Register

In Search of Simplicity

A celebration of basic flight

Sam Weigel celebrated his birthday weekend enjoying flight in three different ways. [Courtesy: Sam Weigel]
Gemini Sparkle

Key Takeaways:

  • The author celebrated his 41st birthday with a weekend dedicated to various forms of "pure, simple flight," embracing a back-to-basics approach to aviation.
  • The adventures included getting current in a Piper Super Cub, experiencing old-school soaring in a vintage Schweizer SGS 2-33 glider in Arizona, and completing four skydives.
  • These diverse aerial experiences highlighted the joy and simplicity of direct interaction with the sky, from feeling lift in an unadorned glider to the freedom of freefall.
See a mistake? Contact us.

It’s a warm spring day in Arizona, 92 degrees Fahrenheit on the ground and not much cooler under the plexiglass canopy at 3,000 feet agl. The northwest wind has picked up, making for some rough tows and brisk crosswind landings. The shear is also breaking up the thermals, making it challenging to keep this 45-year-old training glider in the air. My previous glider experience is in sleek fiberglass ships with a glide ratio of 34:1 or better. This boxy, blunt-nosed Schweizer SGS 2-33—with its tube-and-fabric fuselage and strut-braced aluminum wings—gets 22:1 on a good day.

We’re flying over a prominent ridge that’s not quite perpendicular to the wind. I think strong lift should be here somewhere, but so far it’s been inconsistent. My wife, Dawn, seated in the back, spots a turkey vulture soaring a few hundred feet to windward. I turn that way and soon there’s a deep whump! as a gust slaps the fabric like a drum and the wings load up with a metallic shudder. There’s no electronic vario to chirp a happy song of lift, but you can feel it in your bones and in the stick. This is old-school soaring, and though it’s not terribly sexy, it has a simplicity that is hugely appealing to me. Over the last decade, I’ve done a lot to channel both my life and my recreational flying in this direction. It’s appropriate, then, that I should spend the weekend of my 41st birthday enjoying simple communion with the sky in three different ways.

Sam Weigel

Sam Weigel has been an airplane nut since an early age, and when he's not flying the Boeing 737 for work, he enjoys going low and slow in vintage taildraggers. He and his wife live west of Seattle, where they are building an aviation homestead on a private 2,400-foot grass airstrip.

Ready to Sell Your Aircraft?

List your airplane on AircraftForSale.com and reach qualified buyers.

List Your Aircraft
AircraftForSale Logo | FLYING Logo
Pilot in aircraft
Sign-up for newsletters & special offers!

Get the latest stories & special offers delivered directly to your inbox.

SUBSCRIBE