You guys can misinterpret my posts and the air regs faster than a coked out evangelist caught with a midget hooker interprets the bible.
For the record: I stand by what I've said all along. I feel that it's clear that the meaning of the regulations supports it. That aerobatic aircraft using CYA (A) airspace should have "right of way" over aircraft using it for other purposes.
I haven't said:
(a) that CYA (A) airspace must be exclusively used for aerobatics
(b) that there is not a lack of designated training airspace in the Vancouver area
(c) that anyone could use any excuses for a lack of vigilance while flying.
You guys have come up with that on your own.
If any of you had met me in person you'd know I'm a very courteous, professional pilot. It's how I've supported my family for ten years. I've also been down the lower mainland instructor road before, so I'm sympathetic to what your dealing with. I don't do much aerobatics any more other than the odd roll now and then so I'm not personally motivated to protect the (a) areas we're talking about. I'm interested in seeing that the next generation of pilots are taught basic airmanship.
If any of you would like to support what your saying with a reference, I'll debate it further with you. The mud slinging is getting boring, however. It seems obvious to me that you're choosing to make up your own interpretations of airmanship based solely on
your own needs. Until they decide to pay instructors a descent wage, the cycle of 200hr pilot instructing others will probably continue to propagate the problem as there is little real-world experience penetrating the ZBB bubble. I'll say this, and it's nothing against you guys in particular: Boundary Bay has a very unhealthy aviation culture. It's had decades people hangar flying over a Star Trek burger and a Coke inventing their own aviation reality. The majority of people teaching there have little other experience outside of that role (there are exceptions). I can assure you that many of the highest priorities as seen in that world aren't even on the radar elsewhere in the very big world of aviation.
If you're truly interested in safety why don't you all get together and petition TC to change some airspace to "T" and solve the issue the correct way. Moreover it would protect you from liability in case, god forbid, there is an accident between an aerobat and a student misusing airspace at your recommendation. That is, of course, if your motivation is really to do things right.
In flying I have learned that carelessness and overconfidence are usually far more dangerous than deliberately accepted risks.
— Wilbur Wright in a letter to his father, September 1900.
PC12, you should calm down or you'll be headed for the big jammer. You sound madder than a three legged dog tying to bury a terd on a frozen lake.
