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Bed & Breakfast . . . Bed & Breakfast . . . - Greg Koontz Aviation!

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Bonnie Kratz<br />

<strong>Bed</strong> & <strong>Breakfast</strong> . . .<br />

“ Learning to manipulate an aircraft beyond the<br />

familiarity of level flight is the same no matter<br />

where your goals will take you. ”<br />

and<br />

By <strong>Greg</strong> <strong>Koontz</strong><br />

When I was 7 years old<br />

my father, a corporate<br />

pilot, did something<br />

rare. He rented a private airplane<br />

an d f l e w m e t o G a d s d e n ,<br />

Alabama, for an air show. It was a<br />

huge event for me. Bill Sweet Airshows<br />

was putting on an extravaganza fitting for<br />

the 1960s. Bevo Howard, Hal Krier, and Dick<br />

Schram headlined the show. On the flight home I told<br />

my dad that I was going to be an air show pilot.<br />

At age 19 I bought a Cub from Ernie Moser in St.<br />

Augustine, Florida. He wanted to use it for his flying<br />

circus, so I struck a deal—I got to do the comedy act for<br />

$100, and he got to use the Cub for his other acts. Now<br />

I was an air show pilot, and I soon joined the group<br />

full time and started instructing. Back then, if you<br />

could successfully loop a Citabria, you were assigned<br />

the role of aerobatic instructor. I muddled through<br />

students and, after teaching who knows what to my<br />

first victims, learned the trade. Of course, like many of<br />

us, I owe many thanks to Duane Cole and those classic<br />

books he wrote so long ago. For more than 30 years I<br />

have learned from my peers and my students. Today I<br />

find no side of aerobatics more important than safetyoriented<br />

training.<br />

The Federal <strong>Aviation</strong> Administration (FAA) takes a<br />

very cautious approach to aerobatics. It defines aerobatics<br />

as only a limit to bank and roll, or an excursion<br />

from normal flight. They tell us how high to do maneuvers,<br />

and where to do them, and add the requirement<br />

of parachutes if a passenger is involved. What they so<br />

carefully avoid is telling us specifically what a loop<br />

or roll is! And can we blame them? I can’t find two<br />

instructors who teach an aileron roll the same or agree<br />

on the logical course of an aerobatic curriculum. While<br />

aerobatic instruction has plenty of room for individual<br />

style, there are right and wrong ways to teach.<br />

16 • MAY 2007 SPORT AEROBATICS • 17


<strong>Greg</strong> <strong>Koontz</strong> opened his Sky Country Lodge in Ashville, Alabama,<br />

to provide grass strip, grass roots aerobatic training in a bed and<br />

breakfast environment.<br />

Choosing a good instructor is very basic. I admit that<br />

I learned as I went, stumbling through students while<br />

learning by my mistakes. I asked for advice and was fortunate<br />

to be surrounded by talented pilots. Today training<br />

has become more formal and sophisticated (although<br />

basic principles remain the same) and there are some fine<br />

schools out there. The tough part for the aspiring aerobatic<br />

pilot is identifying a quality program. Here is a basic<br />

checklist that will help students find a safe way along<br />

what can be a very confusing path.<br />

Look for experience in the school’s instructors.<br />

Not everyone gets to compete, so we shouldn’t limit<br />

any search to that one criteria. We should be looking for<br />

someone who has had professional instruction and is<br />

involved with organized aerobatics through associations<br />

such as the International Aerobatic Club (IAC). Avoid the<br />

pilot who became an aerobatic instructor based solely on<br />

the fact that he or she just bought a Citabria!<br />

Consider credentials. Our sport has benefited a great<br />

deal from the introduction of the Master Instructor program.<br />

The National Association of Flight Instructors (NAFI)<br />

is a progressive organization that is dedicated to professionalism<br />

in flight instruction. It is a good source for research.<br />

The FAA has recently started looking into a new flight<br />

instructor program designed around the concept of pilot<br />

qualifications. The yet-to-be-named program is intended<br />

to replace or build upon the old Gold Seal Instructor and<br />

the more recent Master Instructor by encouraging actual<br />

advanced training and accountability of skills rather than a<br />

previous record of some level of success. The idea is to offer<br />

instructors a way of showing their credentials by a certificate<br />

notation saying they have received specific training in<br />

how to teach basic aerobatics, aircraft upset situations,<br />

Courtesy <strong>Greg</strong> <strong>Koontz</strong><br />

Just being a pilot takes a<br />

commitment to maintain<br />

proficiency, but being an<br />

aerobatic pilot is a step more<br />

intense. A training program<br />

needs consistency so you are<br />

building on a fresh foundation.<br />

spins, and conventional-gear aircraft. This would give the<br />

student something specific to look for when searching for<br />

that elusive aerobatic instructor. Hopefully it will also serve<br />

to discourage the “fly-by-night” operators. Stay tuned.<br />

Understand the commitment. A few years ago I<br />

bought a little bass boat and took up fishing. I don’t have<br />

much time for it, but now and then I dust off the boat and<br />

go out on the lake and take up the hobby right where I<br />

left off. What’s that got to do with aerobatics? Nothing,<br />

and that’s my point. Just being a pilot takes a commitment<br />

to maintain proficiency, but being an aerobatic<br />

pilot is a step more intense. A training program needs<br />

consistency so you are building on a fresh foundation.<br />

I ask my students to come stay at my school until they<br />

complete the basic aerobatic course in one visit. This gives<br />

me a chance to critique each flight and build on the next<br />

while everything is fresh. Instructing is like painting a<br />

picture in a person’s mind. Every time I go to add to the<br />

picture, I need the previous work to still be there. This<br />

holds true for the hours of practice that follow. Practice<br />

and critique need to be a steady program to achieve positive<br />

results. This sport takes time and money, and both<br />

need to be available at the same time.<br />

Review the curriculum and look for a strong foundation.<br />

In 2002 I took an early retirement from a corporate<br />

flying job to put my aerobatic school into full-time<br />

status. I’m flying more than a hundred students each year<br />

at my fly-in bed-and-breakfast. They come to learn upset<br />

training, spins, tailwheel flying, and basic aerobatics.<br />

They are doctors, lawyers, businesspeople, and professional<br />

pilots. Some have bought an American Champion<br />

product (my sponsor) and want a checkout. Some want<br />

to prepare for entering a contest. Others want to learn a<br />

sport, and most simply want to improve what they love,<br />

which is flying. Regardless of the motivation, it all boils<br />

down to starting with the basics. My upset training course<br />

looks just exactly like my basic aerobatic course. It has<br />

to. The physics are the same. Learning to manipulate an<br />

aircraft beyond the familiarity of level flight is the same<br />

no matter where your goals will take you. So my training<br />

curriculum starts with reviewing the principles of flight<br />

and then showing how they apply to aerobatics. The next<br />

layer is a few maneuvers designed to build the kind of<br />

orientation skills required for aerobatics, and then finally<br />

I start a layer of aerobatic maneuvers. I prefer doing the<br />

four fundamental maneuvers in the order of rolls, loops,<br />

hammerheads, then spins. This allows me to have the roll<br />

skills started early so I can mold and improve on them<br />

during each subsequent flight. I wait until the last lesson<br />

plan to introduce spins so my student has time to acclimate<br />

to all these crazy gyrations! Each instructor will have<br />

his or her own style and preference, but in the end we all<br />

should be achieving the same foundation.<br />

Invest in the basics. As a rule, most pilots want to<br />

learn too quickly. Bigger is better, faster is greater. There<br />

is no rest until we get to that super-duper airplane, be it a<br />

Lear or an Edge 540. But every pilot starts somewhere, and<br />

that somewhere must be rooted in the basics if it is going<br />

to help them reach their ultimate flying goal.<br />

Hey, we instructors are prone to grandiosity, too. Who<br />

wants to be a lowly basic acro instructor when the excitement<br />

and recognition is in that high-performance mount?<br />

They are super fun to fly and can do mighty feats! As<br />

instructors we have to be careful that we are not trying to<br />

move Primary pilots along too quickly. It is not doing our<br />

sport a favor. What we really need is a push to emphasize<br />

Primary and Sportsman aerobatics. Boy, do we need the<br />

boost. Our sport is the most exciting sport to participate in<br />

and the most confusing to start. There are so many affordable<br />

and fun-to-fly aircraft that would do well in the beginning<br />

categories, and we tend to pass over them as we put so<br />

much attention to the upper categories. All of my contest<br />

experience comes from Sportsman, and if you have not<br />

been there lately, or at all, I’m here to tell you it’s a blast!<br />

Set clear goals. When my students arrive for a couple<br />

of days of personal instruction, the first thing I do is strike<br />

up a conversation about their goals. Those with a goal in<br />

sport aerobatics start the same as anyone, but their intent<br />

to continue in the sport leads us eventually down another<br />

route. The start, much to everyone’s surprise, is a lesson in<br />

stick and rudder. Most of us can fly our regular aircraft just<br />

fine, but many of us have stored the technical parts of our<br />

control movements in the deep wrinkles of our brains. I<br />

first drag that stuff back to the surface where I begin the<br />

first layer of the foundation. Then, after steep turns, slow<br />

flight, and stalls, finally come the rolls. Not a slow roll,<br />

but the fundamental aileron roll. Let’s put the foundation<br />

down in simple and strong layers. Loops and hammerheads<br />

follow in later lessons, and the program ends with<br />

a good cleaning of all those spin bugaboos.<br />

So what happens next? Rolling 360s? Outside loops?<br />

Maybe a good gyroscopic sequence? Nope. We focus<br />

As an aerobatic competency evaluator, <strong>Greg</strong> evaluates the<br />

competency of air show pilots that wish to perform low level<br />

aerobatics.<br />

on mastering the basics—shoring up that foundation.<br />

Once a student is ready to solo the four basic maneuvers<br />

(rolls, loops, hammerheads, and spins) I send them out<br />

to practice. But practice is not productive if not critiqued<br />

regularly. My advice to my students is to latch up immediately<br />

with an IAC chapter, go to the meetings, go to the<br />

practice days, and, before he burns up much fuel, pick a<br />

mentor. That’s right; I give my students away after a basic<br />

course and ask them to find a local expert. Then, with<br />

great faith, I depend on this mentor to carefully monitor<br />

their progress. When the time comes to add on, a good<br />

mentor will send my student back to me or to any one of<br />

many experienced instructors so his or her program will<br />

continue to build in a logical order.<br />

18 • MAY 2007 SPORT AEROBATICS • 19<br />

Courtesy <strong>Greg</strong> <strong>Koontz</strong>


Safety first. Now comes safety, and nothing is more<br />

basic. I am very proud of our record at IAC contests. Not<br />

too long ago a student of mine reported that the safety<br />

check at his first contest was “picky.” He even had to open<br />

up the back inspection plate of his Acro Sport to please<br />

the inspector. That’s great! We set a great example at the<br />

contests. But what happens in everyday flying when the<br />

safety inspector is not looking over your shoulder? I know<br />

of some pilots who actually believe preflight planning<br />

and inspection make them appear to be inexperienced.<br />

In the corporate world I almost never saw the high-time<br />

captains working a full weight and balance. It seemed<br />

they were just kicking the tires and lighting the fires! Of<br />

course, they did have advanced experience and intuitive<br />

judgment, something learned by computing many a takeoff<br />

and endless weight-and-balance sheets. But why take a<br />

chance? Let beginners and spectators witness your safety<br />

habits so there is no misunderstanding.<br />

Pick the right airplane. Obviously safety comes with<br />

the right equipment. A good airworthy aircraft selected<br />

correctly for its task is imperative. A well-chosen parachute<br />

can make a big difference. Comfort is essential to<br />

your happiness in that little cockpit, but also be sure your<br />

rigging is correct for the way you need to sit, and your<br />

path clear to the exit. Parachutes are very personal and<br />

should fit your needs, including your aircraft speed, your<br />

weight, and your experience as a jumper.<br />

Thinking beyond equipment drives me right back to<br />

the basics. I do aerobatic competency evaluations, where<br />

experienced pilots come to demonstrate their abilities<br />

and acquire a low-level air show aerobatic waiver. I often<br />

have the privilege of watching some really beautiful aerial<br />

demonstrations that are destined to entertain thousands.<br />

On rare occasions I watch someone who struggles. That<br />

person is usually delinquent in his or her practice, and I<br />

see the flaws caused by a poor foundation. I have asked<br />

for the required inverted spins, only to be told that he<br />

or she has never flown them…yet the practical test standards<br />

clearly demand them. I just cannot imagine doing<br />

aggressive low aerobatics and avoiding such an important<br />

safety factor. We have friends who are avoiding certain<br />

parts of their flying. As we guide pilots through the maze<br />

of beginning aerobatics, we must be committed to mak-<br />

20 • MAY 2007<br />

Bonnie Kratz<br />

Building a safe aerobatic foundation often starts with a review of<br />

basic stick and rudder technique.<br />

ing sure everyone has good basic instruction and current<br />

practice on those maneuvers they need for safe recoveries,<br />

even though they do not intend to use them in their<br />

flights.<br />

My methods of teaching the basics of aerobatics<br />

are surely unique and will differ from an equally solid<br />

program taught by any number of qualified aerobatic<br />

instructors. What all of those solid programs have in<br />

common is that they are based on mastering the basics<br />

and understanding what works. Being unique is what<br />

every instructor has to offer. Years ago I taught at a<br />

school so busy that all I had was a back-to-back schedule<br />

of hour-and-a-half slots to teach everything from private<br />

pilots to aerobatics to multiengine courses and so on. It<br />

was hard work, paid poorly, and left little time for quality.<br />

Today I have developed an entirely new concept. My<br />

humble little school is located on a private grass strip<br />

far away from any congestion. The aerobatic box is right<br />

over the strip. You can sit on the porch and critique! I<br />

made my house into a bed-and-breakfast so my students<br />

can stay right on the runway. This creates a relaxed and<br />

friendly atmosphere where students can immerse themselves<br />

into the program. Unless otherwise requested, I<br />

limit my students to two people at a time so when a<br />

person comes here to train, it is more like staying with<br />

a personal trainer for a couple of days. We get up in the<br />

morning for a good breakfast (hey, we said it was a B&B)<br />

followed by ground school, and then we fly as the day<br />

progresses. Most students can fly two aerobatic lessons a<br />

day, so with two students we fly a total of four flights a<br />

day around the extensive ground sessions. Then comes<br />

time to light up the grill and have a relaxed evening. As<br />

you can tell, it is very fortunate that I like to cook almost<br />

as much as I love to fly!<br />

The important thing is to know that there are different<br />

styles of teaching, different personalities, and different<br />

aerobatic goals. Helping students find the place<br />

where they will be the most successful is our shared<br />

interest. I happen to prefer serving up aerobatics with a<br />

side of bacon. It works for my students, and that’s what<br />

it is all about.<br />

<strong>Greg</strong> <strong>Koontz</strong> has held a<br />

flight instructor certificate<br />

since 1972. Of his 22,000<br />

flight hours 7,000 have<br />

been as a flight instructor.<br />

He has flown most<br />

aerobatic types as well as<br />

165 total types of aircraft.<br />

<strong>Greg</strong> spent 20 years as a<br />

corporate pilot and retired<br />

in 2002 to expand his<br />

aerobatic business into a<br />

full-time operation. He<br />

performs in about 16 air<br />

shows each year, and his<br />

major sponsor is American<br />

Champion Aircraft. <strong>Greg</strong> operates Sky Country Lodge as<br />

his home base and aerobatic flying school. You can learn more<br />

about his school at www.GKairshows.com or contact him at<br />

<strong>Greg</strong>@gkairshows.com.

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