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#41
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Pretty good chance I was flying one of them with high time.....ggg
Merry Christmas and Happy New Year Ol Shy & Bashful **** your Christmas and **** you! Praise be Allah! |
#42
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On Thu, 22 Dec 2005 15:51:39 GMT, "Capt.Doug"
wrote: "Matt Whiting" wrote in message Wow, I'm almost exactly average. What an exciting thought... :-) Your 35 and still a student? I don't think a student at 35 would be average, but some of us are slow learners. I quit work and went to college fulll time at age 47. I graduated from college with a Bachelors in CS and started in on my Masters at age 50. Yes that was a 4 year degree. Roger Halstead (K8RI & ARRL life member) (N833R, S# CD-2 Worlds oldest Debonair) www.rogerhalstead.com D. :-) Roger |
#43
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Roger wrote:
On Thu, 22 Dec 2005 15:51:39 GMT, "Capt.Doug" wrote: "Matt Whiting" wrote in message Wow, I'm almost exactly average. What an exciting thought... :-) Your 35 and still a student? I don't think a student at 35 would be average, but some of us are slow learners. I quit work and went to college fulll time at age 47. I graduated from college with a Bachelors in CS and started in on my Masters at age 50. Yes that was a 4 year degree. Congatulations! That is impressive. I've just started an online masters in structural engineering and thought at 46 that was getting a little late! :-) Matt |
#44
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"Jose" wrote in message
In a post jiving somebody about "still being a student", you should not use the invisible letters HTML tag, as it gives the (almost certainly erronious) impression that you do not know about apostrophies, and should go back to school yourself. ![]() Certificate requirements are to read, speak, and understand English. Writing isn't mentioned. Besides, it's the 'good moral character' part that concerns me. D. (good catch!) |
#45
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In article .com,
Jay Honeck wrote: Here's the average age of pilots, comparing 1993 to 2003: [...] Here are the number of private certificates issued: [...] Both of these are a one-way trips, ladies and gentlemen. What the heck kind of GA are we going to have in 25 years, at this rate? What can we do to arrest this rate of decline? Clearly, one of the biggest factors in flying is the cost. I think I was one of the few people who added up _all_ of my aviation costs, and it was approximately $12,000 (I admit I could have cut some of those, but that's certainly within the ballpark for this area). Hopefully Sport Pilot will drive down the flying costs, but that remains to be seen. I think the second reason for declining GA is that unless you're born into an aviation family, there doesn't seem a popular "flying culture" for people in my generation (I was born in 1969). I think I will be derided for that statement, so it probably deserves some elaboration. I've been interested in some form of aviation all my life. I flew kites and did model rockets as a young kid. While I was always interested in things like R/C, there was nobody else I knew that did it, and my impression (which still holds true today) is that R/C is tough to do completely by yourself; building the model is one thing, but actually learning to fly it requires a mentor. Model rocketry was relatively easy to do at the time (you could buy a pre-built starter kit that required relatively little assembly). Once (I think I was 10), a relative who flew helicopters for the State Police landed in the field behind our house and took us on a quick ride (boy, _that_ was cool), but other than that, I had no experience with any sort of general aviation. There was a GA airport relatively close to where I grew up; everyone knew about it, but it seemed like nothing ever happened there. I drove up to it once while I was in high school; it seemed relatively deserted, with a bunch of dingy hangers. Certainly not the kind of place I'd want to hang out, and it didn't seem like there were a lot of planes going in and out of there to do plane watching. I didn't know anyone that had a plane, or did any sort of aviation at all (other than the relative who flew the helicopter as his job, but he was a distant relative and I think that was one of the few times I saw him), and as far as I know they had no airshows or any sort of community awareness type of program. So while I was interested in aviation, it seemed to be unobtainable/nonexistant in my area. Couple that with a family who, had the best intentions at heart, exerted a strong pressure during my entire childhood to be "normal" (whatever that means) and not do anything that other children didn't do, made me think that basically aviation was a non-starter. Fast forward to a few years ago. I've graduated college, got married, have a reasonable disposable income. I do the research, and decide to try learning to fly. We have a couple local GA airports, and one of the flying schools has a "intro to learning to fly" seminar. One thing leads to another, blah blah blah, I eventually get my private. But ... I've come to the realization that I'm probably not going to use my license again. Why? Well, cost is a factor, but not as big as you'd think. I make a decent living, so I could afford to fly. But a bunch of other factors are at work. First, my wife does not like flying. She has enough troubles with commerical aviation; it took a fair amount of negotiation for her to finally accept me learning to fly, but she stated that she is _no_ way going to go with me. End of story. Her concern is fear; she just is afraid of dying. She intellectually knows that this fear isn't rational, but that doesn't change the fact that she's still afraid, and I don't think anything would change that. And please, if you are thinking of suggesting that I buy her introductory flight lessons, save your typing; that would be the WORST thing in the world to do. She's the sort of person that strongly fights back if someone tries to push her into doing something she doesn't want to do, and I am sure she would simply refuse to take the lessons. Why does she feel this way? I'm not sure, but I think part of it is that she had no experience with flying as a child; I've been surprised by things that scare _me_ that don't scare her, until I find out that she had experienced these things as a small child. I bet if she had flown in GA planes as a young girl, it wouldn't bother her as an adult. This has a number of negative consequences for flying. This means no vacations, no trips to visit family, basically no extended trips of any kind (unless you have the kind of marriage where taking a vacation away from your spouse is acceptable; that's not the kind of marriage I have). This also affects money and/or time, but indirectly. You have to spend a fair amount of money on a hobby that is yours and yours alone, one that your spouse gets no enjoyment from. Depending on how your family deals with it's finances, that could be a major issue. But that's not the only factor at work. Another factor is basically I'm the _only_ pilot among my circle of friends and famly. Everyone else thinks that I'm nuts/crazy/going to kill myself. This isn't a huge negative factor, but it crops up a bunch of little ways. For example, once I saw an unusual amphibious airplane at the airport (I don't remember what it was). Normally the sort of thing you would probably chat about with your friends, right? Well, I don't have any friends that would find that interesting. That may seem like a minor thing, but it's just one example of the lack of an "aviation culture" .... that means that if you want to do aviation things, you have to _really_ want it, because your friends won't be there encouraging you. That's not to say that my friends DISCOURAGE me; they tolerate aviation as one of my many strange interests. But it's nothing I could share with them. Out of all my friends, only _one_ has accepted an offer to go flying with me, and he drives race cars as a hobby. So, you're probably going to say that I should _find_ some aviation friends. Well, I've tried. I have two co-workers who are interested in aviation. One got his license, one gave up midway, post-solo (I think money was the issue). The one who got his license is an adrenaline junkie who came close to killing himself and his friends the first time he took them up (I heard them chuckling about the story one day in the lunch room). Needless to say he's not the sort of guy I'd prefer to go flying with. Neither of them responded when I suggested doing aviation-related things away from work. Example: we work close to Andrews AFB, and they partner with the FAA to do altitude chamber flights for a ridiculously low fee (I think it was $50). I asked them if they would be interested in going; both declined. I ended up going by myself. Incidently, I think there were 12-15 people in the class. Most were corporate pilots who were required to take the training. A couple were from some aviation college (they came in together). I was the _only_ pilot from the local area. When I was learning to fly (at a local GA airport which actually was rather busy), there wasn't what you would call "hanger bums". The terminal was rather neat, and I would see the same people over and over, but we were all on a mission: learning to fly. The flight instructors were mostly time-builders, and they had a sort of exclusive "I'm better than you" attitude that didn't encourage a newbie to hang around with them. My instructor didn't have that attitude, but he was busy doing his thing and didn't really have spare time to hang out. I know that people deride time-builders, and I understand their arguments against them. However, it was sort of Hobson's choice; going to another airport would have added too much time to my hobby and basically would have been a non-starter. I've never seen the hanger BBQs that people talk about; there were a number of hangers there, but nobody hanging out in them. I joined a local pilots mailing list. This has sort of a ... well, it's a strange vibe is all I can say. Most of the people on the list are owners and have instrument ratings and I get the vague sense they poo-poo VFR renters (a lot of the discussion is proper IFR routing around the DC ADIZ and the right waypoints to put in their panel-mounted GPSes, for example). Maybe that's me reading too much into the list politics, I dunno. Example: I once posted asking if anyone would be interested in going to the Sport Pilot Expo in Florida, and I got zero response. There's no sense of community on this list; at least, none that I can detect. There aren't any get-togethers that I've seen, but even if there were, I'm not sure I would go. I'd have to go by myself (e.g., without the spouse) and it doesn't seem like they'd welcome me. Maybe they would, but it's sort of moot since they don't have any. So, I figured maybe this was just the local area, and there were just tons of pilots out there hanging out at other airports. So I flew to a number of airports in the vicinity (both during and after my training), and I even drove to some during trips back to where my wife grew up. The LARGE majority of these airports were deserted; most of the time I was the _only_ person at these airports. These were all visited on nice VFR days that would be packed at my home airport. Many of these airports had hangers that were collapsed and generally had the "no one has been here in a long time" feeling. Almost all of them were kinda depressing, frankly. So, I finally realized that my flying was going to be _me_, alone, flying to other airports that were mostly deserted, and no one else to share the experience with. I thought that was going to be enough to keep me interested, and maybe it would be ... but not at the current price. Maybe if Sport Pilot takes off a nice SLSA aircraft would be the answer (I'd probably have to buy it myself, since no one else is interested in sharing the cost). I can't speak for anyone else's experience, but I can't believe I'm alone in this. Certainly people on these newsgroups talk about their local pilot communities and how great they are. I don't doubt their experiences, but I don't know if it's just the area they live in, or they somehow had some "in" that I'm missing. I'm not sure if my experiences are part of the cause or part of the effect; is the lack of an aviation culture the result of declining experience, or the cause? I suspect they're interrelated. As a final note: one of the airports I visited, I met the airport manager, and asked him why his airport was so empty. His answer: "Well, everyone got old and moved away". Ironically, he thought Sport Pilot was a terrible idea. --Ken |
#46
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![]() "Ken Hornstein" wrote in message ... In article .com, ..snip ... Why does she feel this way? I'm not sure, but I think part of it is that she had no experience with flying as a child; I've been surprised by things that scare _me_ that don't scare her, until I find out that she had experienced these things as a small child. I bet if she had flown in GA planes as a young girl, it wouldn't bother her as an adult. ..snip --Ken Our local EAA group (221) flew 940 young eagles this year. I'm sure this early life experience will stick with these kids for a long time. I hope we all work to be sure that they will have the same opportunities that we have had in the NAS. Keep the spirit, Ken, more folks will come along to enjoy your passion. Sometime these things just happen by osmosis... ;-) |
#47
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![]() ".Blueskies." wrote Our local EAA group (221) flew 940 young eagles this year. I'm sure this early life experience will stick with these kids for a long time. I hope we all work to be sure that they will have the same opportunities that we have had in the NAS. IMHO, the best way to follow up on the young eagles flights, and get the kids in *learning* to fly, or wanting to have a career in aviation, is to found an aviation explorers group, or help one out, if there is one near you. It keeps the fire lit, and provides that long term push that is necessary to get into flying, and stay in it. CAP may be an option, but it would be much harder to start one of those groups. g -- Jim in NC -- Jim in NC |
#48
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Clearly, one of the biggest factors in flying is the cost. I think I
was one of the few people who added up _all_ of my aviation costs, and it was approximately $12,000 (I admit I could have cut some of those, but that's certainly within the ballpark for this area). That's 300% higher than the "ballpark" figure for around here. -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
#49
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First, my wife does not like flying.
If I had a nickel for every time I've heard this from a pilot, I'd be rich. What *is* it with you guys, all hanging around with gals who don't like to fly? (This started out being a joke-question, but upon reflection, I think I'll leave off the "smiley"... It's a damned serious question, really, and gets to the root of why so many guys ultimately quit flying...) -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
#50
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Jay Honeck wrote:
That's 300% higher than the "ballpark" figure for around here. I disbelieve you. My Cessna cost me half that ten years ago. George Patterson Coffee is only a way of stealing time that should by rights belong to your slightly older self. |
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