Msing48 wrote:On the same note, I have known two men that died, most likely from trying to stretch their glide to an unobstructed area only to stall short of clearing the trees. RULE #1 is KEEP FLYING THE PLANE !!!
It is far better to fly into trees at a controlled minimum airspeed than to stall and hit the trees in an extreme nose-down attitude with more than minimum speed. In fact, any angled impact with minimum speed will be far more survivable than a vertical impact at more than minimum speed (usually much more). I've been involved in several accident investigations, all of which resulted in "uncontrolled flight into terrain/water", which is FAA-speak for stall/spin. It's never pretty, and almost universally fatal.
Mike's comments about having a plan and studying the areas surrounding the airport in advance couldn't be more spot-on. Know your options before you need to choose one! Modify your operations if necessary to give you more or better options.
One last thought; DON'T DO INTERSECTION TAKEOFFS unless you know for sure that you have an "out" in case of engine failure. An intersection takeoff puts you at lower altitude at the airport boundary, which in turn narrows your options drastically. Remember those "three things useless to a pilot".