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Hi all,
As part of my University job, I provide technical support to three academic conferences a year. Our summer one this year was in Honolulu, Hawaii and I just got back. (Jet lag is killing me. It’s 11 pm in Houston and I am not the least bit tired and work calls at 8 am tomorrow!) My travel plans didn’t allow for much sight-seeing, but I was able to stop by Honolulu Soaring’s operation along the North Shore area and check them out. I wish I had the time to do a lesson with them. I am learning to fly (3 hours total so far) gliders near Houston, which is quite flat. Experiencing a flight along some of the ridges on Oahu would have been wonderful. One of my conferences is coming back in October of 2011, so I hope to schedule some time with an instructor then. In any case, in the half-hour I was able to spend with them I had a great time talking gliders with the crew. As a beginning student pilot, I’m used to my club operating on a grass runway. This, by contrast, was a commercial operation on a paved runway. The runway, a former Air Force installation, is leased by the State back to the commercial providers, if I remember correctly. It is two miles in length! It is shared by a skydiving operating at the eastern end, the gliderport and an aerobatic glider operation at the western end. For those with Google Earth, the gliderport and the runway are easily visible at 21°34'41.00"N, 158°12'13.26"W. As a beginning student just getting into aviation, the gliderport operations were a joy to watch. I have never seen a runway shared by so many gliders and powered aircraft. The words “choreographed dance” describe accurately what I saw. I also enjoyed seeing an SGS 2-32, which carries three people. That was new to me. When I asked about its performance in the air, the crew described it as “a brick.” While I was there a pilot was taking several successive pattern tows. I learned from the crew that he was a power pilot from Japan seeking his glider rating. I learned something very interesting. Apparently, flying in Japan is much more expensive than flying in the United States, even for gliders. So this pilot booked a ten-day hotel stay on Oahu and spent the trip getting ready for his checkride out at Honolulu Soaring. All in all, I enjoyed the brief visit I had at Honolulu Soaring. The crew was warm and friendly and I wish I had had the time to schedule some instruction with them. Maybe next time. ![]() Here is a link to four photos I took with my Blackberry: http://www.coe.uh.edu/michael/honolulu.html --Michael in Houston |
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