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#1
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I think part of the reason for the decline in soaring
is the rapid expansion of urban areas, I used to fly back in teh 70s, and there were 3 gliderports within an hours drive. They have all closed due to the expansion of suburbia. The closest field with decent soaring is now over 2 hours away each way. That takes 4 hours out of a weekend day just to drive! After a grueling week at work, spending a half day in a car driving to & from a gliderport is more than I can take. I will be retiring soon, and intend to jump back in, but I'm already spending at least 2 hrs a day commuting, and I can't stand the thought of doubling that on weekends! |
#2
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I live on the wrong side of town... it is 25 miles across town and then
another 20 miles to the glider club... luckily on most days it is less than an hour 1 way. The next closest club is on the right side of town... but at least a 90 minute drive one way. And that's when I started soaring. BT "Peter Gadd" wrote in message ... I think part of the reason for the decline in soaring is the rapid expansion of urban areas, I used to fly back in teh 70s, and there were 3 gliderports within an hours drive. They have all closed due to the expansion of suburbia. The closest field with decent soaring is now over 2 hours away each way. That takes 4 hours out of a weekend day just to drive! After a grueling week at work, spending a half day in a car driving to & from a gliderport is more than I can take. I will be retiring soon, and intend to jump back in, but I'm already spending at least 2 hrs a day commuting, and I can't stand the thought of doubling that on weekends! |
#3
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Peter - that may explain why there are fewer gliderports, but not fewer
pilots. I live in Phoenix, which has for 30ish years now has enjoyed the presence of Turf Soaring on the northwest side and Estrella on the south. If anything they should be enjoying more business, not less, especially considering the order of magnitude growth in the area since those operations began. I've previously stated on this newsgroup my opinions on why participation in the sport is declining and won't repeat them here, but I believe it has little to do with urban expansion. Much more to do with numbers of military trained pilots since WWII and competition from other sports. It ain't as easy to become a pilot as it used to be, either. Anecdote: when I started gliding lessons in Fall 2003, I did so at Estrella, which was closest to my home in Tempe. I've been an active skydiver in southern AZ since 1988 and in all that time I had never heard of Arizona Soaring or Estrella Sailport. No print or radio advertisement, not even any tourist-visit-us brochures in the rack of them you see in hotel lobbies. I was greatly surprised that in 15 years I had never heard of Estrella, and it was in my own backyard. In fact, the only reason I knew about it was that my boss had started flying there earlier in the year! Anecdote 2: In my hotel room here at the Marriott TownePlace Suites in Hawthorne, CA, there is a rack of sight-seers brochures in the lobby. There is a brochure for Skydive Elsinore, energetically touting the reader to make a parachute jump. There is gliderport at the same field, and another one at Warner Springs less than an hour away. But no brochures from either gliderport in the rack. Why not? -Ted in Tempe "Peter Gadd" wrote in message ... I think part of the reason for the decline in soaring is the rapid expansion of urban areas, I used to fly back in teh 70s, and there were 3 gliderports within an hours drive. They have all closed due to the expansion of suburbia. The closest field with decent soaring is now over 2 hours away each way. That takes 4 hours out of a weekend day just to drive! After a grueling week at work, spending a half day in a car driving to & from a gliderport is more than I can take. I will be retiring soon, and intend to jump back in, but I'm already spending at least 2 hrs a day commuting, and I can't stand the thought of doubling that on weekends! |
#4
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Tell me about it.
Driving is hard work. |
#5
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Back in the last millenium when I learned to soar at Estrella (1974 or 5?
without looking at my log) they had a very large billboard on I-10 at the turn-off to Maricopa that had a giant 2-32 on it and I'm sure that's what caught my eye (and everyone else's) on trips to Tuscon or other points south. I would bet that billboard provided them a lot of ride business, as well as the occasional student through private certificate. I think it was an hour's drive from Mesa, maybe more. Today I drive almost 3 hours one way each weekend over a mountain range to Ephrata, but the soaring is well worth it. I used to drive over an hour from home in CT to Wurtsboro for some pretty good soaring in the early season, but not nearly as good and consistent as the conditions at Ephrata year-round. In Belgium, it was at least 2 hours from Tervuren to the Kortrijk Glider Club. Like many hobbies and sports, it's impossible to rationally justify the time and cost of soaring, you just have to like doing it. I mean - one could be into Formula car or J-boat racing or camp-cruising in Wayfarers - the time commitment and cost may be similar depending on the toy. Jim "Ted Wagner" wrote in message news:1106885548.221f54f69f4f905d8b35a85cbdd020a2@t eranews... Peter - that may explain why there are fewer gliderports, but not fewer pilots. I live in Phoenix, which has for 30ish years now has enjoyed the presence of Turf Soaring on the northwest side and Estrella on the south. If anything they should be enjoying more business, not less, especially considering the order of magnitude growth in the area since those operations began. I've previously stated on this newsgroup my opinions on why participation in the sport is declining and won't repeat them here, but I believe it has little to do with urban expansion. Much more to do with numbers of military trained pilots since WWII and competition from other sports. It ain't as easy to become a pilot as it used to be, either. Anecdote: when I started gliding lessons in Fall 2003, I did so at Estrella, which was closest to my home in Tempe. I've been an active skydiver in southern AZ since 1988 and in all that time I had never heard of Arizona Soaring or Estrella Sailport. No print or radio advertisement, not even any tourist-visit-us brochures in the rack of them you see in hotel lobbies. I was greatly surprised that in 15 years I had never heard of Estrella, and it was in my own backyard. In fact, the only reason I knew about it was that my boss had started flying there earlier in the year! Anecdote 2: In my hotel room here at the Marriott TownePlace Suites in Hawthorne, CA, there is a rack of sight-seers brochures in the lobby. There is a brochure for Skydive Elsinore, energetically touting the reader to make a parachute jump. There is gliderport at the same field, and another one at Warner Springs less than an hour away. But no brochures from either gliderport in the rack. Why not? -Ted in Tempe "Peter Gadd" wrote in message ... I think part of the reason for the decline in soaring is the rapid expansion of urban areas, I used to fly back in teh 70s, and there were 3 gliderports within an hours drive. They have all closed due to the expansion of suburbia. The closest field with decent soaring is now over 2 hours away each way. That takes 4 hours out of a weekend day just to drive! After a grueling week at work, spending a half day in a car driving to & from a gliderport is more than I can take. I will be retiring soon, and intend to jump back in, but I'm already spending at least 2 hrs a day commuting, and I can't stand the thought of doubling that on weekends! |
#6
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Heavy, well said and right on dude........you rock!
Brad |
#7
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Peter - that may explain why there are fewer gliderports, but not fewer
pilots. I live in Phoenix, which has for 30ish years now has enjoyed the presence of Turf Soaring on the northwest side and Estrella on the south. If anything they should be enjoying more business, not less, especially considering the order of magnitude growth in the area since those operations began. I've previously stated on this newsgroup my opinions on why participation in the sport is declining and won't repeat them here, but I believe it has little to do with urban expansion. Much more to do with numbers of military trained pilots since WWII and competition from other sports. It ain't as easy to become a pilot as it used to be, either. We do not advertise.. we are a weekend club, we accept members every "training season".. and as we approach this time of year, we have to turn some away.. we are "full". Our instructors and equipment is max'd out.. as a weekend club there are only so many training hours in a day. We have a waiting list.. Our "training season" begins in September. I'll agree that we have one primary trainer, one advanced trainer and one tow plane, and two other gliders for those already solo'd or checked out. We are looking at whether to buy another training glider, and maybe have to pick up a second tow plane... but the other short fall... we need tow pilots.. tail wheel, high performance qualified. We run into the "expand or stay the same".... need $$ to expand.. and need members to support the expansion.. which came first the chicken or the egg. For a weekend club it is a tough call.. for a full time club.. full time employees.. it would be doable. Now there are two additional commercial "tourist ride" and "glider training" glider companies on the same field... let's see if they can survive. For those of you who come up to Jean every spring from AZ... drop me a line.. we'll get you the information for "mid week tows".. BT |
#8
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In the UK we are suffering the same problem. Distance
to a club is seldom a factor for us, our country is much smaller. Getting to fly is not a problem as no licence is required to fly a glider in the UK and even the instructors do not have to hold power type categories. I would have to say that these are not the cause of the decline, not in the UK anyway. I think it has more to do with the perceptions of the new generations. They are able to access 'fun' on tap. Go somewhere where their fun is provided, have it, and then go on to something else. The concept of going somewhere all day to help others have fun is alien to them, why would the need to do that. My generation needed to do it, the current generation don't and I think it is as simple as that, coupled with the choice of adventurous sports now available giving much more opportunity. The 'access fun provided by someone else' as opposed to 'make your own fun' ethos is here. Gliding is one of the sports that needs people other than those actually flying to take place at all. At 07:00 28 January 2005, Btiz wrote: Peter - that may explain why there are fewer gliderports, but not fewer pilots. I live in Phoenix, which has for 30ish years now has enjoyed the presence of Turf Soaring on the northwest side and Estrella on the south. If anything they should be enjoying more business, not less, especially considering the order of magnitude growth in the area since those operations began. I've previously stated on this newsgroup my opinions on why participation in the sport is declining and won't repeat them here, but I believe it has little to do with urban expansion. Much more to do with numbers of military trained pilots since WWII and competition from other sports. It ain't as easy to become a pilot as it used to be, either. We do not advertise.. we are a weekend club, we accept members every 'training season'.. and as we approach this time of year, we have to turn some away.. we are 'full'. Our instructors and equipment is max'd out.. as a weekend club there are only so many training hours in a day. We have a waiting list.. Our 'training season' begins in September. I'll agree that we have one primary trainer, one advanced trainer and one tow plane, and two other gliders for those already solo'd or checked out. We are looking at whether to buy another training glider, and maybe have to pick up a second tow plane... but the other short fall... we need tow pilots.. tail wheel, high performance qualified. We run into the 'expand or stay the same'.... need $$ to expand.. and need members to support the expansion.. which came first the chicken or the egg. For a weekend club it is a tough call.. for a full time club.. full time employees.. it would be doable. Now there are two additional commercial 'tourist ride' and 'glider training' glider companies on the same field... let's see if they can survive. For those of you who come up to Jean every spring from AZ... drop me a line.. we'll get you the information for 'mid week tows'.. BT |
#9
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With respect, that's ********
![]() Put on the spot I would argue that //my// generation are as eager and as capable as yours ever were or will be of "going somewhere all day to help other to have fun" for nothing more than the rewards of equal participation. To say otherwise is nothing but ageist, bigoted conceit talking, perhaps a little influenced by the charm of looking back over your glorious golden age of days gone by through rose-tinted spectacles. No offence intended. But you do touch on part of the issue when you mention the competition we suffer these days in terms of the availability of other adventurous sports. White water rafting, riding around dune buggies, sky-diving, aerobatics in an old biplane, the list is endless, adrenaline pumped, accessible and for the most part very visually and energetically advertised. I think gliding will always be a minority sport. It is never going to enjoy mass appeal. It either terrifies the average man in the street or it simply fails to throw the necessary switch. The idea of flight is not to him what it is to you and me, it's a means to an end, whereas here it is the end in itself. But beyond that, our principle problem is obscurity and inaccessibility. Nobody knows we're here, and if they do, they've no idea how to access us. That's certainly true here in the UK, and I'd guess no different over in the States judging by some of the other posts in this thread. -Bill Don Johnstone writes I think it has more to do with the perceptions of the new generations. They are able to access 'fun' on tap. Go somewhere where their fun is provided, have it, and then go on to something else. The concept of going somewhere all day to help others have fun is alien to them, why would the need to do that. My generation needed to do it, the current generation don't and I think it is as simple as that, coupled with the choice of adventurous sports now available giving much more opportunity. The 'access fun provided by someone else' as opposed to 'make your own fun' ethos is here. Gliding is one of the sports that needs people other than those actually flying to take place at all. -- Bill Gribble | http://www.ingenuitytest.co.uk | http://www.cotswoldgliding.co.uk | http://www.scapegoatsanon.demon.co.uk |
#10
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Bill, I apologise, you are obviously one of the current
generations who does not think that way and I am aware there are a few, unfortunately you are the exception rather that the rule. Fell right into the generality trap there. It's not an age thing per se, it's more an expectation, as time goes on people expect more and more and the culture of 'you can get anything if you pay for it' is here. No effort required. At 12:30 28 January 2005, Bill Gribble wrote: With respect, that's ******** ![]() Put on the spot I would argue that //my// generation are as eager and as capable as yours ever were or will be of 'going somewhere all day to help other to have fun' for nothing more than the rewards of equal participation. To say otherwise is nothing but ageist, bigoted conceit talking, perhaps a little influenced by the charm of looking back over your glorious golden age of days gone by through rose-tinted spectacles. No offence intended. But you do touch on part of the issue when you mention the competition we suffer these days in terms of the availability of other adventurous sports. White water rafting, riding around dune buggies, sky-diving, aerobatics in an old biplane, the list is endless, adrenaline pumped, accessible and for the most part very visually and energetically advertised. I think gliding will always be a minority sport. It is never going to enjoy mass appeal. It either terrifies the average man in the street or it simply fails to throw the necessary switch. The idea of flight is not to him what it is to you and me, it's a means to an end, whereas here it is the end in itself. But beyond that, our principle problem is obscurity and inaccessibility. Nobody knows we're here, and if they do, they've no idea how to access us. That's certainly true here in the UK, and I'd guess no different over in the States judging by some of the other posts in this thread. -Bill Don Johnstone writes I think it has more to do with the perceptions of the new generations. They are able to access 'fun' on tap. Go somewhere where their fun is provided, have it, and then go on to something else. The concept of going somewhere all day to help others have fun is alien to them, why would the need to do that. My generation needed to do it, the current generation don't and I think it is as simple as that, coupled with the choice of adventurous sports now available giving much more opportunity. The 'access fun provided by someone else' as opposed to 'make your own fun' ethos is here. Gliding is one of the sports that needs people other than those actually flying to take place at all. -- Bill Gribble | http://www.ingenuitytest.co.uk | http://www.cotswoldgliding.co.uk | http://www.scapegoatsanon.demon.co.uk |
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