Thanks for the post
@Chuck U. Farley welcome to PoA! I hope you don't take my responses personally or in a bad light, as that is definitely not my intention.. just my observations to your observations, and hopefully if someone at CAP is reading this it can be constructive
Oh, and the chicks... yah, you know what I'm talking about. the only thing better is having a boat during the summertime.
This could be tongue in cheek, sometimes hard to tell online, or maybe it is locally dependent, but in the 9 months or so I diligently went to CAP meetings I don't think I ever saw a female regular.. I would think there are better places to meet women than CAP meetings. This is a topic for another thread entirely, but few women my age seem to A.) care that I'm a pilot or B.) think it's cool. Most just ask "oh you work for an airliner?" and when you say no they are generally confused..
I have wanted to be a pilot since I was barely tall enough to walk. I am a former CAP cadet, and yah it was really geeky in high-school but at least I was big and bold enough that no one fu##ed with me. I learned how to march, snap to attention, and address my elders and "sir" or 'Ma'am", all good things. I endured, did my first solo in a glider at a CAP summer camp, then first solo in ASEL the following summer. From there I went onto college, did AFROTC for a year until I realized it was not a good fit for me, then tripped and fell into another career field.
Respecting adults ("elders") and addressing people professionally does not need to come from a military style organization. I was in the scouts and I agree that organizations like that do help give someone structure and discipline, but they're not requirements, and may even be detrimental from a social perspective by stripping away a lot of your autonomy. I know plenty of very respectful people who aren't from a military or similar background. This whole pseudo-military part of CAP was one of my big turnoffs. If the mission is to promote general aviation and use it to help the public good, etc., then it should be geared towards that. Assembling a ranking system and this whole pretend hierarchy doesn't do anything to help actually promote their mission. That's cool that you did your first solo in a glider, great way to learn about the principles of flight, etc., but you shouldn't have to "
endure" something and wait multiple summers to get to your dream of flying. It is not a cheap hobby, but I managed to work my way through my PPL as a teenager just saving my money from the odd jobs, etc..
I have recently been looking to get back involved with Civil Air Patrol, the local squadron is very active with ES missions and perhaps this will give me a greater sense of purpose for flying, and if nothing else, I will get the opportunity to fly in some very nice, well-equipped aircraft.
This may be local, but out here there were some serious barriers to entry to fly their aircraft. A licensed,
instrument rated pilot who flies 100+ hrs per year should be able to do a checkout like anyone else and be entitled to be on their roster to fly. If they have their own checkout training etc., that's fine.. (many clubs do require a certain amount of dual time for advanced aircraft like Bonanzas, etc.) but you shouldn't have to be filling out reams of paperwork and spend hours as a mission observer (basically sit in the back seat and get nauseous), etc. just to actually fly and be part of the mission. When I asked about actually flying their planes I was told to expect 6 months to 2 years... that's ridiculous
These aren't opinions, just my actual experiences with them. I was eager to meet a cool group of local pilots and do something to give back.. but I think I was probably the only non military guy in the meetings and the whole fake-air-force thing was a massive turnoff
It's a shame really, as I am sure there are some great guys out there and awesome squadrons.. oh well
not just an opinion. What we all need to realize is every squadron is different and everyone is going to have a different experience whether it's positive and/or negative.
Right on. Unfortunately it seems that the good squadrons are relatively few and far between, as it seems my experience was similar to many who replied to this thread