RickMasters wrote:
Actually, I thought I was done with hang gliding after 1986.
I don't know know if someone who's flown at your level can ever be done with hang gliding. I certainly haven't come anywhere near your level of involvement in the sport, and I know the sport will be with me the rest of my life.
RickMasters wrote:
We had worked so hard and for so long to lower the death rate to that of sail planes or even lower. Everywhere I looked, paragliders were falling out of the sky. Today I have verified nearly 1290 paragliding fatalities and many, many times more broken backs. These all occurred since I last flew a hang glider.
I took my first HG lessons in 1978, but didn't "get back" to it until 2004. I might have been a statistic if I hadn't taken that long break to return to a sport that's now much safer due to the efforts of so many many people like yourself. I suspect that many of those improvements were a direct consequence of someone else paying for it with their life. On almost every flight I find myself thinking about how wonderful it is to fly and how grateful I am to the men and women who worked so hard and sacrificed so much to bring us the sport we have today.
RickMasters wrote:
Obviously, hang gliding has lost its way. Parachutists have a bloodier, more fatalistic mindset than hang glider pilots. Parachutists also have their own parachuting organization. Therefore I was completely stunned to see that hang glider pilots had turned over their national organization to them. That was a huge mistake.
Hang gliding needs its own representative organization and the good sense to keep it.
That last sentence encapsulates my goal for the US Hawks. USHPA
might be able to serve that purpose if they were to undergo a fairly substantial restructuring and partitioning to ensure that each sport had its own equal representation regardless of the numbers. But that's not likely to happen. The paragliders have indeed taken over USHPA, and they give no indication that they want to make things fair for hang glider pilots. My many years of exposure to Rich Hass confirms that.
It's certainly sad to look back, but that's not where the future lies. It lies ahead. The future is in our hands to be built the way we want it. The 13 Colonies needed to start anew to build what became the greatest country in the world. PADI had to break away from NAUI to form the largest SCUBA organization in the world. Children must leave their parents to build their own lives. The pattern is universal. There comes a time when a fresh start is needed. Now is that time.
I won't twist your arm too much longer, but I think it would be a wonderful endeavor to resurrect the XCPA. But you have to let me know if you'd like to give it a try. I'll help any way I can.