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Define 'Crew'



 
 
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  #1  
Old June 7th 07, 02:16 PM posted to rec.aviation.soaring
Ray Lovinggood
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Posts: 137
Default Define 'Crew'

Burt Compton mentions, 'an involved crew is a happy
crew.'

Please define 'Crew'!

Ray 'the crewless' Lovinggood
(some, no most, would say Ray, 'the clueless' Lovinggood)

Carrboro, North Carolina, USA



  #2  
Old June 7th 07, 02:57 PM posted to rec.aviation.soaring
[email protected]
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Posts: 351
Default Define 'Crew'

On Jun 7, 8:16 am, Ray Lovinggood
wrote:
Burt Compton mentions, 'an involved crew is a happy
crew.'

Please define 'Crew'!

Ray 'the crewless' Lovinggood
(some, no most, would say Ray, 'the clueless' Lovinggood)

Carrboro, North Carolina, USA


whoever I can sucker into coming to get me

  #3  
Old June 7th 07, 07:28 PM posted to rec.aviation.soaring
[email protected]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 172
Default Define 'Crew'

On Jun 7, 6:57 am, wrote:
On Jun 7, 8:16 am, Ray Lovinggood

wrote:
Burt Compton mentions, 'an involved crew is a happy
crew.'


Please define 'Crew'!


Ray 'the crewless' Lovinggood
(some, no most, would say Ray, 'the clueless' Lovinggood)


Carrboro, North Carolina, USA


whoever I can sucker into coming to get me


This is probably the mose accurate description of "crew" I've heard!
Some would argue that to be "crew" the party or parties should be
informed of, and agree to, the support requirements BEFORE take off.
LOL

  #4  
Old June 7th 07, 10:04 PM posted to rec.aviation.soaring
[email protected]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 351
Default Define 'Crew'

On Jun 7, 1:28 pm, wrote:
On Jun 7, 6:57 am, wrote:

On Jun 7, 8:16 am, Ray Lovinggood


wrote:
Burt Compton mentions, 'an involved crew is a happy
crew.'


Please define 'Crew'!


Ray 'the crewless' Lovinggood
(some, no most, would say Ray, 'the clueless' Lovinggood)


Carrboro, North Carolina, USA


whoever I can sucker into coming to get me


This is probably the mose accurate description of "crew" I've heard!
Some would argue that to be "crew" the party or parties should be
informed of, and agree to, the support requirements BEFORE take off.
LOL


Ive found that when you are far away in a field somewhere, you can lay
quite the guilt trip on someone who normally would have nothing to do
with chasing you. What kind of person would make you sleep in the
dirt?

  #6  
Old June 7th 07, 10:49 PM posted to rec.aviation.soaring
[email protected]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 2,124
Default Define 'Crew'

On Jun 7, 9:16 am, Ray Lovinggood
wrote:
Burt Compton mentions, 'an involved crew is a happy
crew.'

Please define 'Crew'!

Ray 'the crewless' Lovinggood
(some, no most, would say Ray, 'the clueless' Lovinggood)

Carrboro, North Carolina, USA


The happy person that catches your wing when you get back.
UH

  #8  
Old June 8th 07, 01:12 PM posted to rec.aviation.soaring
[email protected]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 2,124
Default Define 'Crew'

On Jun 7, 8:58 pm, Ray Lovinggood
wrote:
At 21:54 07 June 2007, wrote:





On Jun 7, 9:16 am, Ray Lovinggood
wrote:
Burt Compton mentions, 'an involved crew is a happy
crew.'


Please define 'Crew'!


Ray 'the crewless' Lovinggood
(some, no most, would say Ray, 'the clueless' Lovinggood)


Carrboro, North Carolina, USA


The happy person that catches your wing when you get
back.
UH


UH,

Sounds like just another myth in the glider kingdom.
Sort of like the 60:1 glider, the achievable 1,000
km flight, the effective drum brake, the survivable
water landing, etc...- Hide quoted text -

- Show quoted text -


Actually not a myth. My current string is 15 in a row. Best previous
65 in a row, so it can be done.
UH


  #9  
Old June 8th 07, 01:50 PM posted to rec.aviation.soaring
J. Nieuwenhuize
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 83
Default Define 'Crew'

On 8 jun, 14:12, wrote:
On Jun 7, 8:58 pm, Ray Lovinggood



wrote:
At 21:54 07 June 2007, wrote:


On Jun 7, 9:16 am, Ray Lovinggood
wrote:
Burt Compton mentions, 'an involved crew is a happy
crew.'


Please define 'Crew'!


Ray 'the crewless' Lovinggood
(some, no most, would say Ray, 'the clueless' Lovinggood)


Carrboro, North Carolina, USA


The happy person that catches your wing when you get
back.
UH


UH,


Sounds like just another myth in the glider kingdom.
Sort of like the 60:1 glider, the achievable 1,000
km flight, the effective drum brake, the survivable
water landing, etc...- Hide quoted text -


- Show quoted text -


Actually not a myth. My current string is 15 in a row. Best previous
65 in a row, so it can be done.
UH


You do have a two-stroke thermal right?

 




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