Evidence to the contrary.Bob wrote:Tad cannot be trusted to correct his mistakes.
http://www.kitestrings.org/viewtopic.php?p=3242#p3242
http://www.kitestrings.org/viewtopic.php?p=8658#p8658
Evidence to the contrary.Bob wrote:Tad cannot be trusted to correct his mistakes.
http://www.ushawks.org/forum/viewtopic.php?f=2&t=463Bob Kuczewski - 2019/04/20 20:20:13 UTC
USHPA's Risk Mitigation StrategyPssst . . . Hey big insurance company...
Don't worry about all those accidents and deaths. We have a bullet proof risk mitigation strategy.
Here's how it works. We let our big businesses get away with whatever they want, and we make sure everyone is afraid to testify against them. And if anyone does dare to testify (they almost never do), we publicly smear them, take away all their ratings, and turn the whole hang gliding community against them.
Pretty cool, huh?March 9th, 2019 ... 2 more dead at Torrey.Big insurance company (slowly backing away) wrote:
Sure. Right. Whatever you say.
Uh ... we'll look into getting back to you on that policy.
Don't call us, we'll call you ... maybe.
Pity the Board didn't get somone like Dennis Pagen to talk to you, bring you back into the fold, harness your energy, settle the matters without you doing any serious damage to the sports.Bob Kuczewski - 2011/03/09 02:33:49 UTC
This is going to sound cold, but I believe people have a right to make their own choices. I don't want a "nanny state" where anyone is telling me what I can and can't do ... for my own good. The sport of hang gliding would surely not exist if that thinking were carried to its logical extreme. There's something bred into all living things that urges them toward taking some degree of risk in their lives. Those who want to forbid that risk are essentially snuffing out the human spirit itself. I can't support that. I do support information. I support good information. I support exposing bad information. But I don't support dictating what anyone can or can't do. The fundamental principle of economics (and evolution) is two words: "people choose".
Davis wrote:I saw BK in action at the BOD. I would have shot him.
Serious damage was being done to the sport within the first half hour of its inception. It was being done to the sport when I entered it at the beginning of April in 1980. It just kept getting worse, and worse, and...Bob Kuczewski - 2013/03/10 18:20:34 UTC
I first learned about Tad Eareckson when I was Regional Director and the USHPA Board circulated a letter he had written (with intention to send?) to the FAA about some dangerous practices in hang gliding.
The Board's knee-jerk response was to try to take some kind of legal action to silence Tad. I indicated that I thought we shouldn't be sending our lawyers in as our first response, and that maybe we should have someone talk with him first. So Dennis Pagen volunteered, and I believe the matter was settled without any serious damage to the sport.
...worse and it's in death spiral mode now and there's nothing out there that's gonna turn that around.Steve Morris - 2010/03/31 23:58:54 UTC
In 2009 there were several serious hang gliding accidents involving pilots on the HG forum (or who had close friends on the forum that reported that these accidents had occurred). In each case there was an immediate outcry from forum members not to discuss these accidents, usually referring to the feelings of the pilots' families as a reason to not do so. In each case it was claimed that the facts would eventually come out and a detailed report would be presented and waiting for this to happen would result in a better informed pilot population and reduce the amount of possibly harmful speculation.
In each of these cases I have never seen a final detailed accident report presented in this forum. So far as I can tell, the accident reporting system that has been assumed to exist here doesn't exist at all, the only reports I've seen are those published in the USHPA magazine. They are so stripped down, devoid of contextual information and important facts that in many cases I have not been able to match the magazine accident report with those mentioned in this forum.
The end result has been that effective accident reporting is no longer taking place in the USHPA magazine or in this forum. Am I the only one who feels this way?
...of federal law.Jim Rooney - 2008/11/20 22:25:38 UTC
Something to bear in mind... the tug's weaklink is three strand.
For clarity... A normal single loop weaklink would be considered two. A tandem double loop is considered four.
In the tandem setup, the "weaklink" in the system is at the tug end, not the glider.
Ya'll seem to be missing this.
Once you go beyond three strand... you're not using a weaklink. If the weaklink goes, you're getting the rope.
Paul found this out the hard way in Texas.
Yeah, you seem to be able to respond to Tad's posts just fine whenever you think you can score or appear to. It's only when you're really obviously painted into corners that you go blind, deaf, and dumb.Bob Kuczewski - 2019/04/11 06:57:51 UTC
I fear that poor Tad may be losing his mind. He keeps addressing me by name and asking me questions on his forum ...
Maybe Tad forgot that I can't answer any of his "Hey Bob" questions ...
...because he banned me?
That's all that's left, Bob.* No posts or links about the toxic Bob Kuczewski, Scott C Wise, Tad Eareckson and related people, or their material or organizations. ALL SUCH POSTS WILL BE IMMEDIATELY DELETED.
which had all three of us still on equal footing - ignoring the fact that Scott doesn't have an organization - plus all Jack's Bob-specific paranoid ranting. I'm glad all the latter stuff is gone 'cause I was always a good bit jealous of and felt a good bit slighted by all that WAY disproportionate extra attention you got.These people are poison to this sport and are permanently banned from this site in every possible way imaginable. They have been banned over and over again by multiple websites and organizations.
http://www.chgpa.org/forums/viewtopic.php?f=2&t=2467Jack Axaopoulos - 2009/11/10 13:36:53 UTC
I still dont know if I buy into the stronger weak link hypothesis.
http://ozreport.com/forum/viewtopic.php?t=24846Jim Rooney - 2007/07/22 22:30:28 UTC
I've heard it a million times before from comp pilots insisting on towing with even doubled up weaklinks (some want no weaklink). I tell them the same thing I'm telling you... suck it up. You're not the only one on the line. I didn't ask to be a test pilot. I can live with your inconvenience.
None of these mainstreamer motherfuckers has ever heard of a weak link of any kind for any purpose in any application before. Maybe you should start a Bob Show topic to get this issue properly sorted out once and for all.Davis Straub - 2011/08/26 14:04:52 UTC
We had six weaklink breaks in a row at Zapata this year. Russell Brown (tug pilot, tug owner, Quest Air owner) said go ahead and double up (four strands of Cortland Greenspot). He knows I used his Zapata weaklink in Big Spring (pilots were asked to tell the tug pilot if they were doing that).
Bob Kuczewski wrote:I've started this topic to gather views as to the quality of the USHPA hang gliding pilot proficiency system (rating system) as expressed in USHPA SOP 12-02 (specifically 12-02.1 through 12-02.11). In particular, I'd like to see discussions about any items that pilots might feel are so wrong that they should be changed.
JoeF wrote:Erase the money trail from the text. Erase the sieve of membership from the text.
Erase the revocable text. Erase u$hPa from the text.
Have zero mention of paragliding, towing, tandem, unenforceable tribal control matters.
Focus just on raw knowledge and raw skills.
Then overlay creative comments with creative helpful links for the mentors and pilots.
Erase text that implies that an org is required for procedures, practice, and performance; keep the text so that the participant remains 100% responsible. Encourage log-diary with notes from many mentors along the way.
Bob Kuczewski - 2019/05/14 08:47:47 UTC
Ryan Voight is a second generation hang gliding instructor (son of Paul Voight). Ryan was literally raised in the sport of hang gliding. He eventually started his own school at one of the best and most consistent hang gliding sites in the U.S. - Point of the Mountain, Utah. Eventually, Ryan joined his father on the USHPA Board as part of a father/son dynasty.
So what happened? Let's listen in as Ryan tells us all what's wrong with the sport of hang gliding:Well then, if the entire sport is plagued with poor instruction techniques and practices, then shouldn't Ryan's school have flourished? Shouldn't Ryan be running the most successful school in the world and turning out more new pilots every week while the rest of the sport flounders?Ryan Voight - 2019/05/14 02:28:43 UTC
I believe ADAMANTLY that the failings of the sport to thrive are almost entirely due to poor instruction techniques and practices.
Ryan even produced this great introductory video:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uvhzoVC1UqM
The video does an excellent job of showing how students are coached through picking up the glider, running on flat ground, and eventually launching and landing from a small hill. It reminds me of my own training progression back in 1978. It also reminds me of what I've seen by instructors from coast to coast for decades. Is that the "secret" that's somehow going to save hang gliding? Really?
Let's see what else Ryan has to say ...What!?! Here's a second generation hang gliding instructor and second generation USHPA Board member who knows the secret of teaching and was running his own school in one of the best flying sites in the country ... and now he's "done teaching"? He's "moved on"? What could have possibly gone wrong?I moved on, I'm done teaching, and very done trying to help USHPA. Hang gliding isn't even that big a part of my life anymore... I sold my T2, and just have one glider now, a Falcon. Saturday was my second flying day in 2019...
Ryan seems to want to blame "USHPA", but Ryan *is* USHPA. He's as close as we have to "hang gliding royalty" in this country. Both Ryan and his father have been extremely influential in creating the "USHPA" that we have today.
The sad fact is that Ryan and his jokester father are exactly what's wrong with USHPA. They've been calling the shots for their own business interests for decades now. The wreckage all around them is theirs. They own it.
Neither Ryan nor his father Paul would support the reforms needed to turn USHPA around. Neither would support open voting by the USHPA Board. Neither would support separate divisions for hang gliding and paragliding. Neither would support balancing the Torrey Pines Soaring Council. Neither would support a hang gliding club at our most famous flying site. Neither would support due process for pilots. They both sat idly by while Mark Forbes and Tim Herr called the shots.
And now Ryan Voight steps forward with a training video as if that's all that's needed?
Let me be clear. Ryan Voight and Paul Voight and the majority of the USHPA Board have driven the sport of hang gliding into the ground for their own self serving reasons. There has been too much interest in the business of hang gliding and not enough interest in the sport of hang gliding. Ryan Voight is the poster child for this epidemic, and he's gotten what he deserves.
When in hang gliding has total anything of quality ever pushed total crap significantly out of existence?Well then, if the entire sport is plagued with poor instruction techniques and practices, then shouldn't Ryan's school have flourished?
He certainly would if anything he was teaching had any foundation in reality.Shouldn't Ryan be running the most successful school in the world and turning out more new pilots every week while the rest of the sport flounders?
The video equivalent of the excellent book, Towing Aloft, by Dennis Pagen and Bill Bryden.Ryan even produced this great introductory video:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uvhzoVC1UqM
Ryan Voight - 2015/02/22
If you teach them how to pull the glider with the harness they'll learn to steer the glider through weight shift simply by running toward their target.
069-25104
http://c2.staticflickr.com/2/1572/26142964830_289bc3f2cb_o.png
At all times totally adhering to hang gliding's global cardinal rule of never getting a hand anywhere near the control bar.The video does an excellent job of showing how students are coached through picking up the glider, running on flat ground, and eventually launching and landing from a small hill.
I would've never had the slightest doubt.It reminds me of my own training progression back in 1978.
And yet we still have never seen the tiniest scrap of video evidence of anybody anywhere pulling the glider with the harness to steer it through weight shift simply by running toward his target. Go figure.It also reminds me of what I've seen by instructors from coast to coast for decades.
Gotta admit... It's the best kept secret in the entire world history of aviation.Is that the "secret" that's somehow going to save hang gliding? Really?
I'm all ears. 'Specially since we no longer get to hear anything Jim Keen-Intellect Rooney has to say about anything.Let's see what else Ryan has to say ...
Almost kindle's a spark of hope for the sport.I moved on, I'm done teaching, and very done trying to help USHPA. Hang gliding isn't even that big a part of my life anymore... I sold my T2, and just have one glider now, a Falcon. Saturday was my second flying day in 2019...
I'm wondering what could've possibly gone right.What!?! Here's a second generation hang gliding instructor and second generation USHPA Board member who knows the secret of teaching and was running his own school in one of the best flying sites in the country ... and now he's "done teaching"? He's "moved on"? What could have possibly gone wrong?
Now that:Ryan seems to want to blame "USHPA", but Ryan *is* USHPA. He's as close as we have to "hang gliding royalty" in this country.
No shit.Both Ryan and his father have been extremely influential in creating the "USHPA" that we have today.
And we're inheriting it.The sad fact is that Ryan and his jokester father are exactly what's wrong with USHPA. They've been calling the shots for their own business interests for decades now. The wreckage all around them is theirs. They own it.
Sound like excellent Bob Show material so far.Neither Ryan nor his father Paul would support the reforms needed to turn USHPA around. Neither would support open voting by the USHPA Board.
Lemme show ya how to write:Neither would support separate divisions for hang gliding and paragliding. Neither would support balancing the Torrey Pines Soaring Council. Neither would support a hang gliding club at our most famous flying site. Neither would support due process for pilots.
in a less sickening style...Neither Ryan nor his father Paul would support the reforms needed to turn USHPA around. Neither would support open voting by the USHPA Board. Neither would support separate divisions for hang gliding and paragliding. Neither would support balancing the Torrey Pines Soaring Council. Neither would support a hang gliding club at our most famous flying site. Neither would support due process for pilots.
Neither Ryan nor his father Paul would support:
- the reforms needed to turn USHPA around
- open voting by the USHPA Board
- separate divisions for hang gliding and paragliding
- balancing the Torrey Pines Soaring Council
- a hang gliding club at our most famous flying site
- due process for pilots
The way you did when the motherfuckers were going after Yours Truly - to settle the matter without me doing any serious damage to the sport. And can you even begin to imagine where the sport would be today if the matter HADN'T been settled without me doing any serious damage to it? I totally shudder to think.They both sat idly by while Mark Forbes and Tim Herr called the shots.
He stepped forward with it well over four years ago. And Team Kite Strings tore his ass to shreds on it. But it didn't make...And now Ryan Voight steps forward with a training video as if that's all that's needed?
...the slightest degree of actual difference. Hang gliding operates on popular and respected opinions rather than fundamental aeronautical theory.Michael Grisham - 2019/05/14 00:02:18 UTC
Ryan,
I was wondering how much you spent on a 5 minute video with over 2.6 million views (in four years) promoting simple basic hang glider instruction.
Ryan captures everything the sport needs to promote hang gliding in his video. The basic elements, a small safe clear area, a good instructor, a small training hill, and a hang glider are all that is needed or required. Every metropolitan area in America should have a city or county park as depicted in Ryan’s video.
Read the viewer comments.
Ryan holds the key to breathe new life into Hang Gliding.
Thank you Ryan.
Lead the way.
For something new and different.Let me be clear.
http://www.ushawks.org/forum/viewtopic.php?f=2&t=463Ryan Voight and Paul Voight and the majority of the USHPA Board have driven the sport of hang gliding into the ground for their own self serving reasons.
Bob Kuczewski - 2011/03/09 02:33:49 UTC
This is going to sound cold, but I believe people have a right to make their own choices. I don't want a "nanny state" where anyone is telling me what I can and can't do ... for my own good. The sport of hang gliding would surely not exist if that thinking were carried to its logical extreme. There's something bred into all living things that urges them toward taking some degree of risk in their lives. Those who want to forbid that risk are essentially snuffing out the human spirit itself. I can't support that. I do support information. I support good information. I support exposing bad information. But I don't support dictating what anyone can or can't do. The fundamental principle of economics (and evolution) is two words: "people choose".
Rooney got a small taste of what he deserves. Ryan got...There has been too much interest in the business of hang gliding and not enough interest in the sport of hang gliding. Ryan Voight is the poster child for this epidemic, and he's gotten what he deserves.
...what he wanted.Ryan Voight - 2019/05/14 02:28:43 UTC
Hang gliding isn’t even that big a part of my life anymore... I sold my T2, and just have one glider now, a Falcon. Saturday was my second flying day in 2019...
You also forgot to say that...Bill Cummings - 2019/05/15 18:44:54 UTC
Power to the pilots not an ever shrinking board
For somewhere around the last five years the US Hawks Hang Gliding Association has been making decisions on how, "To Promote, Protect, and Serve Recreational Hang Gliding," and doing it on line, for free, and on the day something comes up. (meeting continuously, people can participate, bring items to the board )
The voting procedures in place allow for your second, third, (and so on) choices to be counted if your first choice doesn't prevail.
The clubs throughout the country are integrated have their own web page/forums (free) that can be found with the other clubs' web pages/forums on the central US Hawks website.
(IF I FORGOT TO SAY IT - IT'S FREE.)
...all your airtime, altitude gains, miles, skills, experiences, accomplishments, qualifications, contributions count for total shit. It's only hang gliding if you got to launch altitude in the backseat of a truck with your glider bagged up on the racks. All you flatlanders, national competitions champs, world XC record holders can go fuck yourselves.Joe Faust - 2018/04/20 21:40:42 UTC
Have zero mention of paragliding, towing, tandem, unenforceable tribal control matters.