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#1
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Flying a fighter is the most fun you can have with your pants on.
Flying anything else is almost as much fun. Kurt Todoroff Markets, not mandates and mob rule. Consent, not compulsion. Remove "DELETEME" from my address to reply |
#2
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As I fly along with no visible means of support, it reminds me to
believe in the unseen. -- Gene Seibel Hangar 131 - http://pad39a.com/gene/plane.html Because I fly, I envy no one. Larry Fransson wrote in message news:2003112712144016807%lfransson@comcastnet... On 2003-11-27 11:38:22 -0800, Ross Younger said: Apologies if it's an oft-asked question, but what does flying do for you folks? It pays the bills! |
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Ross
Take off - 100 and a quarter mile. 2 hours hard IFR. Land - 100 and a quarter mile. Park, open canopy and shut down. Satisfaction of a job well done under difficult conditions. Big John On 27 Nov 2003 19:38:22 +0000 (GMT), Ross Younger wrote: It has been three months since I passed my Skills Test, and I logged just over five hours between then and the end of October. After a combination of bad luck, bad weather and stress intervened, I got back in the air today for the first time in a month. This was technically a competence check with an instructor, to satisfy the club's insurers; we did a few circuits, finishing to an eye-poppingly beautiful red half-set sun. While writing up my journal just now, I was suddenly reminded of what I like about flying. It's the sheer joy of just being up there, looking down and admiring the world without having an immediately tangible connection to it. This seemed to be the case for my first passenger, too (my girlfriend, of course - and she loved it). There's also the technical pleasure which comes from pulling off a greaser :-). I suppose shooting an instrument approach and breaking cloud just above decision height to see the runway right where you expect it counts too, though it'll be a little while before I take much instrument training, I think. Apologies if it's an oft-asked question, but what does flying do for you folks? Blue skies, Ross |
#4
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1. It's fun! There are few things as enjoyable.
2. Gives me something challenging to do and a great feeling of satisfaction. 3. Provides a break from graduate school. 4. Helps pay the bills. 5. Amaze your friends with incredible stories of bravery and courage. -- O.K. Maybe not. But it is a useful conversation starter. For a while. Until they get tired of you talking about airplanes every chance you get. David Larry Fransson wrote in message news:2003112712144016807%lfransson@comcastnet... On 2003-11-27 11:38:22 -0800, Ross Younger said: Apologies if it's an oft-asked question, but what does flying do for you folks? It pays the bills! |
#5
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![]() Some of the greatest thrills of my life have been in my plane--on parallel final with an airbus going into Logan, circling Central Park at 1800 feet on a crystal clear night, breaking out 200 feet above Richmond on the ILS and seeing the runway lights right where they belong, and circling JFK between the parallels at 1500 feet taking photos as the Concorde was landing beneath me. In the 28 years that I have been a pilot, the sheer joy of taking off and moving "above it all" has never left me. There hasn't been a flight where I haven't, at some point, said to myself, "wow, look where you are!". For me, it is therapeutic in that while doing it, you really do not think about any of the myriad problems and stresses of life on the ground. Even in complex airspace while working feverishly to accomplish a mission, NOTHING else enters my mind. In that sense, it is a cleansing . . . a getaway . . . no cellphone, no Fox News, no email, no talk radio . . . just flying. It does for my head what the workout/steamroom does for my half-century old body. G After landing and going through my ritualistic camera equipment packing and putting my plane to bed (including a kiss on the spinner), I call my wife to let her know I am "down and safe" (her requirement) and then I replay the video of the flight that is in my head. In a sense, I am still flying most of the 25 minute drive home. I have always believed that every human being who has EVER walked the face of the earth since the beginning of time has DREAMED of flying. And only the tiniest, tiniest, microscopically small fraction of them will ever get to DO it as we do. It's no small thing. It's all I can remember really wanting to do since watching "Sky King" on Saturday mornings as a child. Oh . . . yes, I forgot . . . at 26 I also wanted to play in the E Street Band. G www.Rosspilot.com |
#6
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After landing and going through my ritualistic camera equipment packing
and putting my plane to bed (including a kiss on the spinner), I call my wife to let her know I am "down and safe" (her requirement) and then I replay the video of the flight that is in my head. In a sense, I am still flying most of the 25 minute drive home. As someone around here said a while back, after a checkride (was it StellaStar?): I didn't need an airplane to fly home. -- David Brooks |
#7
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What a great post. Thanks.
Toby "Rosspilot" wrote in message ... Some of the greatest thrills of my life have been in my plane--on parallel final with an airbus going into Logan, circling Central Park at 1800 feet on a crystal clear night, breaking out 200 feet above Richmond on the ILS and seeing the runway lights right where they belong, and circling JFK between the parallels at 1500 feet taking photos as the Concorde was landing beneath me. In the 28 years that I have been a pilot, the sheer joy of taking off and moving "above it all" has never left me. There hasn't been a flight where I haven't, at some point, said to myself, "wow, look where you are!". For me, it is therapeutic in that while doing it, you really do not think about any of the myriad problems and stresses of life on the ground. Even in complex airspace while working feverishly to accomplish a mission, NOTHING else enters my mind. In that sense, it is a cleansing . . . a getaway . . . no cellphone, no Fox News, no email, no talk radio . . . just flying. It does for my head what the workout/steamroom does for my half-century old body. G After landing and going through my ritualistic camera equipment packing and putting my plane to bed (including a kiss on the spinner), I call my wife to let her know I am "down and safe" (her requirement) and then I replay the video of the flight that is in my head. In a sense, I am still flying most of the 25 minute drive home. I have always believed that every human being who has EVER walked the face of the earth since the beginning of time has DREAMED of flying. And only the tiniest, tiniest, microscopically small fraction of them will ever get to DO it as we do. It's no small thing. It's all I can remember really wanting to do since watching "Sky King" on Saturday mornings as a child. Oh . . . yes, I forgot . . . at 26 I also wanted to play in the E Street Band. G www.Rosspilot.com |
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