At this weekend's Dallas contest we had a few questions that had to be addressed, pretty well handled by knowledgeable judges and even the flyers themselves.
Randi Gifford is a breath of fresh air, she's open to questions about her judging, seeks the answers, and applies them. Just getting interested people like Jerry together to talk out the questions/rules is probably a big step. If you are at a club meeting and there are other diciplines represented there, others not interested in stunt judging might get bored. A get-together just to hash out stunt judging would be great, out on Don's patio with an ice chest of cold ones....
John Ashford is known to spend some time in the regs, and he has given seminars where he's learned a lot..... seminars, now there's a thought.....
There are two facets to judging toy airplanes on strings, the scoring of the manoeuvers themselves, and the decision making when something weird occurs.
I respect judges who, when confronted with a question, can say they honestly don't know, but then say let's go to the book and find out. If you're standing in the hot sun in 100 degree heat, and the next flyer is ready to go, a little knowledge of where stuff is located in the books can expedite the decision making process,
Example:
A flyer's plane touches the ground on the bottom of an hourglass and then continues the pattern, quick, who ya' gonna' call?
Joe Bowman, that's who, he's the Tom Watson of Stunt.
I'm sure this clears up Jerry's query...he is a very good stunt judge already, if ya' ask me.....dg