Situational awareness in the clouds with modern equipment is so simple that a computer can do it. Situational awareness VFR at altitude is easy to handle with integrated contact and instrument awareness. Situational awareness among the obstructions and terrain is a much different situation requiring different orientation and techniques. Wind management is one of them. Yes, we are still part of the air mass, now influenced greatly by obstructions and terrain. Yes, those rivers of air will follow terrain up and over for orographic lift. But no, the danger of the downwind turn is not a myth down here. The myth is that high ground speed or ground rush will cause stalls. No, the control feel and relative wind noise is the same. It is pulling back on the stick to stay up in turns or to get away from the earth too quickly that causes stalls. Yes, 40 knots of tailwind will create more ridge lift. It will also get us to the point where we need and energy management turn back quicker, if unable to go over. Yes, the wind is stronger in a saddle (terrain venturi.) This greater ridge lift helps make it possible to safely cross a saddle (mountain pass) much lower than the higher terrain on each side of the pass.
All turns in maneuvering flight should be energy management turns to target rather than level turns to heading. Wind management in crop dusting or any low altitude air to ground work is to make use of wind direction to decrease radius and ground speed in the turn to target. Working with limited horizontal space available, as in the canyon turn back or the base to final turn in a tight valley, wind management can be critical. Unnecessary level downwind base to final turns are the first holes in the Swiss cheese that too often lead to stall too low for recovery. I really don't care if it is a skidding spin or slipping spin or coordinated stall. Pulling back rather than banking enough to join the centerline extended while allowing the nose to go down to prevent stalls is the problem.
Rather than teaching us that we can't safely maneuver in much wind, ground reference maneuvers should teach wind management. Rather than teaching only level turns of limited bank angle, we should teach energy management 1 g turns using crosswind and headwind to reduce radius and slow ground speed to make steep turns to targets safely. We need to learn how to bank safely at whatever bank angle necessary to capture the target in the horizontal and vertical space available.
Altitude maintenance at the expense of airspeed is high altitude orientation. Airspeed maintenance at the cost of a little altitude and using the law of the roller coaster is low altitude orientation. Misorientation or loss of situational awareness is dangerous in maneuvering flight where most every stall is fatal. Thinking we are a part of an air mass unlimited by obstacles and terrain with ample vertical space available to recover from inadvertent stall (high altitude orientation) can quickly become fatal on takeoff, in the pattern, or landing.
As pilots we need to know where we are and what is around us and below in order to apply appropriate principals and techniques.
