Amen to that,  I know one guy who became an instructor for two months.  Once he 
saw all his mates going off having XC fun, while he was stuck in the back seat 
of a two seater.  Obviously this guy gave the instructing up!  He did however 
continue to contribute to the sport by doing Form2's for the club, lead and 
follows (now called coaching), treasurer, etc..
 
I guess it all comes down to cutting the big rubber band from the airfield 
before the XC bug really hits!  Having said that, I know someone who is the 
most competitive and driven person in the sky, hates to loose.  However, when 
there on the waves surfing, they like nothing more than 'hanging 10' on the 
front of there longboard while others carve it up infront of them! ie, without 
a competitive bone in their body while surfing.
 
So I guess it all comes down to 'each to their own'.  In my mind I think, why 
would anyone want to float around the home airfield or fly a wooden aircraft!!  
haha, sorry.  But for someone else, they'd look at my flying (high performance 
machines and racing) and think, why would anyone like to spoil the extasy of 
just going gliding/soaring.. 
 
As Gleb (from The Sunship Game movie) said in the 1970 US Nationals, "From 
childhood it was always a beautiful thing, I used to make model airplanes. I'd 
much prefer handlaunch gliders always, I find beauty in everything.  I find 
competition not beautiful, your storming that thing through air where it's all 
shaking, I find it grueling, difficult, wasteful of beauty." 
 
 
Regards
WPP
> Date: Tue, 21 Oct 2008 03:39:10 -0700> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]> To: [EMAIL 
> PROTECTED]> CC: [email protected]> Subject: Re: 
> [Aus-soaring] Where to from here?> > I was talking about the implication that 
> your 80% were too smart to do instructing - I wasn't implying they don't 
> contribute in other ways, just that (you say) they consciously decide to 
> leave instructing to others so they can fly more themselves. > > "I believe 
> they have kept their eye on the big picture, know what it is> really want and 
> not become a prisoner of the Instructors Roster"> > Generally the way to 
> become a prisoner of any roster is to not have enough others on the roster?> 
> > I think we're all entitled to retire eventually, or even just take a 
> sabbatical. But somebody has to do it.> > R. > > 
_________________________________________________________________

_______________________________________________
Aus-soaring mailing list
[email protected]
To check or change subscription details, visit:
http://lists.internode.on.net/mailman/listinfo/aus-soaring

Reply via email to