Soaring and Gliding
The Sleeping Bear Dunes National Lakeshore Area
- 128 pages
- English
- ePUB (mobile friendly)
- Available on iOS & Android
Soaring and Gliding
The Sleeping Bear Dunes National Lakeshore Area
About This Book
To fly as the hawk and eagle has been mankinds dream for centuries.
Modern sailplanes make soaring and gliding flight possible, and with them, humans can fly higher, faster, and farther than the greatest of birds, using only an invisible force of nature to stay aloft. The terms soaring and gliding are used interchangeably, and the sport is appealing to pilot and spectator alike. Sailplane enthusiasts have always been explorers, always looking for a more ideal site that will provide the intellectual challenges of soaring as well as the sheer beauty and relaxation the sport can offer. Michigan-based glider pilots and designers found their soaring paradise in the early 1930s when they ventured north to the Sleeping Bear Dunes area. The explorers began to promote the sport to national and international prominence, and many came to make up a veritable whos who of American aeronautics. Over a century after Octave Chanute discovered motorless flight on the Lake Michigan dunes, sailplanes, hang gliders, and paragliders still fill the skies.
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Table of contents
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Dedication
- Table of Contents
- ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
- INTRODUCTION
- One - SOARING COMES TO THE MIDWEST 1929—1935
- Two - THE EXPEDITIONS TO THE SLEEPING BEAR DUNES 1936—1937
- Three - THE SILENT WINGS OF GLORY 1938—1939
- Four - THE WAR YEARS 1940—1945
- Five - REVITALIZING THE SPORT 1946—1960
- Six - THE GLORY YEARS REVISITED 1961—2006