Steve Wittman is my hero. Not just because he designed the plane, but because he was the little guy who made it big. In his 60 plus years of air racing, he never had one sponsor. And if you do not think he did well, go to the Airventure Museum and check out his wall. Truly amazing! He was known as "Mr. Aviation" and of course the Oshkosh, Wisconsin airport was named after him.
The avtar picture is of my Tailwind.
I am sorry you had a bad experience in a homebuilt. It is not fair to judge all homebuilts because of a bad experience. I have had just as many events that prickled my neckhairs in Citabrias and Cessnas as I have in my Tailwind. My hours are about equal in factory builts and my Tailwind. I think I have learned more about flying in my Tailwind though. My over the fence speed is 80mph. Landing a taildragger going that fast, sometimes at night, requires a pilot to be definitely on his toes. After I learned to fly, I was on final in a 172 to Jefferson County Airport on the Olympic Peninsula in WA. When I was about ready to flare, the same experience happened to me-a gust of wind lifted a wing up so fast on me it scared the bejesus out of me. All I saw was grass in the windshield. All it took was an instantaneous response and a go-around. My first landing in my Tailwind after completion-I now belong to the ranks of test pilots

-left a lot to be desired. It was the worst bounce and porpoise session I have ever had. However, I am now able to grease it most of the time-depends on the wind. It likes both grass and concrete equally. It only likes doing wheel landings, though, and that is fine with me. There is not much for a flare in it. It is mostly just to flatten out to landing attitude. What it is NOT is a trainer for the inexperienced. Most homebuilts are not designed with that mission in mind since there are so many Pipers and Cessnas fullfilling the training role.
There is no stall warning or AOA indicator in mine either, and that is ok with me. It is the only plane I fly right now and nobody else flies it. I know my speeds. It will not power off stall dirty. It hangs on and is still flying, although dropping 1200ft per minute, below 50mph. This is due to the lifting body fuselage. Power on clean it stalls around 68mph and the nose drops with no wing drop. It is really a non-event. What you do have in all situations is an incredible sink rate befoe it stalls. That is a good warning for me. You can feel it in the seat of your pants in the beginning stage of the sink. Just watch the airspeed and verify with GPS.
One plus:it is the straightest trailing taildragger I have ever taxi'd on the ground-much easier than a Citabria. You do not muscle controls, either, or it will bite you.
Wittmandriver