Lifetime ratings?
Yes. You don't forget how to ride a bicycle (which is another flavor of weight shift controlled vehicle) and paying dues to USHGA never did anything to hone my launch run skills or flare timing.
Currency requirements?
When the USP a** wipes away your rating because you didn't pay your dues, is it because you no longer know how to fly a hang glider or because the USP a** took a dump because they didn't make any money off you?
B.
So if we add a currency requirement of some sort, that should produce a safer (and maybe more insurable?) ratings program.
Where's the data that indicates that currency is the slightest blip on crash statistics radar?
Jim Rooney - 2011/06/12
Most common HG injury... spiral fracture of the humerus.
flyin_canuck - 2011/03/01
Nothing creates carnage like declaring a spot landing contest.
Ann Fawkes - 2011/03/02
If the conditions are such that you need to choose between a controlled wheel landing or a risky foot landing, go for the wheels and try the foot landing in better conditions. Landing unharmed is your first priority.
Doug Hildreth - 1984/04
Failure to Hook In: I doubt if the eight reported cases represent a real increase over previous years, but rather an increase in reporting (USHGA questionnaire). Hook-in/hang-check, hook-in/step-through, hook-in/lift-glider. We gotta stop this!
Richard Johnson - 1974
The greatest dangers are a rope break or a premature release.
Maybe we could think REAL HARD and figure out if there's some POSSIBLE way we could do a few things differently and achieve some ACTUAL results.
So why shouldn't a rating be permanent? You earned it.
Maybe.
Now you gotta go find a USP a** Instructor and pull him away from his lucrative biz of training people who want to stunt on parachutes how not to kill themselves by moving their fingers a little the wrong way and teach you to fly a hang glider all over again. And wait for you to carry that big ol' glider back up that hill over and over.
Or maybe you just bought it from that guy. And maybe that guy was totally clueless - like most of the people I had to deal with to keep getting my card upgraded.
So I'm not all that sure it's a great idea to automatically assume that everyone who's got a USHGA card is a pilot and give him a lifetime Hawks pass.
Hawks kick their kids out of the nest when they're ready.
No they don't. The kids leave when they're ready.
However, I would agree that all pilots need to be brought up to the advanced level within a certain period of time or be required to repeat some proficiency tests.
Why? If they're flying Hang Two gliders at Hang Two sites under Hang Two conditions with Hang Two skill levels and rolling all their landings in on the wheels and they're safe, happy, and having fun why do we need to push and harrass them and prepare them for XC competition?
My best friend wanted to fly a Fledge with rudders. He was a damned good pilot but he had never flown a rigid wing. I held his nose wires and he ground-handled it in the ridgelift for a while. When he was ready, he yelled "Clear!" and did I try to stop him? Did I say I was the USHGA police and he was busted? No. I jumped out of the way.
If you HAD been the USHGA police what USHGA regulations would you have cited in the charging document?
I have no problem WHATSOEVER with what Bob did. I have HUGE problems with what George Worthington, Arlan Birkett, and Shane Smith did.
We are currently anticipating that we would honor all existing USHPA ratings either initially (grandfathering) or on an ongoing basis.
The idea behind hang gliding is to get off the ground, fly up to the clouds, stay there for an hour or two, and land without bending anything too much.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vb4nUTAJXTkhttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pTiUCy7CK74http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bTa6XL16i0Uhttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JR_4jKLqrushttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eTKIAvqd7GIIf USHGA mountain pilots were so astronomically incompetent that they couldn't get and stay off the ground more than three out of four, occasionally zero out of six attempts how good an idea would it be to welcome them into US Hawks, accept their training as valid, and honor their ratings without question?