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On Oct 31, 9:18 am, Chip Bearden wrote:
Soaring is riskier than driving a car. Competition soaring and aggressive cross-country soaring are riskier, still, although they are typically practiced by more experienced pilots who should (key word) know how to manage those risks. There's a good article about safety and risk by former World Champion Bruno Gantenbrink on DG's Web site:http://www.dg-flugzeugbau.de/index-e.html. If you fly cross-country or competitively and haven't read it, please do. I grew up mouthing the cliche (an international one, apparently, based on Bruno's article) that the most dangerous part of soaring was the drive to the airport. In fact, flying is the most dangerous part. In 40+ years of soaring, I've lost quite a few friends and acquaintances to glider crashes, including my father and my best friend, both highly experienced pilots. I've been first on the scene at fatal crashes. I think about the potential downside consequences of soaring before every contest and often when driving to the gliderport (although, oddly, seldom when I'm flying). I've got two 13-year-old daughters who would be devasted if something happened to me while flying. Yet I continue to fly. Soaring is the most fulfilling, exciting, rewarding activity I participate in, and I feel more alive for it. Nothing matches the exhilaration of completing a task or an ambitious flight knowing I've flown well. And I'm honest enough to admit that if soaring were completely risk free, it wouldn't have the same appeal. I suspect more than a few of my fellow pilots share this "condition" although I would describe none of them as thrill seekers or dare devils. Yet I do everything I can to minimize the risks balanced against my desire to compete and fly cross country. I bought my current glider because it had a safety cockpit and impact-absorbing landing gear. I equipped it with a canopy wire deflector bar, an ELT, a 6-point safety harness, a rear-view mirror, and more than a gallon of easily accessible drinking water. All this was to keep me out of trouble and to help me survive trouble if it occurs. I'm considering installing a transponder or a portable collision avoidance device to reduce what I think is my biggest risk currently--being hit by a power plane in the busy airspace where I fly west of New York City. I'm probably more cautious than some. I know my limits and don't knowingly exceed them. Soaring isn't for everyone. One pilot I know, a good one, dropped out of soaring after his wife got sick and died. As much as he loved soaring, his children were young and he didn't feel it was fair to them to continue something that increased the risk they might end up losing both parents. He intends to get back in the game when they're older. I think he made the right call for him. I confess that when I was in my 20s, I not only mouthed the cliche about driving being more dangerous than flying, but I glorified the risks that even then I acknowledged existed in order to enhance the sense that I was doing something special, something extreme, something most people would never experience. Now in my 50s, I see that part of the appeal of soaring is the ability to push myself up against the edge of the cliff, look over it, and then back away. I don't need or want the risk that a power pilot flying head down and locked will plow into me from behind (as nearly happened a few months ago) or the risk that someone above me in the gaggle will make a mistake and spin down through my altitude (as happened a few years ago). The challenge is to work with the risks I can control. It's the ones I can't control--and I'd be in denial if I said they didn't exist--that trouble me. There are enough of those, plus the risk that I will make a bad mistake someday (I'm not in denial about that, either), to remind me that soaring is inherently risky compared with most of the other things I do. To date, those risks are not sufficient to cause me to quit soaring. But we're all different and what works for me may not apply to anyone else. Chip Bearden ASW 24 "JB" USA Chip, Thanks for your comments, all well put. I also lost my father in a soaring accident, in the 1979 US nationals. He was an experience pilot and instructor and we just don't know what happened. I stepped into soaring 25 years later as my family matured and I couldn't resist the enticement any longer. My family is aware of the risks, as am I. We accept that something may happen to any of us on any given day, most likely not even related to soaring. I agree with most of the comments relating to managing risk. I try to do all I can to understand the sources of risk. Read accident reports, analysis the actions of other pilots around me, and introspectively evaluate my own errors and limitations. As an instructor I am constantly exposed to "common" errors and thought processes that lead to increased risk. Whenever I'm aware of a potential for increased risk, I narrow my tolerances and refrain from approaching the edges of my skills. The point here is to maintain the self-awareness to recognize the change in risk. Not only in soaring but in just about every life activity there is a need for situational awareness. We see it everyday on the highway with the the casual driver that makes an inappropriate lane change, for example. In aviation we are particularly sensitive to the need for situational awareness as the inherent risks are indeed greater. I feel that one of my greatest challenges, as an instructor, is to develop in my students the abilitiy to evaluate their situation and be aware of the currently available options for action. In my experience it is much more difficult than teaching someone to control the aircraft, navigate, communicate, or any of the other tasks that are evaulated in a pilot test or flight review. I've probably nattered too long. Mike |
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