Adam,

Thanks for your pragmatic words.  In the 1970's I was a 'hot' competition
pilot, flew at the 76 World comps, but could not keep up with the costs and
raised a family etc.  I flew for the family years once a month or so to keep
the love or hobby alive.  I got 3 diamonds, 750 etc and am still adding to
the ~4,000 hours.

I enjoy a week or 2 over summer barreling around 300 ~ 500 if conditions are
good and  always turn in to home to avoid outlanding. And I enjoy supporting
others at the camp.  Gliding would be real dull if there were no bragging
rights at sunset.

There are many aspects you have yet to discover so keep at it.  A few would
include:

1.      Getting all FAI badges signed up.
2.      Getting well above cloud base. See Kosciusko snow 10,000' below.
3.      Ridge flying.  Just imagine Kosciusko, Wilpena Pound, Mt Warning, or
Siding Springs 100 meters off one wing tip, yet easy final glide home under
the other.
4.      Or routinely touching down precisely on runway centerline [the white
bit, not just the black]
5.      Knowing where you want to be in 20 minutes [10 years?] and having
the skill to make it happen.

Try to keep the family interested also.  Camp by a lake so they can enjoy a
hot summers day.  And take them for a smooth glider flight regularly to
share the fun.

And I can recommend that back seat competition ride you talk about.  

My son once asked me why I do it.  I struggled.  He answered for me: "I
thought you did it because you love it."  And I do.

Go for it.

Alan Wilson
Canberra

-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Andrew
Hallam
Sent: Saturday, 28 August 2010 3:33 PM
To: Aus-Soaring
Subject: Re: [Aus-soaring] Death of a movement - start of a sport

Hi All,

Interesting discussion, especially since I am one of those new members who
is deciding whether or not to continue with gliding. 

Caveat: My (lack of) experience and my personal situation may, or may not,
be representative of others making similar decisions. 

I started gliding last year at age 42. I now have 21 hours solo time (10
flights), and have been fortunate to complete flights that meet all Silver C
requirements. So far it has been lot of fun, and resulted in a great sense
of achievement. From what I understand, I also approached learning to fly
gliders a little differently than most. (The journey so far is partly
documented at
http://www.hallam.id.au/journal/2009/11/3/learning-to-fly-gliders.html.)

I still have a *lot* to learn. I now need to decide whether to invest the
time and money in that learning. That means thinking about what the future
looks like if I do continue with gliding, and making a call on the
opportunity costs.

While the idea of flying in competitions is enticing I'm unlikely to be a
serious or regular competition pilot due to my age, the limited number of
hours I can fly each year, and the cost of a reasonable glider. Therefore,
thinking of soaring as a sport might not be realistic, for me. 

The most likely path, for me, seems to be treating soaring as more of a
hobby. Flying when I can, setting my own tasks, and maybe posting a few
flights on OLC. Competition flying is likely to be an occasional bonus
rather than a regular thing. I am wondering if that is going to be enough to
keep me interested.

If I do continue, some of the things I'd like to experience while finishing
my Glider Pilot Certificate are:

- More cross country soaring. Learning by doing via coaching in a dual
seater or pair flying with an experienced pilot.
- Graduating to a higher performance single seater (doesn't have to be the
latest and greatest, 
  just good enough to maximise my enjoyment at my skill level).
- Flying in a competition as a passenger in a dual seater.
- More training on all aspects of safety.
- More learning about soaring weather.

Longer term: 

- Some form of competition/challenge that encourages low hours pilots to
improve their skills (safely).*
- Organised flying with pilots of similar experience.

*Formal badge claims don't really interest me at this point, unless they are
needed to convey my level of experience to others.

As others have said, to the newcomer there appears to be a large nebulous
gap between solo and elite competition. Working out what your realistic
options are, and therefore what you can get out of soaring, can be
difficult. If you don't understand what you can achieve, it is more
difficult to commit the time and money to find out.

Feedback is welcome. 

Andrew



On 27/08/2010, at 11:09 PM, Tim Shirley wrote:

> Paul has said it all, and Mike B has made similar comments.  We need to
switch people on to the sport of gliding.  Not the grind of doing circuits
and going solo, but all the challenges that are available from unpowered
soaring flight.  Cross-country, wave soaring, competitions, badges, records.
The fun stuff.
>  
> We are not a low-cost flying training organisation - at least, we are not
today.  Gliding is a SPORT and  should be marketed as such.  If we want to
give scholarships, we should be looking at the incentive to continue, not
just the incentive to start.  For example, by paying for early X/C pilots to
go to coaching camps or to their first competitions.  That's what will hook
them.  Whereas a few free training flights won't help, because the money
runs out before the fun starts.
>  
> Being a sport means that the customers we target will be different, and
should include other flying disciplines, especially those where there is
limited sporting challenge.  Long term participation in our sport needs
people to have resources, including time and money as well as dedication,
enthusiasm and commitment.  
>  
> When I take a TIF I spend most of the time talking about the
possibilities.  I chat about the competitions, the long flights people do,
the fun of wave flying.  Anything to turn them on to the challenge, and away
from the impossible question "how much does it cost to learn?".
>  
> Yes, we have people who only want to soar gracefully above the airfield
for a couple of hours.  Yes, we have people who want to restore and fly
vintage sailplanes.  Yes, we need instructors to train newcomers.  And all
of that is terrific.  But it's not the right marketing pitch - which should
be, that this sport is seriously challenging, physically and mentally
demanding, and above all, heaps of FUN!
>  
> Cheers
>  
> Tim
>  
> se sono rose, fioriranno


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