fly is also relatively difficult and society
doesn't have the attention span of discipline to wait. Most people expect
instant results and success. Soaring is also extremely solitary while
participating. Most other activities are more communal and social while
participating.
The number of barriers to growing the sport of soaring are monumental
compared to the small hurdle of expense. American's have tons of
discretionary income and an immense playing field to spend it. Expense is
an easy scapegoat and blinds us from seeing what else needs to be done to
grow the sport either by attracting new participants or keeping what we
have.
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Kevin Brooker[/i][/color]
Agreed, discretionary time is probably more important then income. I've been doing a lot of grandparenting with two that are not yet ready for the gliderport. And also looking after affairs of estate of my late father-in-law, a much bigger project than for my parents. At least we're out of the cheap rentals business and only keeping the farm viable.
Outreach remains our most important imperative.
Frank
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