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"Jay Honeck" writes:
There's no mystery to me as to why not everyone loves aviation like we do (or why some people love golf like I don't!). Right. But these "near-pilots" DID love aviation like we do -- and something spooked them to the point where they walked away. Well...did he? Your specific example? As you said yourself, quitting was essentially inconceivable to you, and you resorted to fairly drastic means to pay for flying sometimes (you mentioned selling blood plasma). You didn't report him saying anything suggesting his love of flying was actually like yours. If we are to replace all the World War II and Korean War-era pilots who are dying in droves, we've got to get people into aviation, NOW. I address this "scared straight" issue as just another small piece of the "Why is GA dying?" puzzle, and hope that we (as pilots) can come up with better ways to train newbies so that this kind of thing won't happen so often. Note how many of the people taught to fly for those wars kept on flying, either professionally or for fun, afterwards. Not, I believe, a very high percentage. I've been interested in flying forever, but I've never done anything about flight training. I used to ride my bicycle over to Stanton airport (from Northfield) now and then to watch (and sometimes photograph) glider and skydiving operations, and anything else that was going on there, when I was a kid. I made sure to get pictures of the VC-10 we flew to Entebbe in in 1964. I've got lots of other interests (notably photography) to absorb my time and energy. And, perhaps, I figured out early some things about how useful general aviation was for transportation (not terribly at the basic level), and how much money it would cost. So I've read (and now and then posted) to aviation newsgroups for years, go to aviation events locally, talk to pilot friends, and so forth, but never started training. I classified it as something cool which, if it was your overriding obsession, somebody in my income range could do. And I didn't think it was my overriding obsession. Maybe I would have found out it *was* going to be my overriding obsession if I'd taken some lessons or something, maybe. I've liked what little time I have in smaller planes, but I've actually never been in a single-engine fixed-wing plane, and only two GA-size twins. If I won the lottery, I'm not at all sure I'd start lessons. The lottery would dispose of any money issues, but there are still time issues. Plus my interest is towards planes that would take a lot of flying to maintain competence, and the lottery would put me in the position of being able to easily afford more plane than I could quickly learn to fly safely. So, I'm still here as a reasonably-friendly onlooker rather than a pilot, and I enjoy that. -- David Dyer-Bennet, , http://www.dd-b.net/dd-b/ RKBA: http://noguns-nomoney.com/ http://www.dd-b.net/carry/ Pics: http://dd-b.lighthunters.net/ http://www.dd-b.net/dd-b/SnapshotAlbum/ Dragaera/Steven Brust: http://dragaera.info/ Much of which is still down |
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Right. But these "near-pilots" DID love aviation like we do -- and
something spooked them to the point where they walked away. Well...did he? Your specific example? As you said yourself, quitting was essentially inconceivable to you, and you resorted to fairly drastic means to pay for flying sometimes (you mentioned selling blood plasma). You didn't report him saying anything suggesting his love of flying was actually like yours. Well, perhaps I'm reading more into it than I should, but: - He chose to stay in an aviation themed hotel, right next to an airport... (we're not the closest to the University, nor are we the cheapest) - He was deep in study of our aviation memorabilia when I interrupted his reverie... - He avidly and animatedly talked about aircraft, displaying a breadth and depth of knowledge far beyond our average "wannabe" guest... I got the impression that aviation ran strong in his blood, but it was, admittedly, a brief conversation. It did, however, stick in my craw, since he was the first guy who has ever admitted to me that he was scared out of the cockpit. -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
#3
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Jay Honeck wrote:
It did, however, stick in my craw, since he was the first guy who has ever admitted to me that he was scared out of the cockpit. And you should really take that as an indication that very few people are actually scared out of the cockpit, instead of assuming (as the title of this thread indicates) that the rest are simply lying about it. George Patterson Give a person a fish and you feed him for a day; teach a person to use the Internet and he won't bother you for weeks. |
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