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#1
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#2
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![]() Apparently just left today. My daughter was at St John's last week and watched him tool around the harbour in practice flights. www.expeditionsail.com -- scroll down. -- all the best, Dan Ford email (put Cubdriver in subject line) Warbird's Forum: www.warbirdforum.com Piper Cub Forum: www.pipercubforum.com the blog: www.danford.net In Search of Lost Time: www.readingproust.com |
#3
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![]() "Icebound" wrote in message ... Apparently just left today. http://www.940news.com/nouvelles.php?cat=9&id=n070239A I guess they made it okay: http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?p...4&refer=canada Not many details, though.... |
#4
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![]() "Icebound" wrote in message ... Apparently just left today. http://www.940news.com/nouvelles.php?cat=9&id=n070239A Fossett's previous record attempts have been meaningful, but this one puzzles me. I really don't understand risking a one of a kind very low performance aircraft to recreate a long over-water flight. Its been done before, and there is nothing to gain and a bunch to lose... |
#5
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I think it would be called a sense of adventure which most people have lost
in the world and the ones that do still have a sense of adventure are called crazy, reckless, arrogant, dumb, ect. by the general public. Look at the guy that did the flight across the Atlantic in a Cessna 150. "Kyle Boatright" wrote in message ... "Icebound" wrote in message ... Apparently just left today. http://www.940news.com/nouvelles.php?cat=9&id=n070239A Fossett's previous record attempts have been meaningful, but this one puzzles me. I really don't understand risking a one of a kind very low performance aircraft to recreate a long over-water flight. Its been done before, and there is nothing to gain and a bunch to lose... |
#6
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![]() Okay, he made it just fine, overnight Saturday/Sunday. Landed on the 8th tee (whatever) of a golf course in Ireland. They navigated with a compass and a sextant, which for us GPS addicts is almost as astonishing as flying 19 hours over-water in a 1919 (well: pseudo 1919) open cockpit biplane. -- all the best, Dan Ford email (put Cubdriver in subject line) Warbird's Forum: www.warbirdforum.com Piper Cub Forum: www.pipercubforum.com the blog: www.danford.net In Search of Lost Time: www.readingproust.com |
#7
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![]() "Cub Driver" wrote in message ... ..... They navigated with a compass and a sextant, which for us GPS addicts is almost as astonishing as flying 19 hours over-water in a 1919 (well: pseudo 1919) open cockpit biplane. One of the by-products of the modern world is that it has reduced the opportunities for the great masses to get their hands dirty, become inquisitive, and learn things. 60 years ago, nearly every car owner in North America had to tinker with it at one time or another, if only to change a tire. Every pilot had to learn some serious navigation skills, especially for IMC or featureless terrain. Today, the relative number of people with either of these skills out there in the mass population is much smaller. Arguably, the skills are no longer necessary... but I wonder if it also means that the population's collective desire to *learn* may be diminishing... "Why bother, somebody else's technology will take care of it" ? ? ? I'd like to be around another 50 or 100 years from now, to see how this plays out... How will us masses evolve? How dependant will our lives become on the few, powerful keepers of technology? Will another Steve Wozniak rise to completely upset the course of technological history, or are we past that; will such breakthroughs remain only in the domain of the large and the powerful? 60 years ago, my father happily solved his worries by his own initiative...a good shot of self-distilled potato brew, straight up. (Homeland-Security 1950's style... the police would browbeat local merchants into telling them who was buying excessive amounts of sugar). Today, self-medication is frowned upon and I am supposed to rely on someone else's technology: I think its called Eli Lilly??? That would make we worry even more, about becoming dependant on the technology. I will think about it some more after this bottle of Seagram's is empty. ;-) From north of the border, all the best for July 4th to those of, in, and from the USA. Stay Safe! |
#8
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![]() "Icebound" wrote in message ... "Cub Driver" wrote in message ... .... They navigated with a compass and a sextant, which for us GPS addicts is almost as astonishing as flying 19 hours over-water in a 1919 (well: pseudo 1919) open cockpit biplane. One of the by-products of the modern world is that it has reduced the opportunities for the great masses to get their hands dirty, become inquisitive, and learn things. And people now can't do even basic arithmetic without an electronic calculator :~( |
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