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Cheese

Old 4th Aug 2004, 12:41
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Talking Cheese

I fully recognise the seriousness of this forum and was about to ask a question re. the impending Olympic games. However, it occured to me that more importantly, 'cheese' seldom features in these pages.

Does anyone have any advice re. the consumption of cheese and biscuits whilst flying eg what kinds of cheese, biscuits etc are favoured by rotary pilots ? Indeed, does anyone consume foodstuffs whilst flying, and how do they manage it ?

I expect, and deserve, a lot of abusive language.
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Old 4th Aug 2004, 13:07
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Don't be so silly.

Everyone knows you shouldn't eat cheese and biscuits while flying. Especially not Brie or camembert or for the more refined person especially not pate, cos you need both hands to use those little blunt knives to spread it on the bikkies.


Me... I like meusli bars. But you have to get ones who packet can be ripped open with one hand and a good set of teeth!
Washed down with good ol' H2O in one of those bottles with the suck tops!
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Old 4th Aug 2004, 13:12
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Ok, but what's your feeling about Blue Stilton and water biscuits. Are they more or less dangerous than cheddar for eg ?

Also, is it important to dress for the occasion ?
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Old 4th Aug 2004, 13:37
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Not being British, at least not for the last 220 years, and staying within Banjo George's theme,

Should you put cheese on your Spotted Dick? And if so, would it be called Dick Cheese?
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Old 4th Aug 2004, 13:44
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Can I have your green card in return for 220 yrs of Britishness please ?
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Old 4th Aug 2004, 14:19
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Loosely to do with cheese and flying... As a teenager I once threw a piece of stale edam down the garden and smashed a greenhouse window.

I'll bet no one else can boast of cheese-related vandalism. (Or, thinking about it, would want to.)
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Old 4th Aug 2004, 14:33
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Cheese dreams

BG,

I've told you about eating Danish Blue late at night but you obviously wouldn't listen

Having a little snackette in some of the larger helicopters is fine but you ain't gonna do it with a PPL and a R22/S300/F280/B47 etc. You don't take your limbs off the controls for anything more than a few seconds!

Also, imagine you have a monthful of, say, Wensleydale and ATC want to talk to you. Now talking with your mouth full isn't very polite and you might get crumbs over your mouthpiece.

If you can't go for more than hour without cheese then please seek help

Cheers

W
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Old 4th Aug 2004, 15:00
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Dear Whirley,

You're absolutely correct. I eat blue cheese and then have dreams of being a nice, correct pilot who earns a reasonable crust, never makes mistakes and when he does, never makes them again.

I'm wondering if cheese should be banned. It seems quite dangerous, especially with a smorgasborg, if that's how you spell it. Do smoked meats lessen the danger ?

BG
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Old 4th Aug 2004, 17:08
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If you like flying and eating try instructing cause once you get the student past the hovering stage you can leave them to it and eat what you like. leaving the door off is also an option should you spy your CFI and need to get rid of the evidence, and back to cheese I prefer to have a bottle of red wine to hand as well as this smooths out the vibrations in helis like the R22.

PS only joking..................... nothing smooths out an R22
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Old 4th Aug 2004, 20:09
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I got caught eating an apple by ATC once, bloody silly question he asked me aswell.
I think a nice tupperware bowl full of Cheddar chunks is good, doesn't crumble like Cheshire and doesn't melt either at 35°C in the cockpit. I quite like St.Agur aswell but I would only eat that in a 205 (more room for the fresh crusty baguette).
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Old 4th Aug 2004, 23:52
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Thumbs up Cheese, who was eating cheese?

Eating cheese in a closed cockpit is one thing but cutting the cheese in a closed cockpit is totally another thing.


Which one is guilty?
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Old 4th Aug 2004, 23:53
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Cool

Hmmm, shades of North Sea lunches: the best (worst?) was a full plate of rice & curry, straight out of the window of the 212 once safely airborne

Irish rig support smoked salmon sarnies. More salmon than bread

Cheese and bikkies? Soft crackers would be too crumbly (crumbs in the flight suit, yuk), hard biscuits a tad difficult with only one hand. Cheddar leaves a residue on the survival knife, Brie doesn't get soft enough at this time of the year ( -5C today in the snow.....).

Obviously Cheshire and a suitably crusty piece of bread for the refined aviator
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Old 5th Aug 2004, 00:28
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Whirly, you obviously haven't learned to fly properly. One of the first things I learned to do, after hovering, was how to light a cigarette with 'gofer' matches while flying a TH55. It just requires frictioning the cyclic and throttle, and flying with your knees, while using both your hands for whatever is necessary. My instructor used to hover, take off, fly around the pattern and do an auto to the ground, then pick up and hover off to the side, while never touching the cyclic with his hands, and seldom the collective. I saw that it could be done, and had to learn for myself. If you can't fly with your knees, you're not using anywhere near all your capabilities - sometimes it's absolutely necessary, and if you don't practice first, you'll be behind the power curve when you need to.

As for cheese and crackers, we just get them out of the vending machine. Standard pilot's lunch over here. I prefer peanut butter, though.
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Old 5th Aug 2004, 05:59
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Eating cheese in the cockpit - are you mad? you might spill the port!
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Old 5th Aug 2004, 06:29
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Thank you Gomer, but I can only just hover and talk at the moment

I once knew a chap who could roll a fag (cigarette to some of you!!) whilst driving his Triumph Spitfire round a roundabout by steering the car with his knees.

I will try and practice when my hours get into three figures!!!!

Cheers

Whirlygig
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Old 5th Aug 2004, 07:49
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Whirlygig,

You and I won't manage it however many hours we get; we're not tall enough! You need long legs if you're going to fly with your knees.

That's why I'll stick to eating muesli bars when I'm flying, and keep the cheese and wine on the ground.
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Old 5th Aug 2004, 07:50
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This really is top class advice. I'm especially impressed with the full plate of curry and rice despite any obvious connection to cheese. Were the popadums cheese flavoured or was it something in the chutney / naan bread ?

Some astonishing 'how did they do that ?' style tobacco stories too. Somebody will be saying next that they have managed to have meaningful sex in a heli. Still, it's all about pushing the boundaries.

Hugely impressed,

BG
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Old 5th Aug 2004, 07:57
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Cool Somebody will be saying next that they have managed to have meaningful sex in a heli

Ah, so you know Leading Seaman Edge, he of Wessex fame
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Old 5th Aug 2004, 08:32
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DANNY!!!!!

We need a Rotorblast forum. Soon.
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Old 5th Aug 2004, 09:27
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Whirlybird,

Sad but true. How about, though, I manage to fly that ol' Hughes with cyclic gripped betwixt calves?

Re - meaningful sex - I nearly had an episode just after my trial lesson, trying to get out of said Hughes and misjudged position of collective. Then fell out of the helicopter

Back to cheese - one problem is that most forms of cheese which are in easy-to-eat, packaged forms are 'orrible. Cheese Strings? What are THEY!?

Cheese

Whirlygig

PS - I don't know about Leading Seaman Edge - pray, tell
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