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#1
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Happy Dog wrote:
Who knows?Â*Â*DidÂ*anythingÂ*likeÂ*thatÂ*everÂ*happen *toÂ*youÂ*orÂ*anyoneÂ*elseÂ*you know?Â*Â*DidÂ*youÂ*orÂ*theyÂ*quit?Â*Â*ThoseÂ*areÂ* binaryÂ*questions. That's an interesting question. I'd a small scare during my PPL training. It, combined with the love I have of preflighting in the winter, kept me away from the airport for five months. But I returned (when it warmed up {8^). I wonder if the difference is two-fold: Some don't get scared (perhaps until the hook is set {8^), and others get scared but get back into the seat. On the other side of it, I can definitely see the "life circumstances" part. I used to fly at least once a week, even if it was just to poke some holes. Now, I'm at about once a month. This is from a combination of work and family (I've a two-month-old at home). On the upside, I'm in a club. Were I an owner, I'd be seriously concerned. As a part owner, I trust fellow members to help me make up the slack grin. I'd my first son up a few times before the new pregnancy kept my wife out of the plane (and I'm not yet brave enough to fly w/son and w/o wife {8^). I expect, when son #2 is suffficiently old, we'll be back to our local trips (Cape May, Boston, Nantucket, etc.). As they get older, I hope to be heading further out. In the meantime, son #1 and I still "play airplane". During these games, he'll often wear his headset "for the noise". - Andrew |
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#2
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"Andrew Gideon" wrote in
Who knows? Did anything like that ever happen to you or anyone else you know? Did you or they quit? Those are binary questions. That's an interesting question. I'd a small scare during my PPL training. It, combined with the love I have of preflighting in the winter, kept me away from the airport for five months. It looks like this is more common than I thought. I suspected that the scare claim was just an excuse for some more mundane reason. Anyone else have this experience? mo |
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#3
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Who knows? Did anything like that ever happen to you or anyone else you
know? Did you or they quit? Those are binary questions. That's an interesting question. I'd a small scare during my PPL training. It, combined with the love I have of preflighting in the winter, kept me away from the airport for five months. It looks like this is more common than I thought. I suspected that the scare claim was just an excuse for some more mundane reason. Anyone else have this experience? I've never seriously scared myself (although I've been plenty worried a few times), but my mentor in flight quit flying not long after an engine-out landing in a corn field. Of course, it didn't help that he was fired from his job about then, too. -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
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#4
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Jay Honeck opined
snip His instructor asked him what happened, told him that what he had experienced was easily countered with good technique, told him he had done well and acted properly, and immediately booked him for a few more dual lessons. To no avail. This guy was so taken aback by his brush with disaster that he just couldn't get into flying anymore. He did fly a couple of more times with his instructor, but he could never get back in the saddle. He quit altogether. Sometimes there is such a thing as too much imagination. -ash Cthulhu in 2005! Why wait for nature? |
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#5
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Jay Honeck wrote:
At last -- I've *finally* found someone who could explain what had happened to foil their dreams of flight. I've never, ever been able to understand this all-to-common occurrence -- and there are other good reasons to quit flying, for sure -- but I have often wondered if this kind of scare during training isn't happening more often than we know about? (And before you dismiss a drifting take-off as being non-life-threatening, see: http://www.ntsb.gov/ntsb/GenPDF.asp?id=CHI05FA080&rpt=p This is an accident that happened in nearby West Union, Iowa, earlier this summer, when a low-time pilot in a Cherokee 235 drifted off the runway centerline, bounced in the weeds, flipped the plane, and killed himself and his two passengers.) It was with a heavy heart and a feeling of dismay that I bid our guest farewell. Perhaps it was for the best that he quit flying, but I couldn't help but think that he had given up too soon, and that with a little extra guidance he could have made a good pilot. At my previous job (may it R.I.P.), I got an honest account from a similar fellow - he'd gotten to the point of solo and quit for good shortly thereafter. He had stumbled into a cloud somehow and was in it for what he estimated was a good 20 seconds or so. He apparently popped out the other side nearly inverted. He recovered and landed safely, but, according to him, that incident drained all of his desire to fly. He never got that interest back. I've had a few near misses myself, mostly connected with transitioning to a new a/c type and not getting the proper training or doing something incorrect with too little time in type. The shock was very definite in each case and cooled me off a good bit for a while. I've always climbed back into the plane in the end, though, for reasons unclear to me. I think that here are folks who simply just don't care much for flying and would rather not. They kick the tires to see what it's like, try it out, and then decide it's not for them. I'm like that about many things myself - boating, motocycling, dating - and my reaction is similar. Try it out for a while, yeah it's ok, but nah..... Just doesn't do it for me, I'm done now....... Doesn't mean these folks are dispassionate, I think that flying just isn't for them..... LS N646F |
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#6
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ls wrote:
At my previous job (may it R.I.P.), I got an honest account from a similar fellow - he'd gotten to the point of solo and quit for good shortly thereafter. He had stumbled into a cloud somehow and was in it for what he estimated was a good 20 seconds or so. He apparently popped out the other side nearly inverted. He recovered and landed safely, but, according to him, that incident drained all of his desire to fly. He never got that interest back. This reminded me of the following audio clip of a VFR only pilot who inadvertently ended up in cloud. It worked out OK for him and he was back flying again later the same day. Now I'm not a pliot, but after hearing the clip I think you'll agree that's pretty incredible. warning, this clip is not for the faint hearted http://www.naats.org/docs/flightassist.mp3 |
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#7
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On Mon, 15 Aug 2005 03:48:15 GMT, "Jay Honeck"
wrote in 3gULe.251379$x96.181434@attbi_s72:: I have often wondered if this kind of scare during training isn't happening more often than we know about? When I began flight training in 1970, two of my friends also started taking lessons. Neither of them completed their training and obtained their certificates. They were both happy to go aloft with me as PIC for many years afterward, and it was a rewarding experience for all of us. I never asked them why they quit, but my intuition suggested that there were two factors in their failure to obtain an airmans certificate: 1. They lacked faith in their personal ability to fly safely. They were afraid they might misunderstand or forget something important and get into a situation beyond their ability to assure a successful outcome. It was largely an issue of lack of confidence and aviation experience. This lack of self-confidence coupled with the natural fear for their well-being was uncomfortable for them. 2. The cost of training and subsequent maintenance of currency was beyond their means. This financial issue was the underlying cause of their discontinuing training, and a good excuse not to overcome the fear associated with number one above. My means permitted me to comfortably train, and I'm the sort of obsessive personality that completely immerse myself into demanding tasks to assure their successful completion. So I would think that while fear is an issue to some extent for virtually every student airman, it is the lack of free time and discretionary funds that are the prime inhibitory factors to obtaining an airmans certificate. |
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#8
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"Jay Honeck" wrote in message news:3gULe.251379$x96.181434@attbi_s72... Most of our guests at the hotel are not pilots. It's simply a matter of numbers -- there are a LOT more non-pilots than there are pilots, and they need hotel rooms, too. Many of our guests are "wannabes" or aviation enthusiasts, however. Although we have found many people who are afraid of flying, we have yet to meet someone who doesn't like airplanes -- and those people are our "bread & butter." An amazing number of guests tell me that they have taken flight lessons, but quit flying for one reason or another. I have never been able to understand this phenomenon, since -- I'll give you two examples. When I was in primary flight training, an aquaintance was also taking lessons -- we had the same CFI. He made his solo flight about two weeks after me. It turned out to be his one and only solo. On his first landing things got bollixed up and the C-150 ended up on its nose. My friend walked away without a scratch, except perhaps for his pride. Unlike your guest and his bean field, my guy never went back. The second is my wife. I'd had my PP-ASEL for a year and we'd made several flights, local and cross-country when I talked her into doing at least a couple hours of dual. She thought at the time it was a good idea... just in case she needed to take over and land, someday. Well, she went on to solo, left part of her Tee-shirt hanging on the FBO's wall, and was finished. She said she accomplished what she set out to do. Still today, she is never reluctant to go for a ride, and she enjoys following along on the sectional and tuning radios. She just doesn't have the need. |
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#9
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"Jay Honeck" wrote in message news:3gULe.251379$x96.181434@attbi_s72... Most of our guests at the hotel are not pilots. It's simply a matter of numbers -- there are a LOT more non-pilots than there are pilots, and they need hotel rooms, too. Many of our guests are "wannabes" or aviation enthusiasts, however. Although we have found many people who are afraid of flying, we have yet to meet someone who doesn't like airplanes -- and those people are our "bread & butter." An amazing number of guests tell me that they have taken flight lessons, but quit flying for one reason or another. I have never been able to understand this phenomenon, since -- I worked for a guy who took a few lessons and then quit. He was proud to tell everyone how easy it was to fly and also once you do the take and landing the rest is pretty boring. He liked saying this in front of me and another pilot. I think it made him feel superior. It was probably masking a fear he had or perhaps we was truly really bored with flying. I think another reason that people give it up is that after the first few lessons it looks like all you are doing is the same thing over and over without ever seemingly making any progress. The real reason a lot of people fly is to see stuff from the air and here they are trapped doing stalls, slow flight, engine out, etc. I wonder if it might be more useful that the dual XC be moved earlier in the syllabuss to keep people interested. Scott -- -------------------- Scott F. Migaldi CP-ASEL-IA N8116B PADI MI-150972 Join the PADI Instructor Yahoo Group http://groups.yahoo.com/group/PADI-Instructors/ -------------------- |
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#10
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I haven't heard many CFI's comment on it lately, but locally I'm aware that
many of them contact fallen away students and pilots to inquire "what the story is". I think one of the most disheartening things about being even a part time CFI is to have students drift off without knowing why. Naturally the first thing that comes into your mind is that it is in some way the CFI's fault. A few observations from teaching ground schools and a few students part time: - Young people, especially high school students, are extremely busy. Unless they make flying a priority and unless their parents support them and help them make it a priority, other things simply get in the way. School, extracurricular activities, social life, part time jobs, and many other things simply take time, and that leaves less time for flying. - Successful people, that can afford to fly, are often just as busy. These people typically have pretty fast paced high pressure jobs. These same people usually make the commitment and arrange their schedules to obtain their license, but I've watched several simply fade away for many reasons. Scheduling conflicts, no time off, can't stay current, what ever. The same things that pull them away from their family and social lives, pull them away from flying. - Some people are living a dream, and then they wake up, declare the dream over because they've reached what ever level or goal that they had consciously or subconsciously set for themselves, then simply go back to living their life as it was before. Mission accomplished (in there minds) - The reality of the expense hits them. - The reality of the dedication required hits them and they are unwilling to make the sacrifices necessary. I'm sure that there are a million reasons, but these are just a few that I've encountered. I've talked to only a couple pilots that have scared themselves into quitting. Some were good pilots that simply made a mistake. They took the time to learn from their mistake and continued on briefly, however the pressure from their family is what ultimately convinced them to quit. Some acted more as a passenger rather than a pilot. They made a mistake but were simply along for the ride. They didn't know what caused their problem. They didn't take the time to learn more after it happened. Some of these pilots, with some extra effort and training can make good safe pilots. This takes more guts and more humility than some are willing to exhibit. It's those that I'd rather have quit than continue to endanger themselves and others. I, like you, started flying and never looked back. Although I took nearly 9 years off, beginning when we built our house and then my kids were born, my dream never died and when I was able I jumped back in with both feet. For me, it's been a series of adventures. For me, the fun and enjoyment come from continually learning and setting new goals. What's next? What rating or certificate can I train for now? What kind of airplane do I want? Where can I take the family? It never stops. We're in the minority, you and I. Just as most of the others on these newsgroups. Does that make us special? Does that make us crazy? I once heard that a "fan" is someone that is a fanatic about something that most other people don't care anything about. I think we're fanatics and that is what makes us continue to wonder what happens to those who slip along the wayside. Ramble mode "off". Jim |
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