Thursday, 19 April 2007

Zen and the art of 'Winglish'

Just read an interesting article over at www.paragliding-tales-and-reviews.com on the art of kiting (that's groundhandling for us English pilots). Its a great little story about getting a 'feel' for your wing - that is instead of trying to control your wing by what it looks like and by thinking about what you should be doing, but to control it by becoming more 'in-tune' with how it feels. By listening to and feeling the glider through your body, harness, risers and brakes you respond more instinctively to the movements of the glider and ultimately become one with it - moving in perfect harmony. At this point you understand 'Winglish' and speak the language of the glider.

Its the sort naturalness we all want to achieve but is hard to attain simply through rational analysis. Sure, thinking about what is happening and why what you are doing is either working or not is definately helpful, but I really believe that getting into 'the zone' or reaching any level of mastery often can't be analysed - its something you have to feel, and of course experience always pays off!

So, next time you are being dragged about the launch area and the other experienced pilots are handling their glider effortlessly in strong winds - you know they are fluent in 'Winglish' while you are still only catching the odd word.

The article on Winglish was originally written by Jeff Greenbaum and is featured on his website along with a series of other articles on different aspects of paragliding - many of which are useful to (relatively) low airtime pilots like myself.

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