The BACKGROUND is what makes you dizzy . !
The further away things are , the easier it is . At Different fields it takes the brain cells awhile to get used to whats about .
After half a diozen visits its taken for granted by the grey matter and no longer a distraction , or spinning around .
THEREFORE standing out at the circle center with your Arm out and thumb up , looking about a foot in front of the thumb
and LOOKING where you want your thumb ( aeroplane ) to go , for a dozen laps ( rotations )minimum , gets the INFORMATION
OVERLOAD in abeyance. Or has dealt with that already rather than having your attention jumping between the plane , spectators , carpark
and hot dog stand constantly .
A field with trees at the edge of the circle gets the background whirring a good deal more than somewhere ' wide open ' , so your likely
a lot better off starting out at a airfield type site .
Some smart assed young turkey asked if he could hve a go off my Phantom ( stunter ) I told him ' if you hold your arm out and look at your thumb and walk around in a circle a dozen times first . amazingly he did, no arguments . Manadged to leave the handle for a few laps straight off and chase it for a 1/2 dozen , at times. The plane would go half the angle of the arm - straight arm .
He got a bit dizzy after 4 minutes or so , but had flown several laps unhindered ( dual - handle ) .
He had never seen a control liner 10 minutes before .
SO , do some practice WITHOUT the airplane beforehand , at home and at the field .
When your HAPPY with THAT , add the Aeroplane .