Jeff Szlauko
Pre-takeoff checklist
- Joined
- Jul 8, 2016
- Messages
- 146
- Display Name
Display name:
ChopperJeff
Just completed my 1st solo a couple weeks ago, then went up last Saturday for my 2nd solo, which was the first one to venture out to the practice area on my own. I can't believe how much more stressful it felt than the very first solo! I just practiced a couple basic maneuvers, then headed back to the airport. I was dreading that the tower would give me some convoluted instructions, but they gave me exactly what I wanted to hear, which was "cleared for straight-in to runway two five left". I breathed a sigh of relief, which was short lived as they came back on to inform me of another plane coming in, and he'd be going over me, and I had to turn heading one four zero, and so on and so forth. Just as I finally spotted that plane, they informed me of another in the pattern ahead of me, entering base, and for me to follow. Looking back at what the tower told me, it all seems pretty straight forward, but at the time, I felt overwhelmed.
I was literally shaking as I landed the Cessna 172, though it turned out to be one of the best landings ever.
How can one be better prepared for the inevitable journey back into the Class D airspace? Are there really only a handful of instructions that the tower will tell you? If so, what exactly are these? Seems so easy with a CFI sitting next to you, but when you are all alone up there, it all seems so overwhelming. Funny, I feel like I can fly the plane just fine, and even land with a fair amount of confidence, but talking to the tower still gets to me, as I'm afraid of bungling it all up. Perhaps it's just one of those things that only practice will fix.
I was literally shaking as I landed the Cessna 172, though it turned out to be one of the best landings ever.
How can one be better prepared for the inevitable journey back into the Class D airspace? Are there really only a handful of instructions that the tower will tell you? If so, what exactly are these? Seems so easy with a CFI sitting next to you, but when you are all alone up there, it all seems so overwhelming. Funny, I feel like I can fly the plane just fine, and even land with a fair amount of confidence, but talking to the tower still gets to me, as I'm afraid of bungling it all up. Perhaps it's just one of those things that only practice will fix.