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Over here on this side of the pond, how should I advertise or tell my
friends (yet to meet) that I fly something like an aircraft without an engine running? If I say Glider, I often hear "Oh, you fly hang gliders?" If I say I fly sailplanes, I hear "What is that?" If I say I am going soaring, I hear "what is that?" If I say I'm going gliding, I hear "You mean hang gliding?" Back before many of you were aware of anything other than mother, I saw and flew in a thing called a glider. (An LK10A) of wwII fame. A couple of well publicised fatal accidents shut down all gliding around St. Louis. On to airplanes, but with a memory of a beautiful thing called "Yankee Doodle Do". Red White and Blue. Gull wings. Randy Chapman was the pilot. On to the west coast...I tried to find where gliders were flown. No one seemed to know. After about a year, I found out that I lived less than two miles from "THE SOARING SOCIETY OF AMERICA" in Santa Monica, California. Maybe you can understand words and have a suggestion. Fred |
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On Feb 23, 5:47 am, fredsez wrote:
Over here on this side of the pond, how should I advertise or tell my friends (yet to meet) that I fly something like an aircraft without an engine running? If I say Glider, I often hear "Oh, you fly hang gliders?" If I say I fly sailplanes, I hear "What is that?" If I say I am going soaring, I hear "what is that?" If I say I'm going gliding, I hear "You mean hang gliding?" That's not a problem, that's an opportunity! When they utter the words "hang gliding", it gives the perfect intro to a sales pitch along the lines of - no, real gliding... - up to 150mph, - 10,000 ft and 500km aren't unusual, - mandatory aerobatic training before you are allowed to go solo - full aerobatics, loops, spins, wing overs, etc and then show them a sexy aerial photo of your plane that you have produced a picture of the glider from your wallet. |
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Tom Gardner wrote:
On Feb 23, 5:47 am, fredsez wrote: Over here on this side of the pond, how should I advertise or tell my friends (yet to meet) that I fly something like an aircraft without an engine running? If I say Glider, I often hear "Oh, you fly hang gliders?" If I say I fly sailplanes, I hear "What is that?" If I say I am going soaring, I hear "what is that?" If I say I'm going gliding, I hear "You mean hang gliding?" That's not a problem, that's an opportunity! It certainly is! When they utter the words "hang gliding", it gives the perfect intro to a sales pitch along the lines of I also mention the things below: - no, real gliding... - up to 150mph, - 10,000 ft and 500km aren't unusual, I leave the following out in the beginning, because it will distract from the main message with training details that most people don't want or will misinterpret, requiring more details that further distract ... - mandatory aerobatic training before you are allowed to go solo - full aerobatics, loops, spins, wing overs, etc If the person is already a pilot or seems particularly keen on physical excitement, and expresses an interest in the details, then it's worth going into it; otherwise, I'm careful to avoid it. and then show them a sexy aerial photo of your plane that you have produced a picture of the glider from your wallet. The picture is *crucial*, because words just won't bring the right image to their minds; after all, that's how the conversation got started! -- Eric Greenwell - Washington State, USA * Change "netto" to "net" to email me directly * Updated! "Transponders in Sailplanes" http://tinyurl.com/y739x4 * New Jan '08 - sections on Mode S, TPAS, ADS-B, Flarm, more * "A Guide to Self-launching Sailplane Operation" at www.motorglider.org |
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On Feb 23, 4:58 pm, Eric Greenwell wrote:
Tom Gardner wrote: I leave the following out in the beginning, because it will distract from the main message with training details that most people don't want or will misinterpret, requiring more details that further distract ... - mandatory aerobatic training before you are allowed to go solo - full aerobatics, loops, spins, wing overs, etc If the person is already a pilot or seems particularly keen on physical excitement, and expresses an interest in the details, then it's worth going into it; otherwise, I'm careful to avoid it. Understood and accepted. I'd usually lead into it by -- if they appear vaguely interested in a trial flight -- asking them whether they would like it to be exhilarating or relaxing or exciting or restful. And then say it can be any or all of those, sometimes in the same flight. If exhilaration catches their imagination then I'll mention - 0 to 60 mph in 4s (vs cars in ~12s) - climbing with your feet higher than your head - and "casually" mention the aerobatics Safety is a more "interesting" topic. I won't bring it up unless they do, but then I'll mutter: - similar to scuba diving or rugby (I must check about horse riding) - I don't like the idea of using my legs as undercarriage - I'm happy for my 15yo daughter to do it, because I hope it'll help her avoid any thrill-seeking in cars when she becomes old enough to drive - qualified instructors being repeatedly re-tested by other qualified instructors |
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On Feb 22, 10:47*pm, fredsez wrote:
Maybe you can understand words and have a suggestion. Fred I usually get past the hang glider bit by explaining that I fly a 50ft wingspan aircraft that has no engine. The hard one is "soaring". Even people that think they know what I do ask me if I'm going sailing. I was in the shuttle bus on the way back from a business trip last week. I got talking to a woman about hiking in the area and she asked about wildlife. Told her about red tailed hawks. She seem interested so I told her how great it was to fly with them. The rest of the bus ride was spent explaining cross country soaring. Andy |
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On Feb 25, 12:18 pm, Andy wrote:
On Feb 22, 10:47 pm, fredsez wrote: Maybe you can understand words and have a suggestion. Fred I usually get past the hang glider bit by explaining that I fly a 50ft wingspan aircraft that has no engine. The hard one is "soaring". Even people that think they know what I do ask me if I'm going sailing. ......and then they ask how fast you fall down when the wind stops blowing! Mike |
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