Rick,Rick Masters wrote:But we pilots learn these skills - many of them inherently dangerous - by doing them. This is necessary for the re-invigoration of hang gliding and there is no other way in a solo sport to avoid the risk.
With all due respect, I disagree. HG instruction can be a much safer option, when acquiring skills. When I taught HG for a living, nobody got out on the training hill without first demonstrating their basic full competence on the full-glider Simulator:
http://www.hanggliding.org/wiki/Soaring_simulators
That "full competence" includes stall recovery and turbulence corrections, as ingrained automatic reflex responses from the new pilot. Radio instruction out on the training hill would be too little, and too late.
A triangle bar and bungee cords is NOT enough, here. I had to weed out the dyslexics on the Simulator, sorry to say, because radio "commands" and even pointing which way they should turn was purely a crap-shoot, for some cases. The worst case was a guy who had as much trouble with Up/Down as he did with Left/Right, even as he watched the Simulator nose coming down or going up. I don't think today's medical science recognizes that level of dyslexia, but I have seen it.
Tossing the reserve parachute is also a skill to be learned (thoroughly) on the full-glider Simulator. Wish I had a dollar for every HG pilot who threw the reserve parachute into the Simulator's flying wires (where it wedged itself) on the first try, because they did not look first.
If the HG instructor can not teach cliff launching without a cliff, please quietly "fire" that one, and find a better one. The sky (and I) will not accept any excuses, there.
I strongly oppose any "learning to fly" in mid-air. New pilots have enough on their plate already.
All IMHO, of course.