@AvNavCom - curiosity / jealousy question. Are you flying alone? This sounds epic!
15 hrs in the next month and then this trip . . . I'm guessing your kids are grown or I'm so doing it wrong. I'm envious of your ability to make time for this adventure.
I am going to be flying this one alone, which is good for comfort but bad for fatigue and have a safety back-up. If I ever get her back from the shop, she'll have a top-notch GPS (GNX-375), an engine monitor, and new fuel digital probes, so I'm hoping that some of the headwork calculating fuel remaining and endurance will be easier. What I won't have is any kind of autopilot or wing leveler, and I'll be flying steam gauges (thankfully, just rearranged into a standard configuration), so the advice from folks in the thread about shorter legs to avoid fatigue is well-taken. Good food, hydration, and oxygen have been on my mind for sure. Personal beacon will be clipped to my body.
To answer your question, I'm married but no kids, which simplifies things quite a bit. I am active-duty and enjoying one of the Navy's classic coast-to-coast assignment changes, which is the reason for the trip as I relocate my plane to its new (and hopefully final) home in Manassas. The ability to fly those hours is mostly a combination of weekend time and taking some leave, along with allowable travel time for the move given to me by the Navy. She will have a newly overhauled engine, so for safety I really need to do all of my post-maintenance checks and engine break-in before launching on such a long multi-day cross-country. Those hours need to be flown regardless of how convenient they are, so I'm dedicating time for them already. Better to find the loose hoses now!
The trip itself is about 3 days of flying, but I've budgeted about a week, with plenty of flex on the back end if I need a few more days. I have made a commitment to myself that I will not fly based on clock/calendar. Happily, my wife is supportive as her constant listening to me about various aviation things has piqued her interest. About a year or so ago she mentioned possibly getting her own license, and recently that has become "when I get my pilot's license...". Apparently my Cherokee has also become "our" plane in the last few months. Haha!
Appreciate the thoughts about getting IFR current again. Not sure I'll have the time between now and then, but worth thinking about for sure. I plan to avoid the L.A. basin almost entirely with my route. I'm sure there's some sort of elegant way to put my SkyVector course into this post, but I'm not smart enough to figure it out. You can find it
here though. Planning a fuel stop in BXK after wandering my way around all the MOA/Restricted/Prohibited areas at 9500ft. I had initially intended to swing south to avoid the Phoenix Class B and then go relatively direct to LRU, but after having read the excellent advice to stay near major roads through the mountains, I think I'll go slightly more southward and follow I-10 over Tucson and thence out to my stop for the night at DMN, which appears to be within walking distance of an only mildly disreputable motel. Definitely appreciate the reality check LRU being a little too far from the town!
I have read and appreciated every post! Thanks to everyone who took the time to give me thoughts and ideas, and especially the offer of free ice-cream in Kentucky. I may deviate for that alone! I'll be sure to post some sort of trip log, either as I go or once I'm in Virginia. What a great community. Should have joined years ago.