Jim Tomerson
Gee, don't send the stunt community down the Stuart Walker road!!!! Everyone will get as screwed up as we are in sailing trying to figure him out! Stuart does way to much thinking. My head hurt for years after figuring him out.
My old coach (golly that was you Frank!) always told me to fly the pattern and don't deviate. In my beginning years when I did deviate I put the plane in the ground every time. Since I didn't like building as much as flying I decided to follow his advice and quit crashing and learning the pattern. Having come back to it this last year after 20 years away, my most uncomfortable flights were the first ones when I was trying to get the first plane trimmed out. I couldn't fly the whole pattern and I knew what that ment. Yup, killed one before I even got to the whole pattern. I finally got over that again (a good reason not to quit flying stunt again!) and just started practicing. On the rare occaision when I practice one or two maneuvers for an entire flight it is very uncomfortable. And oddly, at least in my case, I am not sure it transfers to flying a better pattern. Seems when I practice by flying the entire pattern in proper order I get better with a practice session than when I just work on a few maneuvers in a flight. I think the muscle memory thing is a real big deal.
But so is flying in junky weather, be it wind or dead calm. Same for flying in the sun. I usually practice in the evening on an island where the wind blows from the south west most every night. When I get to a contest the sun is always in my face. Toughest thing for me to deal with since I never see it. I made sure I flew in alot of wind this summer, sometimes practicing in 20 knot winds. Yea, those patterns looked like junk, but the sound of the wind whistling in my ears at a contest doesn't bother me now. True I did kill 2 planes doing it, but it was worth it. That's why there are arf's. Use them, they are a tool.
bob branch