We are glad you are alive and encourage you to get back in the saddle, learn from any mistakes, get training where needed, and keep your chin up!

mauleace wrote:I do not believe that I am destined to crash or ground loop my plane.
CAVU wrote:mauleace wrote:I do not believe that I am destined to crash or ground loop my plane.
I agree with this and what Low & Slow said in the other thread about our responsibility to our passengers/participants and loved-ones to get training and be competent. No one wishes any of the victims in these unfortunate accidents other than well. For purposes of learning from what happened, it makes sense to recognize that there are mistakes and then there are Mistakes.
We're not talking about ground loops or fender benders here. I've made my share of mistakes, but if I really thought that it just was matter of time or chance before I did something that was likely to kill me and/or my loved ones, I'd hang it up.
Sorry if this comes across as insensitive. To me, it's just the truth. Mother nature and the laws of physics aren't sensitive.
CAVU

Scolopax wrote:The pilot who crashed the Mooney at Big Creek on Monday? Same story with regards to his decision making process. No one decides that they are going to crash and burn.
Scolopax wrote:Within the last two years Scott Crossfield, Jim Leroy, Shaun Lunt, and other very competent airmen have made fatal mistakes or bent airplanes. Do you think that any of them thought that they were about to make a decision that would end up disastrous? These guys were very knowledgeable, accomplished, calculated, and experienced pilots. Well above average, I might imagine.
The pilot who crashed the Mooney at Big Creek on Monday? Same story with regards to his decision making process. No one decides that they are going to crash and burn.
We use good judgment and command our ships precisely and with confidence and that is what we grow accustomed to. We also grow accustomed to expanding our envelope of experience to more demanding environments and learn from our successes and from our mistakes with every new experience.
Throughout our piloting days we develop a sphere of knowledge that we rely upon that may have always kept us out of significant trouble. Does this sphere contain everything that we will ever need to know? Can we minimize the probability of screwing up through diligence and deliberate awareness? Can we completely eliminate the possibility of screwing up?
Pilots are typically humans who embrace the spirit of adventure, which is to say that as much as we aspire to perfection, even the best are inclined to experience random episodes of absentmindedness and flawed judgment, and we tend to place ourselves in unfamiliar situations.
Complacence is a great hazard lurking within us. It is as much of a threat to us as a strong downdraft and is as real as high density altitude. They don’t mention it in the books, or ask about it in the written exam, but for me it still seems a factor worthy of evaluation.
I was thinking about this yesterday while driving from job to job. Times are getting tough and right now Jean and I are selling our Harley's and I thought, what if we have to sell the Maule. I don't think it will come to that but I started to think of reasons and an argument for keeping it. THe one thing that constantly entered my mind was "I love the freedom of doing what most of the rest of the world can't do" I guess England and Germany have General aviation but cost of flying is so prohibitive and rules over there make it all but impossible. There are tough days at work when I'm on the way home and about to pass the airport that I pull in and just sit on the couch in the hangar and look at my Maule with a beer in hand. Then there are others that I pull it out and fly over the back country as the sun goes down and the air is quiet and smooth and I think,"This is heaven" . I forget about all the finacial crap and petty women shit I had to put up with at work and just concentrate on flying. (I Install and sell Draperies and window coverings) Hence the dealing with women and their petty shit for the past 30 years. As a result I'm also a member of BCAH. Anyway, I digress, and I think I need another beer....Skystrider wrote:I understand what you are saying Jr.CubBuilder but virtually the same thing could be said about cars. Cars give us freedom, like an airplane. Anybody, no matter what their driving experience can up and die in a car accident. Many tens of thousands do every year. Way more in terms of numbers than in airplanes. A moments inattention can kill you in a car. Think about what cell phones are doing. And I don't think we are genetically predisposed to drive cars any more than airplanes.
I don't think it is the "danger" junky in you, I think it is the "challenge" junky! By far, fewer people are willing to invest the time and energy into learning to fly than they are driving. Part of that is, quite frankly, because cars are more practical than airplanes. (How often to you go to the mall or take in a movie in your plane?) But a large part of it is simply because it is a lot more challenging and we pilots place a high value on the rewards we receive by meeting that challenge and flying! Most people don't, hence the 1/2 of one percent of the population that flies.
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