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![]() "Roger Long" wrote in message ... "Dave" wrote Flying is surprisingly easy. Walking the length of a foot wide board is quite easy. Put the board between two tall buildings and it suddenly becomes something different. Then add a couple other tasks to do as you walk across. Here you've touched the nub of the disagreement. You've been comparing (I suspect) easy flying with difficult sailing, and concluding that flying is easier (and, perhaps, overexpensive to insure!). In any of these 'concentration' activities, people learn the basics. Then they extend the envelope or performance level of those activities until they reach a limit. You've probably done that as a sailor, with the consequences not too dire. I certainly have. Have you done that in aviation? or were you self limited by the possibility of catastrophe? Or trained to avoid the limits? Most aviation accidents are ultimately pilot error but the things that often kill pilots are not things that you can train for. Human error, actually, not necessarily pilot. And what usually kills is not one error, but a combination of two or three errors (design error, faulty maintenance, poor operational procedure) followed by the pilot being unable to dig himself out of the hole (metaphorically). The point is that the pilot has been trained to survive most of these events - and not be killed by them - but some rare combinations escape the net of preparation. Of course, there are idiots that ignore basics and go for thrills. But that applies to any activity, sailing included. Who are these idiots who sail single handedly the wrong way round the world in boats which can't be righted when they're knocked over? Or those skiers who schuss down rock encumbered cliffs? Or flyers who do low aerobatics over the girlfriend's house? -- JimB http://www.jimbaerselman.f2s.com/ for opinions comparing Greek cruising areas |
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