Jonathan Baron
New member
Interesting point of view :!:
My brother got his ticket due to his achievement oriented nature...then again, he quit pretty much after he got the ticket. Thus I believe motives both egotistical and spiritual are necessary - not to get the ticket, but to become a lasting member of the General Aviation community.
Now that I think about it, there are folks who fly for reasons that nothing to do with either one of those listed motives above. I met this one new Mooney M20C owner who learned to fly because he was a traveling salesman and found flying more practical on good days. He got his instrument ticket because it was more practical on not so good days. He was smart enough to go back to driving on terrible days
Others, still, fly because it is a visible measure of achievement as well, especially those who are high achievers in businesses that generate major dollars. It's not how hard you work as much as the dollar value your work brings in.
Others enjoy flying but stick with and buy airplanes to be heroes to their families, or just to make family trips quite a bit more interesting.
You're right - perhaps we triple tail folks don't simply represent a small portion of the general population, but a filtered part of general aviation.
You hit on another key point: most flight schools, in my experience, are not warm, welcoming places. I just wrapped up an article for a different publication on this subject: people who first arrive at the FBO from the parking lot versus those who enter via the ramp. It's not that pilots have any antipathy toward non-pilots...they simply have no interest in them.
Already anxious when they show up, prospective pilots are easily scared away when they are not greeted quickly and cheerfully - and I've seen this at places with signs along the main road soliciting new students, not just the small green Learn to Fly Here signs.
At plenty of flight schools you can stand around for a long time before anyone comes forth to greet you. And EAA Chapters...oy...don't get me started on them. These are often TIGHT groups that, despite others being present, can only "see" people they've known for decades. Now, before you say, "Not at my chapter!" I have tried to join plenty of them, all over the country. My experience may be skewed to some extent by the fact that lots of people don't think "ah, a pilot!" when I show up....plus I don't show up in an RV
One guy - a complete stranger - walked up to me and asked, "Who gave YOU a medical?"
In short, your operation is as needed as it is exceptional. Pilots may know we need more pilots; they just don't want to chat with non-pilots in pilot settings. In fairness, demonstrating warmth toward strangers is not a common skill. Does the Welcome Wagon exist anymore?
Thanks goodness you were part of the opposite. There's a flight school near Tulsa that's like that, and certainly there are others.
Jonathan
My brother got his ticket due to his achievement oriented nature...then again, he quit pretty much after he got the ticket. Thus I believe motives both egotistical and spiritual are necessary - not to get the ticket, but to become a lasting member of the General Aviation community.
Now that I think about it, there are folks who fly for reasons that nothing to do with either one of those listed motives above. I met this one new Mooney M20C owner who learned to fly because he was a traveling salesman and found flying more practical on good days. He got his instrument ticket because it was more practical on not so good days. He was smart enough to go back to driving on terrible days

Others, still, fly because it is a visible measure of achievement as well, especially those who are high achievers in businesses that generate major dollars. It's not how hard you work as much as the dollar value your work brings in.
Others enjoy flying but stick with and buy airplanes to be heroes to their families, or just to make family trips quite a bit more interesting.
You're right - perhaps we triple tail folks don't simply represent a small portion of the general population, but a filtered part of general aviation.
You hit on another key point: most flight schools, in my experience, are not warm, welcoming places. I just wrapped up an article for a different publication on this subject: people who first arrive at the FBO from the parking lot versus those who enter via the ramp. It's not that pilots have any antipathy toward non-pilots...they simply have no interest in them.
Already anxious when they show up, prospective pilots are easily scared away when they are not greeted quickly and cheerfully - and I've seen this at places with signs along the main road soliciting new students, not just the small green Learn to Fly Here signs.
At plenty of flight schools you can stand around for a long time before anyone comes forth to greet you. And EAA Chapters...oy...don't get me started on them. These are often TIGHT groups that, despite others being present, can only "see" people they've known for decades. Now, before you say, "Not at my chapter!" I have tried to join plenty of them, all over the country. My experience may be skewed to some extent by the fact that lots of people don't think "ah, a pilot!" when I show up....plus I don't show up in an RV

In short, your operation is as needed as it is exceptional. Pilots may know we need more pilots; they just don't want to chat with non-pilots in pilot settings. In fairness, demonstrating warmth toward strangers is not a common skill. Does the Welcome Wagon exist anymore?
Thanks goodness you were part of the opposite. There's a flight school near Tulsa that's like that, and certainly there are others.
Jonathan