by Craig Muhonen » Wed Nov 06, 2019 12:54 am
Hello U.S. Hawks: my first recollection of flying, was with my dad, (American Airlines pilot) in 1949 out of Boston Logan field. I pretty much was hooked from then on. Learned to fly at age 13. Graduated high school in Torrance Ca. In 1964. Surfed and sailed the Coast till 1965 when I joined the Marine Air wing and found myself in Vietnam in 1968, working on F-4 phantoms. Crazy. Went on R&R to Sydney Australia where I went water skiing with some guys (Bill Bennet I believe) who were being towed up holding on to a primitive hang glider. Crazy. Got back to Torrance in 69' 70' and stood on the sand hill and watched Dave Cronk, Hefflinger, and Eiper , I think, run down the hill and actually catch air with a bamboo dropcloth contraption taped together. Crazy. Moved to Telluride Co. In 1971, became a skier and plumber. In 1973 Dave Cronk, with a Quicksilver "C", and some friends (including Bill Bennet) came, and with David Stanfield, started a hang gliding festival, off the 800 hill, where they tried to land on a target. Crazy. Hang gliders from all over came and Telluride became the place to fly. I did some ground skimming, but you had to be a hang 4 to fly. The Telluride Air Force was formed and I helped launch them from the craziest places. Crazy, Crazy. I had been flying all my life, but the early gliders, well, you wernt getting me strapped into one of them. Got to watch my friend catch an 'elevator' ride to well over 10,000'. With his white wills wing, I think, or maybe A seagull. (A record which stood for years).
The Torrance beach hang gliders developed quickly because The area was the aircraft capital of the world, and also a dacron sailing haven. but flying the ridge lift to the south became a 'privacy' problem for the real estate people, and they banned hang gliding. They put up red flags to tell us where we couldn't surf, and banned us from riding our skate boards on town sidewalks....we were bums...but we loved it.
Sometimes you gotta' push the stick forward while you're lookn' at the ground