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View Full Version : Kawa Webinar - Thanks Everyone!!! (Plus a few thoughts...)


BobW
February 7th 19, 07:19 PM
Having just watched (36 hours after the fact) the SSA/Sebastian Kawa webinar
of the (U.S.) evening of Feb. 5, 2019 (link that worked for me below), am
"feeling the need" (ha ha!) to:

1) thank everyone involved - the (many) organizers; Sebastian Kawa; the
moderators; the "technologists"/technologies making it possible (with a
near-total-absence of half-way-around-the-globe
"interactional-verbal-stepping-on-one-another...IOW, "just like a face-to-face
conversation); the post-webinar-folks babysitting it "permanently to the WWW."
AWESOME job folks!!!

2) "do the electronic-community thing" and share some thoughts about
Sebastian's thoughts, from a non-competition/XC pilot's perspective (below,
below...).
- - - - - -

?registrantKey=764259933867 973900&type=ATTENDEEEMAILRECORDINGLINK
- - - - - -

Man! Watching that was damn near just like sitting around a campfire with
everyone involved...GREAT STUFF!!! What's not to like about enjoying a
conversation with an intelligent, focused, non-ego-maniacal, normal human
being having a shared interest? Life should always be so good.

I found it easy to listen to Sebastian from the perspectives (say) of when I
was a somewhat-tyronic ('opefully, as distinct from MORonic!) XC pilot, *and*,
from a multi-decadal-XC nutcase, with pretty much zero interest in actually
*participating* in competition soaring (as distinct from enjoying just about
every aspect of "mentally/occasionally-crewly supporting").

Funnily enough, other than (perhaps, dry chuckle) the greater wisdom from
eventually-acquired-experience, I really don't think the more-experienced-me
actually learned anything he didn't already strongly suspect "way back when."
Non-comprehensively and in no particular order: MacCready theory's a great
place upon which to begin basing one's philosophical approach to inter-thermal
speed control; disciplined thought matters/benefits; understanding risks (and
having plans to "acceptably mitigate, beforehand") matters; tactics as you
think you understand them really don't change with increasing experience.

In short, soaring's "merely" a matter of personal refinement of really basic
skills, regardless of one's chosen path - competition (of any sort), XC, local
ride-giving/flagpole-sitting/landing safely, whatever...

So for any newbies/wannabes who may futurely read this, my broad-brush input
is - basic stick skills aside, of course - give some active thought to
formulating a coherent-to-you framework of "what XC soaring is all about",
bounce your thoughts off some more experienced XC pilots by way of identifying
where you may be way off base (or, somewhat-related, not yet be considering
something of fundamental importance), and continue to have at it! Oh, and if
you ever find yourself imagining you "know everything you need to know" (or
worse, "know it ALL!"), either find something else more forgiving of life-risk
to do, or - *much* better! - re-think that particular conclusion.

Fun, fun, fun!!!

Bob W.

---
This email has been checked for viruses by AVG.
https://www.avg.com

February 7th 19, 09:16 PM
On Thursday, February 7, 2019 at 12:19:17 PM UTC-7, BobW wrote:
> Having just watched (36 hours after the fact) the SSA/Sebastian Kawa webinar
> of the (U.S.) evening of Feb. 5, 2019 (link that worked for me below), am
> "feeling the need" (ha ha!) to:
>
> 1) thank everyone involved - the (many) organizers; Sebastian Kawa; the
> moderators; the "technologists"/technologies making it possible (with a
> near-total-absence of half-way-around-the-globe
> "interactional-verbal-stepping-on-one-another...IOW, "just like a face-to-face
> conversation); the post-webinar-folks babysitting it "permanently to the WWW."
> AWESOME job folks!!!
>
> 2) "do the electronic-community thing" and share some thoughts about
> Sebastian's thoughts, from a non-competition/XC pilot's perspective (below,
> below...).
> - - - - - -
>
> ?registrantKey=764259933867 973900&type=ATTENDEEEMAILRECORDINGLINK
> - - - - - -
>
> Man! Watching that was damn near just like sitting around a campfire with
> everyone involved...GREAT STUFF!!! What's not to like about enjoying a
> conversation with an intelligent, focused, non-ego-maniacal, normal human
> being having a shared interest? Life should always be so good.
>
> I found it easy to listen to Sebastian from the perspectives (say) of when I
> was a somewhat-tyronic ('opefully, as distinct from MORonic!) XC pilot, *and*,
> from a multi-decadal-XC nutcase, with pretty much zero interest in actually
> *participating* in competition soaring (as distinct from enjoying just about
> every aspect of "mentally/occasionally-crewly supporting").
>
> Funnily enough, other than (perhaps, dry chuckle) the greater wisdom from
> eventually-acquired-experience, I really don't think the more-experienced-me
> actually learned anything he didn't already strongly suspect "way back when."
> Non-comprehensively and in no particular order: MacCready theory's a great
> place upon which to begin basing one's philosophical approach to inter-thermal
> speed control; disciplined thought matters/benefits; understanding risks (and
> having plans to "acceptably mitigate, beforehand") matters; tactics as you
> think you understand them really don't change with increasing experience.
>
> In short, soaring's "merely" a matter of personal refinement of really basic
> skills, regardless of one's chosen path - competition (of any sort), XC, local
> ride-giving/flagpole-sitting/landing safely, whatever...
>
> So for any newbies/wannabes who may futurely read this, my broad-brush input
> is - basic stick skills aside, of course - give some active thought to
> formulating a coherent-to-you framework of "what XC soaring is all about",
> bounce your thoughts off some more experienced XC pilots by way of identifying
> where you may be way off base (or, somewhat-related, not yet be considering
> something of fundamental importance), and continue to have at it! Oh, and if
> you ever find yourself imagining you "know everything you need to know" (or
> worse, "know it ALL!"), either find something else more forgiving of life-risk
> to do, or - *much* better! - re-think that particular conclusion.
>
> Fun, fun, fun!!!
>
> Bob W.
>
> ---
> This email has been checked for viruses by AVG.
> https://www.avg.com

Bob - thanks for watching and for posting. I just uploaded an edited version of the webinar with many more graphics and some live video. Should make the 1.5 hours at least a little more colorful. You can find the new version on either the ssa website https://www.ssa.org/Webinars or on my youtube channel: https://youtu.be/Fbkug3BJlew

Thanks again to Sebastian and David Lessnick for making the great effort and taking the time to make this happen!

Bruno - B4

February 7th 19, 10:05 PM
"what Bob said"!! x 10

I shared the link with as many people as I know :)

BRAVO! Thank you to you guys for doing what you do!

WH

BobW
February 8th 19, 02:01 AM
On 2/7/2019 2:16 PM, wrote:
> On Thursday, February 7, 2019 at 12:19:17 PM UTC-7, BobW wrote:
>> Having just watched (36 hours after the fact) the SSA/Sebastian Kawa
>> webinar of the (U.S.) evening of Feb. 5, 2019 (link that worked for me
>> below), am "feeling the need" (ha ha!) to:
>>
>> 1) thank everyone involved - the (many) organizers; Sebastian Kawa; the
>> moderators; the "technologists"/technologies making it possible (with a
>> near-total-absence of half-way-around-the-globe
>> "interactional-verbal-stepping-on-one-another...IOW, "just like a
>> face-to-face conversation); the post-webinar-folks babysitting it
>> "permanently to the WWW." AWESOME job folks!!!
<Snip...>
>>
>> ?registrantKey=764259933867 973900&type=ATTENDEEEMAILRECORDINGLINK
>>
>>
- - - - - -
>>
>> Man! Watching that was damn near just like sitting around a campfire
>> with everyone involved...GREAT STUFF!!!
<Snip...>
>>
>> Fun, fun, fun!!!
>>
>> Bob W.
>>
>> --- This email has been checked for viruses by AVG. https://www.avg.com
>
> Bob - thanks for watching and for posting. I just uploaded an edited
> version of the webinar with many more graphics and some live video. Should
> make the 1.5 hours at least a little more colorful. You can find the new
> version on either the ssa website https://www.ssa.org/Webinars or on my
> youtube channel: https://youtu.be/Fbkug3BJlew
>
> Thanks again to Sebastian and David Lessnick for making the great effort
> and taking the time to make this happen!
>
> Bruno - B4

Bruno - my bad for failing to specifically mention/thank *you* for doing a
wonderful job of "priming Sebastian's pump" with (excellent/thoughtful)
questions...and then simply letting him speak. I hope you got great grades in
Interview School!

And thanks for (all the work in, and) posting the "new and improved webinar
version." I'll definitely take a look.

Bob W.

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