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A Scary Prospect -- What to do?



 
 
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  #1  
Old February 28th 05, 11:54 PM
Margy Natalie
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I wish I had your problems Jay! My daughter won't fly unless it's to somewhere
fun. My son can't get a medical. I will tell you I know one guy who solo'd
when he was 16 and his parents would let him fly anywhere, but he couldn't have
the car on Saturday night! Another friend got a call from the school principal
(this was probably 30 years ago) that their child had endangered the lives of a
number of students by going off and stealing a plane and .... it went on for
quite a while. The parents informed the principal that their child was a
certificated pilot and didn't steal anything as he was allowed to use the plane
whenever he wanted and that no one was in any danger at any time. When the kid
got home his parents informed him if he ever cut school to go to the beach again
in the plane he wasn't to be so stupid as to take along kids who would talk
about it.

Margy

Jay Honeck wrote:

Mary and I have tried very hard to treat flying as an uncommon -- but
perfectly normal -- family activity, and that's all my kids have ever known.
My 14-year-old son has 13 hours in his logbook, and can climb, descend and
hold altitude, track a heading, determine the proper runway to land on, and
(I suspect) probably land the plane -- although I've never let him get below
200 feet on final approach. To him, flying a light plane is no greater
challenge than beating the latest Playstation game, and going for a plane
ride is something he's done over 400 times in his short life...

Thus, we hope he'll be taking flight lessons this summer, assuming all goes
well with his grades. He thinks he's ready, and I hope he earns his glider
rating before next school year starts.

All well and good, but the magnitude of this endeavor had truly not sunk in
until he quite innocently said:

"Just think, Dad, in two years I'll be able to take a date out in the
plane!"

After I picked my jaw up off the floor, I just laughed -- but this brings up
a serious point that I've never seen addressed here. For those of you who
own aircraft, and have kids that have learned to fly, how did you handle
"borrowing the plane"? I mean, it's not quite the same as letting him take
the pickup down to the corner grocery...

Do you guys let your kids fly your plane?
--
Jay Honeck
Iowa City, IA
Pathfinder N56993
www.AlexisParkInn.com
"Your Aviation Destination"


  #2  
Old March 2nd 05, 02:32 AM
Eric Rood
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Gosh Margie, that sounds almost like what happened to my father 60 some
years ago. He and a buddy cut class and buzzed the high school one fine
Spring day (yes, it was during WWII).

Margy Natalie wrote:
I wish I had your problems Jay! My daughter won't fly unless it's to somewhere
fun. My son can't get a medical. I will tell you I know one guy who solo'd
when he was 16 and his parents would let him fly anywhere, but he couldn't have
the car on Saturday night! Another friend got a call from the school principal
(this was probably 30 years ago) that their child had endangered the lives of a
number of students by going off and stealing a plane and .... it went on for
quite a while. The parents informed the principal that their child was a
certificated pilot and didn't steal anything as he was allowed to use the plane
whenever he wanted and that no one was in any danger at any time. When the kid
got home his parents informed him if he ever cut school to go to the beach again
in the plane he wasn't to be so stupid as to take along kids who would talk
about it.

  #3  
Old March 2nd 05, 12:58 PM
Jay Honeck
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Gosh Margie, that sounds almost like what happened to my father 60 some
years ago. He and a buddy cut class and buzzed the high school one fine
Spring day (yes, it was during WWII).


I didn't think the Feds allowed casual GA during World War II?

Good thing they didn't have Stingers back then...

;-)
--
Jay Honeck
Iowa City, IA
Pathfinder N56993
www.AlexisParkInn.com
"Your Aviation Destination"


 




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