Monday, March 23, 2009

Wing Walking - The ultimate thrill



Nothing sums up adventure like the thrill of daring to push the envelope, accomplishing what others just dream of doing, and those few souls who dare are the pioneers that open the realm of possibility and advance for the rest of the human race. - Dharma Rahkonen.

The Member in Action this month is someone we are proud to have as a Friend of Aviation. She truly embodies adventure! Barn storming was practiced by many of the earliest aviators and today it is kept alive by people like our Jenny Forsythe. Here is Jenny in her own words;

The Adventures of Wing Walking as an American Barnstormer…

No doubt – wing walking is thrilling, to say the least, but not in the way most people assume. “That must be an amazing rush!,” is among the more common greetings we’re met with at the flightline after a performance. On the contrary, I’ve often described wing walking as being closer to a form of meditation than a typical “rush”. No matter what else may have been on my mind while my feet were planted on the ground, once we take flight, I find myself at peace and focused upon my own little world on the wings of our Stearman biplane. Wing walking is not for everyone, but for someone like me who enjoys performing such feats, it is more a challenge and a way of expressing myself than it is an adrenaline rush.

The art of wing walking began 92 years ago and has evolved to become a popular spectacle at many airshows these days. Lt. Ormer Locklear is the first person credited with bringing wing walking into the spotlight in 1918 when he was encouraged to perform his “stunts” as a recruiting effort to prove the US Army Air Service’s airplanes were stable and reliable in flight. Nearly a century later, wing walking is still enjoyed at both military and civilian events around the world.

Today’s performances often include a mix of the classics and some more original maneuvers. The simplest routines can be trained for in a day – those utilizing more aerobatics on the part of the pilot and fewer (if any) movements about the wings by the wing walker. Routines that are more involved with the wing walker moving all about the wings from one position to another to another can take considerably more training and practice. There are several places on the plane a wing walker can position their body – and several maneuvers the pilot can execute with the wing walker in any particular place on the plane. Getting the right mix of wing walker movement with pilot skills is where the artistry of wing walking comes into play. Each wing walker’s personal physique, strength, flexibility, and stamina play into the resulting painting that is drawn out on the canvas in the sky.

In North America, a wing walking experience is not something that can be bought, like can be done with a skydiving lesson. Professional wing walking schools simply don’t exist, for a variety of technical and legal reasons. I believe the fact that there are so few people who ever get the opportunity to wing walk makes it all the more thrilling to be a professional wing walker. But, the longer lasting thrill that I’ve experienced as a wing walker comes upon our landing where we are greeted by smiling faces and inquisitive minds. Though many of the same questions pop up from town to town, there is always someone that manages to catch us with a unique or insightful query we’ve not heard before. Wing walking has given me the opportunity to meet the various people and experience the multitude of cultures in this amazing world of ours – and that has truly been the adventure of my life.


http://www.americanbarnstormer.com/
http://www.jennyforsythe.com/