Learn

Discipline 01 of 03 · Learn

Ground Up.

Every glider pilot starts on the ground. Before the cockpit, before the tow line, before the first thermal — there’s the airfield, the hangar, the radio, the weather, and the crew that makes flying possible at all. This is where you begin.

11Achievement Certs
5Ground Crew Roles
1Day to First Cert
0Prerequisites
What Learn Means

Three foundations. Earned in any order.

Learn is not one subject. It’s three woven together — the safety discipline that keeps every operation alive, the ground crew skills that launch every flight, and the aeronautical knowledge that prepares you for the cockpit. You can work on any of them the first day you show up.

Ground Operations

Wing runner, rope tender, launch director, retrieve crew, tow observer. The five roles that move gliders from the hangar to the sky and back. Five certs earnable on your first weekend.

Safety

Airfield awareness, hangar discipline, fuel handling, weather decisions, radio communications. The habits and the judgment that keep everyone home for dinner.

Aeronautical Knowledge

Ground school. Aerodynamics, regulations, airspace, navigation, and the theory that turns raw stick-and-rudder into actual piloting.

The Ground Crew

Five roles. Every flight day.

No glider launches alone. Every flight requires a crew on the ground, and every crew position is a learnable skill. Earn one cert per role, work them in whatever order makes sense for the day.

01
Wing Runner
Hold the wing level until aileron control
02
Rope Tender
Inspect and manage the tow rope
03
Retrieve Crew
Bring the glider back after landing
04
Launch Director
Run the sequence, call go and no-go
05
Tow Observer
Second seat in the Super Cub
Aeronautical Ground School

The classroom before the cockpit.

Ground school is where the theory lives — the aerodynamics, the regulations, the airspace structure, the weather patterns. None of it is glamorous. All of it is necessary. The cockpit demands every bit of it the moment you release from tow.

  • Lift, drag, weight, and thrust — how gliders actually fly
  • Federal Aviation Regulations relevant to glider operations
  • Airspace classes and visual flight rules
  • Weather theory — fronts, thermals, instability, soaring conditions
  • Aircraft systems, instruments, and limitations
  • Navigation fundamentals and chart reading
  • Decision-making and aeronautical judgment
  • Aviation radio phraseology and traffic patterns
The 11 Certificates

Every skill demonstrated. Every entry logged.

Earned in any order · All count toward the Learn Master Award

These are the eleven certificates in the Learn discipline. Each is awarded when a crew chief or instructor signs off on demonstrated competence. There is no testing fee, no application, no schedule — just the work and the entry in your logbook.

Cert 01
Aeronautical Ground School
Aerodynamics, regulations, airspace, and the foundational knowledge every pilot begins with.
Cert 02
Weather & Go/No-Go Decision
Reading the sky, interpreting forecasts, and making the call that keeps everyone on the ground when it matters.
Cert 03
Airfield Safety Operations
Runway awareness, traffic patterns from the ground, and the safety habits that protect every operation.
Cert 04
Hangar Safety Operations
Tool discipline, fuel handling, fire awareness, and moving aircraft safely inside the hangar.
Cert 05
Radio & Communications Operations
Standard phraseology, traffic calls, and clear comms between tow plane, glider, and ground.
Cert 06
Glider Pre-Flight Inspection
The walkaround that catches what shouldn’t fly — from control surfaces to tow hook.
Cert 07
Ground Crew — Wing Runner
The pilot’s lifeline on takeoff. Holding the wing level until the glider has aileron control.
Cert 08
Ground Crew — Rope Tender
Hooking up, inspecting, and managing the tow rope across every launch.
Cert 09
Ground Crew — Launch Director
Running the launch sequence, calling go and no-go, coordinating tow and glider crew.
Cert 10
Ground Crew — Retrieve Crew
Bringing the glider back to the launch point safely after every landing.
Cert 11
Towplane Second Seat Observer
Riding in the Super Cub. Seeing the tow from the other end of the rope.
Master Award
Learn Discipline Master Award
Awarded when all 11 LEARN certificates are completed.
All 11 Earned
The Discipline

Aviation tolerates almost no shortcuts.

The Learn discipline exists because aviation is unforgiving. Every cert in the list traces back to a lesson that someone, somewhere, learned the hard way. We teach these skills before the first flight because there is no good way to learn them after.

The first rule on the flight line

Nobody flies until everybody is safe. Crew chief decisions are final. If something feels wrong, it stops. There is always another flight day.

Your First Day

Show up. Work the line. Earn the first cert.

There is no curriculum to enroll in. There is no schedule. Ground crew positions are taught the day you show up, by the crew chief who needs hands on the line. Walk onto the field, ask what needs doing, and start.

Plan Your First Visit