Video: formation aerobatics at sunset

Flying aerobatics is fun; flying in formation with other airplanes is fun; flying at sunset is fun. Put all three together and you’ve got one spectacular flight. That’s what you get to experience in this video, as you ride along with the famous AeroShell team as they fly their AT-6 formation demo at the Sun ‘n Fun Fly-in.

 

Was this really the day?

 

When I accomplished my solo, the wind was a direct crosswind at 10 knots – maybe a little much for my first solo. I had delayed getting my medical for some time and finally had it completed. I think I had 28 hours in my precious logbook.

I worked extra to pay for my flight lessons

I’m not a wealthy man but any means. Rich yes!! Wealthy, not so much.  Like many student pilots, I had some gaps in my training as I would work after hours to acquire money for more time in the sky. So on this great day my instructor gets in the airplane and asked me what my plan was for the day. I was hoping to solo so my wife came to the airport in case this really was “the day”. I told him I would have liked to get my first solo in if the wind was better. He laughed and said where we live this is good wind.

We took off to do some touch-and-go landings. After the third landing, and with my instructor not saying a word, I asked him how I was doing. His response was “you are extremely boring me.” I laughed and told him if he was so bored I would just let him out on the next trip around.  I came around the pattern for another and greased it.  Sure enough, I pulled up to the FBO and my instructor jokingly commented “let me out before you kill me.” I laughed and responded with a casual, “as you wish,” trying to mask my nervousness.

I asked him what I should do as he was getting out. He told me I should do what I know and what I was capable of, have fun, and do as many landings as I wanted. And he couldn’t resist reminding me that while I should do as many as I like, I should stop before running out of gas.  Noted.

After my first solo takeoff, I knew it was all up to me

I dreamed of this moment since I had been six years old. I lived, breathed, and dreamed aviation all my life.  The moment was here and it was staring me in the face.  No matter who you are or how much you want to fly, there is a moment after completing the run-up for the first time on your own that causes you to take pause and consider if you REALLY want to do this and if you’re REALLY up to the challenge.  After all, nobody is here to save me if I screw up.

I sat for a moment before taxing to the active and resolved that once I took off, I had no choice but to get myself down. So I throttled up and after a very short roll in an airplane that was suddenly much quieter and lighter, I was in the air.

It wasn’t until downwind when the reality of the situation hit me. I looked over to the empty seat next to me and reflected “What the heck are you doing Dana – this is crazy.” I came down final and greased my first landing. After three more uneventful laps around the pattern, I reasoned that I had better stop pushing my luck.  It was starting to get gusty and I was happy with what I had accomplished.

I taxied to the hangar and put the aircraft away.  My wife came running to greet me with a hug and said I was either the bravest man she knows (or the craziest).  I found my instructor in the maintenance hangar arm-deep in a Piper cowling.  He was smiling (a rare occurrence) and asked me how it went.  I responded with the obvious – I’m here so it went well.

When he asked why I didn’t fly longer and I responded with how I didn’t want to push my luck, he stopped in his tracks.  With a serious look in his eye he shared:

In aviation we have skills.  If you have skills, you have no need for luck.  Never get yourself in a situation where you need luck!

We retreated to the hangar where I had my shirt tail clipped, pictures taken, and the whole nine yards. My shirt tail is now pinned on the ceiling of the FBO – a very proud feeling.

I have since earned my ticket by nailing my checkride with plenty of compliments from my DPE.  He said I passed all my maneuvers to commercial standards and that it had been years since he had a applicant perform as well on the oral.  He remarked that I was a realistic, practical person and will be a great pilot.

I think I floated home instead of flying! I owe it all to my great instructor!  Thank you.

Video: landing at the legendary St. Barts airport

St. Barthelemy is a beautiful island in the Caribbean, famous for its gorgeous beaches, European style and celebrity guests. But among pilots, the island is famous for its intimidating airport – short, downhill and surrounded by hills on three sides. In this week’s fun flying video, ride along with young pilot Matt Guthmiller as he flies a Bonanza into St. Barts. You’ll see the landing from both inside and outside the cockpit, complete with GPS data and even the pilot’s pulse (watch it go up on short final!).

For tips on making better short field landings, click here.

Loops, rolls and spins – what it looks like from the cockpit

On the check ride, it’s all about gentle control inputs and straight and level flight. After you have your license, though, aerobatics can be a fun way to expand your skills. In this week’s fun flying video, strap into the backseat of a Citabria for some loops, rolls and spins.

Want to make your own in-flight videos? Check out all the options for cameras, prop filters and audio cables.

Pre-flight inspection

Learning to learn (again)

preflight1

Our flight school attracts individuals from all walks of life

Our flight school attracts students from all walks of life.  From the younger college-age students enrolled in the University of Cincinnati Clermont College Aviation Technology program to older (well, my age) students who are fulfilling a lifelong dream.

For many of the latter students, the biggest hurdle is not learning how to perform short and soft field takeoffs and landings, stalls, ground reference maneuvers or steep turns.  What is the strongest influence that hampers the completion of their flight certificate?   Test anxiety.

Many of these men and women have not taken a test since they left school some 20, 30, 40 or even 50 years ago.  Although confident in their flying skills, they delay taking that knowledge test for fear of failing it.  Are you one of those folks?  Are you putting off taking flight training because you know you may be judged either as a success or failure based on a 60 question multiple choice test?  Let’s take a few minutes and learn how to learn (again).

What is learning?

Learning is the acquisition of knowledge or skills through experience, study, or being taught.  Typically, we “learn” as the result of either vividness or repetition.  For example, the loss of a loved one.  Your parent, spouse or child only has to die once for us to learn they are gone.  It is a vivid, life-changing experience that stays with us forever.  Most things, however, aren’t as vivid and are usually only learned by repeating this bit of knowledge until it become etched in your brain and retrievable at any time.

Repetition is how I learned to multiply – by repeating the multiplication tables one at a time from 1 X 1 = 1 to 10 X 10 = 100.  Unfortunately, most of the knowledge we need for our flight training (VFR minimums, required equipment, airspace etc.) aren’t vivid events to effect learning, but more like the mundane multiplication tables we learned in grade school.

Back to school

My first grade classroom provided inspiration for my learning

I remember Mrs. Zachary, my first grade teacher (we didn’t have kindergarten where I went to school in the sixties).  I realize now her classroom was a learning laboratory.  Before we arrived, she had neatly printed our names on a piece of poster board taped to our desk.

Over the chalkboard, (before smartboards and whiteboards, classrooms actually had these black or green slate boards where we used pieces of chalk to write on them) she placed the alphabet with each letter correctly printed both in capital and lower case form.  Beside the chalkboard, on the wall next to the pencil sharpener, all the numerals were displayed.  On the sidewall away from the windows, she had prepared a bulletin board with a rainbow of colors (remember Roy G Biv?) and on one end she always listed the week’s spelling words.

No matter where you looked, there was something to learn.  And if you couldn’t remember the difference between g and q, you could look above the board and find the right way to write each one.  She used flash cards in our math class.  She demanded that when we took a quiz we had to repeat the question in our answer such as:

What is the name of our state?  The name of our state is Kentucky.

My parents were very encouraging to me as a toddler.  They taught me how to count. I knew all the colors in my eight-pack of Crayolas and they read to me while I was sitting on their lap.  I must say, however, I learned a lot in Mrs. Zachary’s first grade class.

If it worked then, it will work again

Creating flashcards helped me memorize facts

Recently, in preparation for the Multiengine Flight Instructor practical test, I was faced with needing to learn a lot about the 1963 Piper Aztec in which I was going to take the test.  First, like my parents insisted when I was in grade school, I went to the kitchen table to study.  No TV or radio and I left my cell phone in the bedroom to eliminate distractions. To study, I brought out the tools Mrs. Zachary (and many teachers since then) used.

I made flash cards for such facts as the V-speeds, aircraft limitations, and checklist memory items.  The first time through the cards, I wrote out the answer in a notebook.  The next time through, I flipped through the cards and said the answer out loud.  If I got it right, I moved on.

I wrote answers in a notebook to reinforce

For an incorrect answer, I wrote the question and answer again.  I repeated this exercise until I could answer each card three times without a mistake.  Next, I practiced what I had learned.  I would sit in the airplane and hangar-fly each scenario I might encounter.  In this same manner, I rehearsed emergency checklists, go-arounds and other procedures.  First using the POH and then from memory until each became automatic to me.

There is no knowledge test for the MEI (Multiengine Instructor), but I took notes from the multiengine section of the FAA’s Airplane Flying Handbook and Part 61, Subpart H of the Federal Aviation Regulations in preparation for the oral.

I reviewed these notes from time to time until I could nearly recite them without looking.

Ready, Set, Go

So the next (or first) time you have to take a knowledge or practical test, help overcome your test anxiety by being proactive and methodical in your preparation.  The dread may be converted to confidence if you recreate a grade school classroom in your kitchen, take notes, make flash cards, and practice, practice, practice.

Sporty’s has developed many effective tools to help.  The Learn to Fly course provides all the information needed to pass the written and practical test.  The Study Buddy allows you to practice the written until you feel confident.

Talk to your instructor about what to expect on your examination.  Examiners each have their own areas of emphasis for which your instructor may be familiar.  DO NOT postpone your test out of fear of failing as those fears will probably intensify rather than diminish.  You have passed many examinations in your life, you can pass this one too.  Worked for me.

Fun flying video: flying Alaska in a Cessna 170

Incredible vistas. Remote grass strips. Towering mountains. If all your time has been logged around busy airports in the lower 48, flying in Alaska may look completely different. In this amazing video, you’ll certainly see some very different sights, but you’ll also see how much remains the same – pilots are pilots, no matter what the adventure.

Video from Backcountry Pilot.