I've had the same experience:- A few years ago I introduced a friend to 
gliding. He enjoyed the flying but wasn't prepared to spend all day hanging 
around for his turn in the glider. Instead he went to the private gliding 
school that was operating at Byron Bay at the time. He much preferred to pay 
more to book a lesson and turn up knowing he'd be in a glider a few minutes of 
his arrival and leaving directly after the flight.

Lake Keepit is a great solution to learning gliding but people need to 
experience the joy of gliding and decide to invest their time and money and 
travel to spend a few days there. How many other every day year-round gliding 
schools are there in Australia?

Clubs could offer options to students: 

1. Pay the club rate for renting a 2 seater or motor glider. Turn up early and 
help get the glider out and wait your turn to fly.

or 

2. Pay a premium rate for a booked appointment with a glider and instructor 
ready.

Providing both isn't going to be easy to implement in a club situation. Club 
members still need to do the work of D/I ing and shifting gliders etc, but it's 
not impossible and I'm fairly sure it's what people want.


Cheers,

Greg Wilson





---- On Tue, 31 Jan 2017 10:46:46 +1100 Robert Izatt 
<[email protected]> wrote ---- 

and Classic example - my son is a RAAF Instructor and a couple of the young 
guys in his squadron wanted to try gliding so he sent them to his old club. 
They went out paid their money and sat all day and helped push and retrieve 
gliders and finally got a short flight about 3 in the afternoon. They went back 
individually the next weekend, same thing, and one missed out because the 
weather came in late. They didn’t make a fuss about what they did for a living 
or their actual skill levels - no one knew. They just couldn’t invest that much 
time on a weekend. They didn’t go back. I have seen this dozens of times



On 30 Jan. 2017, at 8:10 pm, James McDowall <[email protected]> 
wrote:

I first came into contact with gliding in the early 1960's when my father took 
up gliding to satisfy an itch dating back to the late 1940's when he helped 
build a glider that ultimately ended up with the fledgling ASC.

In those days, many people would spend their weekends (or perhaps do a two week 
course) sitting on the side of the airfield in all sorts of weather waiting for 
the chance to do a few circuits or if they were really lucky a soaring flight. 
Time wasn't an issue and no one thought too much about spending their Saturday 
nights in primitive accommodation.

Fifty plus years later society has changed and flying for most is regarded in 
the same as taking a bus trip. The wonder of flying has been lost on most. Our 
WW2 pilots who formed the backbone of post war GA and recreational flying are 
gone as is the connection with their exploits - how many kids today will rub 
shoulders with a RAAF pilot, let alone one who has seen active service?

Many sports are struggling to attract newcomers - especially in country areas 
which were the backbone of gliding. Tennis courts are ploughed under, football 
clubs merging to stay afloat and even bowls clubs closing.

Whilst there are many reasons one only has to talk to fathers with school age 
children. Their weekends are driven by activities planned around the kids. 
These activities are so highly organised to be risk free and non-competitive 
you really wonder if there is any long lasting benefit to anyone as their seems 
to be no sense of achievement. Throw in the thuggery of social media and 
non-conformance is not tolerated. Taking the kids to an airfield to sit on the 
edge of an airfield all day would probably be regarded as a form of child abuse!

But the biggest factor governing human behaviour today is TIME. Whether it is 
true or not the community is convinced that it is time poor - so poor that we 
cant even cook for ourselves for example. Everything we consider buying is now 
presented as so many dollars per week or month - we live in pay by the month 
society. This is not conducive to a discretionary spend like flying. Add to 
this that there has been no real increase in wages for about a decade there is 
little doubt that or many in the community who would have been attracted to 
gliding fifty years ago can no longer consider it on economic grounds alone.

Unless gliding restructures itself to reflect the time constraints of society 
it will most certainly die. Unless students can make an appointment to take a 
lesson for example the completion rate of students will decline. Unless gliding 
aligns its independent operator rules with RA-Aus and RPL requirements and lets 
motor glider operations occur beyond the club system it will lose those people. 
It must embrace self launching and see any other form of launch as ancient 
history.

The future of gliding requires the GFA to look into the future and at the 
society around them, and recognise that the club, state association and 
national association model is dead and re-model the relationship between itself 
and the gliding fraternity. OR if that is too hard hand the whole lot over to 
RA-Aus or ELAAA if they will have the disfunctional mess.








On Mon, Jan 30, 2017 at 6:29 PM, Richard Frawley <[email protected]> 
wrote:
i suggest you have a reader failure then, do try a reboot.
 
 
 
 > On 30 Jan 2017, at 6:08 PM, Mike Borgelt 
<[email protected]> wrote:
 >
 > My iPad sometimes tells me " this message has no content"
 > I'm surprised it didn't in this case.
 >
 > Mike
 >
 >> On 30 Jan 2017, at 2:33 PM, Richard Frawley 
<[email protected]> wrote:
 >>
 >> interesting, but in the end perhaps irrelevant.
 >>
 >> Analysis will show that the base driving interest that was present in 
the primary age group during the halcyon period no longer exists and likely 
never will again. There was in the people of that time an unsatisfied latent 
demand to express themselves through control and command that flying gave 
purpose to. What developed via clubs was in response to an inherent demand and 
limitations of that time.
 >>
 >> That core need is no longer apparent in the wider community. Flying 
no longer offers natural attraction but to a small number of our population, 
which by observation is getting smaller and smaller.  As such there is no 
longer the need for response in the manner that was previously provided.
 >>
 >> As to what gliding will be in 20 years time will matter little in 
terms of what the GFA does today. As needs change and new services are required 
then those services will be provisioned if demand is sufficient, as that is the 
way of things human.
 >>
 >> As new people do cycle into GFA management on a regular basis, that 
is a good thing, as flexibility and adaption are likely to be the nett result 
which is what i observed during my 3 years on the exec.
 >>
 >>
 >>
 >>
 >>
 >>
 >>
 >>
 >>
 >>
 >>
 >>
 >>
 >>
 >>
 >>
 >>
 >>
 >>
 >>
 >>
 >>
 >>
 >>
 >>
 >>
 >>
 >>> On 30 Jan 2017, at 3:50 PM, emillis prelgauskas 
<[email protected]> wrote:
 >>>
 >>> Thank you all for the delightful conversation at ‘GFA negative 
advertising……'
 >>>
 >>> I thought I’d start fresh, on some items that move away from that 
thread above.
 >>>
 >>> It surprises me that the ‘but you are bashing the GFA’ legion 
didn’t pipe up.
 >>> Perhaps it was because GFA are bashing themselves up in their 
Pravda list.
 >>>
 >>> There are diverse views across the glider pilot nation about what 
GFA is:
 >>> - Some see GFA as being the whole of ’the sport'.
 >>> - Some see GFA as an administrative benefit or necessity to the 
sport
 >>> - Some (me) see this 67 year old organisation as having had its 
day and now being in  its own generated death throes.
 >>>
 >>> For all the reasons already enunciated by others - self 
destructive, dictatorial, creating silos of irrelevant hierarchal positions 
which will never be filled because there aren’t enough volunteers left, and so 
on.
 >>>
 >>> The biggest hurdle for GFA is the loss within itself in its 
corporate knowledge - all the current incumbents came into a fully formed sport 
and try to re-imagine it in their own image without a skeric of understanding 
of how things came to be. (e.g. they don’t know what ‘the Valentine Curve’ is)
 >>> ‘Those who don’t know their history are bound to repeat it’.
 >>>
 >>> With the benefit of longevity and a curiosity to track things 
(yes, I am the dude who did the quantitative measuring of successful and 
defunct clubs for the whole of Australia in the 1970s) I advise -
 >>>
 >>> - In 1949 the GFA was formed to be the barrier between glider 
pilots and ‘the Department’
 >>> - where glider pilots said ‘WE are the people who know how 
gliders work, they are not power planes, so we set rules appropriate to us
 >>> - helped by the proposition (a la ‘The Castle’) that the 
Australian Constitution does not regulate aviation (which didn’t exist when it 
was first written), hence aviation is regulated federally only by the consensus 
of the aviation community
 >>>
 >>> - That original bottom up driven model of regulation of the sport 
by the sport, in the best examples of participatory democracy, lasted until 1981
 >>> - By then the sport had grown to 100 clubs, about 5000 pilots, 
and enthusiasm and volunteer inputs to ‘our sport’ which got it there and was 
propelling it even higher
 >>> - So GFA has never been ‘the sport’, it has always been the 
external peripheral administrative element that we ‘needed to have’, and was 
thus always kept as small as possible.
 >>>
 >>> - So in 1981 the world changed, yes Richard, you are right. The 
system was re-written and has been re-written several more times since, by 
incumbents of their day who saw a great sport, and thought re-imagining it in 
their own image would both serve the sport and themselves well.
 >>>
 >>> - So gliding the sport declined to 2000 pilots in 50 or so clubs, 
with the unstated direction being the demise of the small clubs (less than 20 
members), leaving commercial servicing, schools and big clubs.
 >>>
 >>> We are indeed on track in that direction.
 >>>
 >>> The barriers to achieving the goals of that objective (a more 
‘professional' sport) is that it is being pressed onto the old model of 
volunteer cadre to achieve.
 >>> And people not being stupid, say things (as per the previous 
thread) ‘ ‘why would I work at making my kind of gliding fail or be 
inaccessible?’, and stuff like that.
 >>>
 >>> Gliding is not a franchise that GFA owns. So people choose to 
bale out when the onerous impositions exceed the benefit to them, assessed 
against their definition of ‘the sport’. With many then going to other sport 
aviation; a barrier to hoped-for flow the other way. (Their tales of woe 
unimpress aviators from other sport)
 >>>
 >>> GFA does not control gliding, despite continuous threats and 
intimidation issued by it/them. Glider pilots agree to follow rules that make 
sense because these keep us alive. GFA is overlaying this with rules addressing 
 ‘fear of litigation’ against themselves, to be shifted onto the volunteers.
 >>>
 >>> The current conversation, either in its form today or some future 
time, will result in the demise of the GFA. Glider pilots will find their own 
way to fly the kind of sport each group within the sport wants.
 >>> GFA doesn’t have the budget to follow through the promotion and 
support to create the sport in their image.
 >>> All the attempts so far (since 1981 to date) have thoroughly 
failed as noted above, and will continue to fail.
 >>>
 >>> Pilots and clubs (particularly the small ones) are right now 
debating internally what sort of sport they want. Paying lip service to ‘the 
authority’ and getting on with flying safely is a reality since 1924 (the 
oldest glider I have in my 2 dozen collection).
 >>>
 >>> Some pilots and clubs will decide to be ‘mucking about in boats’ 
style volunteering, and will attract like minded people.
 >>> Some pilots and clubs will go ‘hire & fly’ with commercial 
support; and ditto.
 >>> And all the other variants between.
 >>> And really few pilots will aspire to the GFA view of itself.
 >>>
 >>> Welcome to the real world folks.
 >>>
 >>> Emilis
 >>> (turn rant mode off)
 >>> _______________________________________________
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