![]() |
If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#10
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Frank Whiteley wrote:
I think the mystique of flying is somewhat diluted. When I was young, few of my peers had ever been in an airplane, but we lived close to significant aviation activity, so our imaginations and dreams of flying were ever present. Today, a lot of youngsters have jetted across the country or the oceans. What do they do? Play games, close the window shades, sleep, or watch movies. Few look out the window to try and figure out where they are or watch the changing clouds or even the auroras. A few I've spoken with didn't consider it a particularly pleasant experience, but a means to get to whatever was at the end of the flight. Hardly inspiring. And who can blame us? ![]() seems to despair about attracting, I've been soaring since last summer and enjoying every moment, and I hate airliners with a deep passion. When I was little I loved to fly commercially. I even got to meet the captain and sit in the cockpit of a DC-10. (Good luck trying that one today!) But as I grew out of the child-sized seats, realized just how tiny and annoying those windows are, got more and more tired of the growing stupidity of airport security, and just racked up a lot of commercial flying, I got tired of the whole thing. Flying is great, but being stuffed into a seat that's three sizes too small, packed into an aluminum tube like sardines with no control over your destiny for hours, you can see how it could be considered unpleasant. Airliners are the busses of air travel. You find people who are fascinated with trains, but hardly ever with busses. I think that if you want to attract people to soaring, avoid comparisons with airliners as much as possible. Other than the fact that both involve being high above the ground, they have almost nothing in common. I think there's no problem generating mystique around soaring, in fact I think there may be a little too much of it. People need to know that it's something that *they* can do themselves, not just superhuman masters of the air. Most people probably know where their local airport is and have some idea of how to procure an airplane ride if they felt like it, but how many people know where their nearest glider operation is located? How many realize that they could start learning as early as the next weekend and they could be flying solo in just a couple dozen flights? Maybe I'm subconsciously transferring my pre-soaring thoughts onto the public at large, but that's how I see it. -- Michael Ash Rogue Amoeba Software |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Colorado Soaring Pilots/SSA Governor 2007 Seminar and 2006 Soaring Awards Banquet | Frank Whiteley | Soaring | 0 | February 15th 07 04:52 PM |
Mogas and microbial growth | Economic Girly Man | Owning | 6 | November 13th 04 09:14 AM |
Soaring Server/Worldwide Soaring Turnpoint Exchange back online | John Leibacher | Soaring | 0 | June 21st 04 05:25 PM |
Aircraft growth (question starting with Art Kramer) | Howard Berkowitz | Military Aviation | 9 | June 6th 04 03:26 PM |
Self launch effect on soaring growth | John Jones | Soaring | 12 | April 27th 04 03:53 AM |