Easiest sites to learn foot launch.
And get used to not EVER doing anything stupid enough to need to.oden - 2013/03/29 17:27:39 UTC
New Hampshire
Not all landing area are going to be wide open like the aerotow field across the road from MS. In some cases, when things don't go as planned you will have to land in something that you would end up calling a postage stamp. Get used to landing in small areas, get used to setting up to land in small areas.
Positive about that? There are several people here on Kite Strings who might beg to differ.You won't find a place any better than Morningside for making you a great pilot.
Hang gliding in general sucks so much that it's pretty easy to stand out.No one else has the facility. Morningside is world renowned for a reason...
And......it isn't about Jeff... it's about the facility. You won't find anyplace like Morningside anywhere else.
http://ozreport.com/11.126
The Exxtacy landing accident at Morningside
...a totally awesome place for...Robert S. Poulios - 2007/06/25
I got to Morningside around noon yesterday (2007/06/24) and saw lots of people around a glider lying on the aerotow field grass. Police sirens and two ambulances were coming in behind me. Here's what I heard or saw:
- Pilot had just aerotowed and was coming in for landing. Winds were switchy, West then NW @ 10-12 with gusts.
- Pilot was not landing downwind, but heading mostly West on approach.
- Glider did flip, either near ground or when touching down.
- Pilot was conscious but could not move arms and/or legs.
- Green "Life Star" helicopter arrived approximately a half hour later. Took pilot to Dartmouth-Hitchcock Hospital in Hanover/Lebanon, New Hampshire. (The very best hospital around!)
- Pilot's wife (Debbie) was extremely distraught. She had videotaped flight but turned it off as he was coming in for expected uneventful landing.
- Later saw Mike Onorato's glider - his Exxtacy rigid wing. Both wing sections seemed intact, but one downtube was broken and the carbon fiber base bar was completely severed at each end.
...practicing standup landings.Debbie Onorato - 2007/06/27
Dear Micki and Al,
I am at the trauma center in Lebanon, New Hampshire called Dartmouth Hitchcock and I found their computer. I thought I would write and let you know how much I appreciate your email.
Mike is still in the ICU since Sunday. He is confirmed as being quadriplegic. I was informed in the ER on Sunday, but hoped 48 hours would maybe make the doctors wrong.
I cannot believe this nightmare. I know we will deal with this and I am grateful that it looks like he will not need a permanent ventilator. He has been trying hard since yesterday and they hope to take it out today.
Right now they are inserting something for protection from blood clots. I am planning on staying with him up here as long as my job and finances allow. He will eventually move to Gaylord Rehab in Wallingford, Connecticut.
Life as we knew it has changed forever and it was in an instant. He had a great flight and I watched and videotaped his landing. It was a good landing and I turned off the camera and then it happened about ten feet up.
Like Chris:You take it for what it is worth... it has extreme high value for teaching a pilot how to fly and giving you the chance to work on it without having to throw you off a mountain site when you aren't ready to yet.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4_yTHPgNxsk
05-03223
http://farm8.staticflickr.com/7411/14165628916_bbdc682e28_o.png
http://farm6.staticflickr.com/5120/14188732974_08536f5037_o.png
08-43827
here?
And DO be sure to ask them why:I know of several people that have come from Ellenville that had been thrown off the mountain and hated it. They got talked into coming to MS after almost giving up flying and fell in love with flying instead. The reason... the facility. Use it for what it is worth. Let it make you a better pilot or you'll be bound to end up regretting it later on.
Okay, so maybe the Big O Loop out in California may come close to comparing but it hasn't been around anywhere near as long as Morningside has.
- after the rest of The Industry zeroed in on 130 pound fishing line as the optimal standard aerotow weak link as a result of hundreds of thousands of tows worth of trial and error to determine that it met its expectation of breaking as early as possible in lockout situations but being strong and reliable enough to avoid frequent breaks from turbulence, they suddenly jumped to 200 without flight testing 140, 150, 160, and 180
- no one from Morningside has seen fit to comment on whether Zack Marzec would've been more or less killed on their 200
- Launching into thermal conditions on a Rooney Link without a keel attachment to trim the glider properly? It goddam bloody well IS.Brad Barkley - 2013/03/29 18:05:07 UTC
The tragic death of one pilot is no reason to dismiss an entire method of launch.
- Since when did we get the number of aerotow deaths down to one?
Name a SINGLE other fatality in the entire history of hang gliding in which there's no official fucking CLUE what went wrong and no recommendation whatsoever to reduce the likelihood of a rerun.Or, to put it another way, no method of launch is any safer or more dangerous than another.
Like maybe pro towing and weak link rating?All of them have their own variables...
Yeah asshole?...and required skill set.
- What's the SKILL SET Zack needed a little more work on to be able to handle that one safely?
- And how long do think it'll take johhnn to get up to adequate speed?