![]() |
If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#1
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
I have around 1200 hours, a commercial MEL, IFR and private Glider
certificates. I have not flown seriously since 1973. I had a brief period in 1980 when I earned a glider rating and again in 1991/92 when I joined a glider club and was a tow pilot. In 2002 I helped a local FBO on weekends by running the airport and being the gas geezer when he took time off. In exchange I got to fly his Taylorcraft. Alas I was replaced by a computerized gas pump in 2003. This year I managed to find a slot flying skydivers. Now they have gone belly up. As you can deduce, I have very little money for flying but truly love it. I am considering getting a ground instructors rating in hopes of teaching enough classes to earn a CFI. I never got my CFI because I felt that I would not be a good instructor as I did not feel comfortable in letting a primary student go wrong far enough so he would see his error. Over the years I have seen enough instructors to realize that very few do that so why don't I try my hand. I enjoy teaching. In recent years I have gotten the feeling that FAA attitude has changed. I remember that that FAA seemed to have the approach "We don't care if you kill yourself, we just don't want you to kill anyone else or injure their property." Now it seems that they are becoming a small town speed trap. The idea is violate you. It is, to me a horrifying environment when major aviation publications have a legal column and the AOPA advertises as one of its benefits the availability of a 'lawyer Insurance" plan. From my very limited recent experience, I find the working troops ( Tower, approach control, etc) are still there as one of the few government organizations who actually want and do provide help in an interested and friendly professional manner. This is as I always remember it and is one of the enjoyable facets of aviation. The only time I was ever requested "to call the tower" was when I was flying airtaxi and had flown through a restricted zone. This was a normal practice in which we called the controlling authority and got permission before entering the zone. I had done so and when I told the tower that I had received permission. They said "Oh, the Navy forgot to tell us." All was well and nothing was ever said about it. But I keep reading these stories of FAA vendetta against pilots. I do not want to fly in an adversarial environment. I fly because I love it. It is a challenging, always changing, interesting and beautiful environment. It is not perfect but close. In all life there is always some drawback. After cooking and eating a good meal, you have wash dishes and take out the garbage. But if the stories of FAA brutality are true, it is more that just taking out the garbage. Now my question, is it really that bad or are a few incidents blown out of proportions? I'd like to hear some opinions and stories from the group. (I will not go into the TSA debacle as that is a government driven by panic. In such situations there is always stupidity, ignorance and fear ) |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
1343 NM to the NASM Udvar-Hazy Center and back... | Jay Honeck | Piloting | 25 | June 18th 05 05:07 PM |
Four States and the Grand Canyon | Mary Daniel or David Grah | Soaring | 6 | December 6th 04 10:36 AM |
Long flight today... | Steve R. | Rotorcraft | 1 | October 21st 04 11:16 PM |
FA: WEATHER FLYING: A PRACTICAL BOOK ON FLYING | The Ink Company | Aviation Marketplace | 0 | November 5th 03 12:07 AM |
How I got to Oshkosh (long) | Doug | Owning | 2 | August 18th 03 12:05 AM |