Wade
Pre-takeoff checklist
Well I have finally started my journey to try and get my PPL. I have always wanted to fly ever since a cropduster pilot took me flying a couple of times one summer when I was 8 years old. Now 34 years later the time, money, and family commitments have finally converged into the perfect storm to allow some "ME" time. So this is how my initial training has gotten started.
I took a discovery flight with the wife and the youngest to make sure they want to be in the air and they loved it. The CFI was a really great guy and I liked him so I told him, "I want to join the club as soon as I get my medical and fly a few times a week to try and knock it out as efficiently as possible.". "Ok great lets fly tomo and then I'll work on getting a schedule worked out.", the instructor says.
Then he calls me back a week later and says "He is not able to fly that much and I will have to split time between him and the other instructor." Hmmmmm first roadblock! Caution flags went up and that doesn't sound to good to me, I like structure and systems. I figure the best way is to stay with one instructor throughout the process. So I tell him I am going to think about it and get back to him.
While this is happening I have my medical done and I have a prescription for 10mb of Lexapro that I got on my doctors advice about a year and a half ago when I was going through a real stressful business deal. I rarely take the medication anymore and haven't refilled it in over 3 months, but I put it on the report. BAM!! second roadblock and this one is serious! So I am currently in the stop use wait 90 days SI process and getting letters and other crap from my doctor blah, blah, etc., etc.! So much for getting it done as quickly as possible.
Now I can't Solo without my Medical so I figure I will check out other intructors, schools, clubs, etc, and take a lesson here and there so I am ready to rock and roll when I get my medical. I currently have 7 hours and have flown 5 different planes and I love it! I am kinda glad I didn't stay with the original guy and just fly with him and their 172 the whole time. I have learned a ton about flying and learning the different FEELS of airplanes. I don't have a good system and flow worked out yet and I have been concentrated on the visual pictures and feel of the flight manuevers instead of the instruments. I hope as I get more experience in a familiar plane I will find my instrument flow. At this point I have flown a 150, 2 172's, a Cherokee 180(I like it super ez to fly), and a Cherokee 6( felt like a 747 to me way to much going on). I have gotten them all in the air and on the ground without a instructor taking over except for on my first lesson when I got groundshy pulled up way to soon and floated half way down the strip. I also have one minor foray into the gravel on taxi after landing, because the "right rudder" (I am already sick of hearing that) was really sticky on one plane. I am also getting more confident on the radio and can now understand what is happening with the other aircraft around me. The CFI I have flown with the last 3 times said he thinks I could solo after a couple more hours in the same plane to get a good pattern routine figured out. I still feel confused and disorganized especially when one landing is a short full flaps steep descent pattern and the next one is a long shallow glide path and 10 degrees flaps.
Next week I am going to a different school that is a Kitfox dealer and teachs backcountry flying to see what a taildragger experimental feels like. I would also really like to fly a 182 and a high horsepower backcountry plane like a Maule sometime after I get my Medical.
I took a discovery flight with the wife and the youngest to make sure they want to be in the air and they loved it. The CFI was a really great guy and I liked him so I told him, "I want to join the club as soon as I get my medical and fly a few times a week to try and knock it out as efficiently as possible.". "Ok great lets fly tomo and then I'll work on getting a schedule worked out.", the instructor says.
Then he calls me back a week later and says "He is not able to fly that much and I will have to split time between him and the other instructor." Hmmmmm first roadblock! Caution flags went up and that doesn't sound to good to me, I like structure and systems. I figure the best way is to stay with one instructor throughout the process. So I tell him I am going to think about it and get back to him.
While this is happening I have my medical done and I have a prescription for 10mb of Lexapro that I got on my doctors advice about a year and a half ago when I was going through a real stressful business deal. I rarely take the medication anymore and haven't refilled it in over 3 months, but I put it on the report. BAM!! second roadblock and this one is serious! So I am currently in the stop use wait 90 days SI process and getting letters and other crap from my doctor blah, blah, etc., etc.! So much for getting it done as quickly as possible.
Now I can't Solo without my Medical so I figure I will check out other intructors, schools, clubs, etc, and take a lesson here and there so I am ready to rock and roll when I get my medical. I currently have 7 hours and have flown 5 different planes and I love it! I am kinda glad I didn't stay with the original guy and just fly with him and their 172 the whole time. I have learned a ton about flying and learning the different FEELS of airplanes. I don't have a good system and flow worked out yet and I have been concentrated on the visual pictures and feel of the flight manuevers instead of the instruments. I hope as I get more experience in a familiar plane I will find my instrument flow. At this point I have flown a 150, 2 172's, a Cherokee 180(I like it super ez to fly), and a Cherokee 6( felt like a 747 to me way to much going on). I have gotten them all in the air and on the ground without a instructor taking over except for on my first lesson when I got groundshy pulled up way to soon and floated half way down the strip. I also have one minor foray into the gravel on taxi after landing, because the "right rudder" (I am already sick of hearing that) was really sticky on one plane. I am also getting more confident on the radio and can now understand what is happening with the other aircraft around me. The CFI I have flown with the last 3 times said he thinks I could solo after a couple more hours in the same plane to get a good pattern routine figured out. I still feel confused and disorganized especially when one landing is a short full flaps steep descent pattern and the next one is a long shallow glide path and 10 degrees flaps.
Next week I am going to a different school that is a Kitfox dealer and teachs backcountry flying to see what a taildragger experimental feels like. I would also really like to fly a 182 and a high horsepower backcountry plane like a Maule sometime after I get my Medical.