Low Turns to Final
Go figure. Reminds me of all the crash videos we don't see from Torrey related to the kinds of extremely dangerous practices in which Brad Geary and Max Marien engaged with their child passengers. And with that being such a public and visible venue you'd think there'd be countless scores.Telepilot - 2016/12/30 15:57:11 UTC
It's funny. We see all kinds of videos like this but we rarely see the crash videos.
And we CERTAINLY wouldn't wanna do shit about any of the issues behind any of the crash videos of which we have actual countless scores.
1. Good thing he didn't wind it up tight enough to get it comfortably within the RLF requirements. You'd have probably peed yourself.That video made me cringe, btw.
2. And you were totally OK with the videos this stupid Aussie Methodist motherfucker posted of his flight two summers later five miles to the NorthEast up the Colville River Valley in which he missed launching unhooked off of THIS:
42-B20118
http://c1.staticflickr.com/9/8730/28924928706_e3b352cc4b_o.png
by one unlikely and extremely lucky...
03-A01714
http://c2.staticflickr.com/8/7590/28852422592_99592ce259_o.png
...break.
You mean where they fly level for well over a football field of length after rolling out onto final? Only by the Grace of God have we not had any fatalities. Or maybe we have and Tim Herr has shredded the reports. Hard to say for sure.He was solo, but I've seen similar videos of tandem landings.
Joe Stearn's.(I'm not going to post someone else's...
Un fucking believable that THIS:...video here but I wish those who have a crash video might consider posting it.)
http://www.hanggliding.org/viewtopic.php?t=34930
Injured pilot needs help
is being considered the slightest bit relevant to bored-out-of-their-minds experienced professional tandem drivers flawlessly pulling off their intended hot approaches fifteen times a day all season long, season after season, without the slightest evidence of any problems of any description.Joe Stearn - 2017/01/12 17:34:18 UTC
Basically I picked a spot near the edge of a large field (rather than using the extent of the field), misjudged the start of my downwind for the spot I was aiming at (I was too low) but didn't accept that fact and make necessary corrections (i.e. land ahead of my chosen spot). Consequently I found myself making a near 180 degree turn low to the ground and didn't have enough height to complete it.
Right Ryan. Give everybody the impression that these awards are the result of some kind of democratic process based on a consensus of responsible evaluation.Ryan Voight - 2016/12/30 16:04:56 UTCThis guy solicited nominations for Instructor of the Year from anyone and everyone he's ever dealt with... he had a LOT of submissions... almost was our 2017 USHPA Instructor of the Year.
For the benefit of those of you less fluent in u$hPa-Speak... ONE appointed u$hPa/Industry Insider selects/ignores whomever the fuck he feels like.The United States Hang Gliding and Paragliding Association, Inc. - 2015/03/14
03. Executive Committee
07. Membership and Communication
17. Awards
06. Criteria
-J. Instructor of the Year
01. The Instructor of the Year Hang Gliding Award and the Instructor of the Year Paragliding
Award recognize the importance of our certified hang gliding and paragliding Instructors in promoting safe flying practices and contributing to the positive image and growth of our sport. Innovative approaches that the instructor uses to enhance safety or teaching will be a significant part of the evaluation.
02. Criteria
-a. Nominations should include letters of support from at least three students.
-b. Considerations will include effectiveness as a teacher, being a safety role-model, and other factors that the nominating parties deem worthy of recognition.
-c. One award per sport per year may be given.
-d. Awards Chair will solicit evaluations from Directors and Administrators in the
candidate's region.
The way Kelly Harrison did before that one momentary and unfortunate lapse with respect to several minor risk management issues.In his defense however- he has come a long way over the years...
Yes, I too was horrified thinking about the consequences of something going wrong with what he was doing....and who he is, today, is not the same guy he was once.
'Specially after we learn how to roll control a glider no hands on the ground through weight shift alone by running towards the high wing. Whenever I see videos of people doing that my admiration swells beyond all bounds.Maturity develops over time, ya know? True for all of us...
Right. That always works well to save us from going into the safety business.Glad you asked! (even if you weren't asking me LOL!)Red Howard - 2016/12/29 01:16:35 UTC
Hey, enough of this, already. You need to share your wisdom and expertise on how to learn to do dangerous stuff safely. I'm sure that I am not the only one waiting to learn what you can teach us. What do you recommend?
In a nutshell, it's all risk management and progression.
Wrong. There's a difference between being competent at and doing something demanding of experience, skill, judgment - like dune flying, XC over injun country, aerobatics - and taking risks - like skipping a hook-in check because you just did hang check before getting on the ramp.Elaborating- so you want to do something risky... but you want to learn to do it as safely as it can reasonably be done, right?
See above.Well... what is "risky"?
I'm OK to fly this bent pin pro toad release because Davis has never had a problem with his (hundreds of tows) and Davis Link because Davis is happy to have a relatively weak weaklink and has never had a serious problem with the Greenspot 130, just an inconvenience now and then. Plus that equipment has an astoundingly long track record.Risk = How likely is it go go bad + How bad is it if it goes bad.
Ever consider learning to:It's important to recognize those two elements seperately.
- spell?
- run spellchecks on your material before posting it?
Just kidding.
Like when we learn how to recover from a standard aerotow weak link induced increase in the safety of the towing operation - tandem, in smooth air, at two thousand feet, with the glider tracking straight and level in the center of the Cone of Safety.To create a proper learning environment... one where mistakes can be made (and not just survived, but learned from)...
PROBABLY. But certainly not when nothing bad - beyond a minor inconvenience - is possible....that probably means addressing the "how bad is it if it goes wrong" side of the equation.
Exceptionally easily reachable releases, the safest possible weak links...Learning and practicing is the biggest way we alter the "how likely is it to go bad" side... so when you're just learning something new, not much you can do there... more on that in a second though.
Minimizing how bad the outcome will be if (when?) things go wrong, is how we all hopefully learned to hang glide in the first place. Forgiving equipment...
Really hard to go wrong with low and slow in aviation....forgiving conditions, small hill and low altitude, slow airspeeds.
http://www.chgpa.org/forums/viewtopic.php?f=2&t=2467Never quite having enough rope to hang ourselves...
weak links
Jim Rooney - 2007/08/01 13:47:23 UTC
Whatever's going on back there, I can fix it by giving you the rope.
Have you ever actually taught anybody any skills, Ryan? Can you show me an example from:...until our skill (how likely is it to go bad) was built up.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uvhzoVC1UqM
Great example, Ryan. If only we could properly deal with the epidemic of fatalities we're getting from people trying to advance too rapidly into aerobatics.The other part- how likely is it to go bad- can be managed during the learning process by following a progression. If you want to learn to loop your hang glider, for example, there's a super long list of incrimental baby steps that can be followed, before even getting any kind of inverted.
Another terrific example. But how 'bout a Joe Stearn half killing himself in smooth air at the Brace Mountain Happy Acres putting green because he compromised his approach in order to nail an imaginary old Frisbee in an imaginary center of the Brace Mountain Happy Acres putting green?If you want to learn to land down-wind-up-hill, you don't fly straight at your favorite launch slope when it's blowing in strong enough that it's ridge soarable. Maybe you land uphill, but still into the wind first... learn and feel how the roundout is slightly different, and how the ground skim is shortened, with the flare window opening and closing sooner. Then maybe do it in no wind. Then maybe do a steeper slope. Eventually, progressively working up to whatever your end goal may be.
How I wish participants in this sport understood that. Just think of all the lives that could be saved.Manage- and mitigate- the risk of learning the thing... find ways you can practice and repeat, which will reduce your risk of doing whatever it is you are driven to do. Make a plan, break it down into individual elements, identify stepping stones to work up to it. Isolate the skill set needed, and find ways to build and sharpen these skills, one at a time, before entering a situation where you'll need to execute several complex skills in succession (or worse, simultaneously).
Cite some relevant examples from the sport. Cite ONE. How is this the least bit relevant to the Jesse Fulkersin, Karen Carra, Tomas Banevicius, Nancy Tachibana, Jeff Bohl, Larry Heidler stuff we're actually seeing?Learning, itself, isn't actually all that hard... even learning hard stuff... but combining being analytical and creative and formulating your own curriculum and training program... that's where people struggle. It's intimidating, to try to sit down and wrap your mind around how to go about it... people often seem to find it mentally easier to just "go for it" and learn by doing
If only we had more Ryan Voights out there guiding us all through our perpetual student journeys.It is probably easier on the brain... but for sure it can be harder on the body, the community, and unfortunately often it ends of being harder on the loved ones...
And so stunningly little relevance.Stoubie - 2016/12/29 17:15:29 UTC
They do it because it is fun and that is the point of the sport, to do it because its fun.So much irony it hurts my head...NMERider - 2016/12/29 18:31:55 UTC
I have had enough acquaintances whose idea of fun was tantamount to playing Russian Roulette.
And AIRTHUG's current tagline:
Speaking of irony.Shut up and fly.
By the way Ryan... If you're such a great and prolific teacher how come none of your products are teaming up with you in stressing the importance of these issues or beating you to the draw?