Hi contact,
I apologize, as I was writing that the Wx Man was telling me that I wouldn't be able to leave Denver in the am, and I really needed to get back home as the work was piling up. Consequently my thoughts were scattered at best
Your post was not weak or garbled, and I understood it quite well. The same couldn't be said of my response, but nothing new there...
I understood your exercise in ground
reference and hadn't confused it with ground
effect, the only reason I introduced ground effect was to quantify the amount of wing loading I think the average individual needs to see before the wheels start turning and the realize just what the wind is doing to their ship.
I just honestly believe the average backcountry boon docker flying a pimped out 180hp super cub or 300hp C180, has so much excess hp and wing that he never really clues into what the wind is doing to his rig. Don't agree? I could offer you several ag related examples, but they would be old hat to you, and unrelated to this site, so I will offer you a more recent example that directly relates to backcountry flying and this site in particular.
Remember the canyon turn video thread? Now before I go any any farther let me say Blu, this is not meant to be critical of your video, your turning, or your thread, just an observation...
Ok, so watching that video a couple things were evident.
First, Blu has obviously been influenced by an older midwestern aggie... this is easy to see because he favors a 'P' turn, as in a back to back, or back and forth, turn.... most young turbine flying guys that are lucky and fly big country, fly some form of round robin, be it race track, rverse racetrack on pivots or squeeze... but the important thing is they aren't likely to start with a downwind turn, because the have room, so they just pitch it up and roll...
Next, he probably has no idea why we turn that way... because as any aggie, or seasoned instrument pilot can tell you, a 'P' turn, or PT , burns way more real estate than a simple 'U' turn... the only reason we turn downwind first is to 'buy' room to come back to a swath that is only 50'-75' or so away from where we started. Same is true of the instrument pilot who needs a PT... He needs to come back to a given track, if simple course reversal was all that mattered he would turn tighter by just flipping a youey...
So you see, if Blu simply slowed it up, and rolled it around he would have turned significantly tighter... Now whether he should have pulled the nose up, or slowed it up first and pulled flaps, or slowed and let the nose drop, or why he added power, is all subject matter for that thread, I did not engage there, because I know what works for me, and it is not likely something I would recommend to someone who doesn't practice it on a regular basis... But what is pertinent to this thread, is the fact that he turned down wind (we hope) first and then made his course reversal into the wind... But even there we are just guessing, because he never made that clear.
Just a few posts later someone else (AKT I think) excaims how perfect it was!... first he '
turned out to the right' a little, then full power and a
tight turn to the left... hog wash... right and left mean nothing here... it's downwind and upwind. If the wind was off his right shoulder the entire sequence should have been played in reverse, because the only thing that matters is that his course reversal is in to the wind... But of course I am preaching to the choir here

My only point was that the average pilot is lost on this. They just turn
lastley, my question for bart was just baited...
I had hoped he was in a part of the country where they spray at night (as we do) I have never met someone who works night and shares the same views of wind effects on airplanes as the physics types would have you believing, because all those types believe that it's simply your eyes playing tricks on your mind, but on a moonless night in the country, as soon as you exit the field and the lights are off, there is no ground reference, it is for all intents and purposes IMC, yet I guarantee you that even a non experienced 40 hr. pilot in the front seat of a two holer would be able to tell which way is down wind and which way is upwind
Take care, Rob