colojo
Line Up and Wait
I'm based at a very busy airport, and there is plenty of activity going on in every age group.
I'm almost 52. I share a hangar with the owners of a Pilatus PC-12. They're in their late 60's but are not pilots. The two pilots they employ, both good friends of mine, are 45 and 28. The 28-year-old guy flies with me all the time; we met at OSH last summer and have become fast friends.
We have a number of very busy flying clubs on our field, with lots of instruction going on... everything from PPL's to tailwheel endorsements to Acro to CFI, CFII and ATP. Across from my hangar is parked the busiest 172 on the field; it's the primary trainer for one of the most active flying clubs. It's in the air constantly and I often see it being preflighted by young men and women in their late teens and early twenties. One of the waiters at a nearby restaurant I frequent is 19 and working on his instrument ticket. He just enrolled in the aviation school at K-State.
My CFII is 35 and flies a Falcon jet for a living. Very ambitious fellow. Has his ATP and is an FAA examiner. I've been flying with him for ten years.
On Saturday mornings in the summer time, the Wings Over the Rockies Aviation Museum takes school teachers and young kids for free rides in their Stearman to help promote aviation among our youth and those who teach them. The program is wildly successful.
So, Jay, next time you're feeling blue about the future of GA, c'mon up to APA in your RV-8A. I'll invite all my flying friends, young and old, and we'll kick it for an afternoon in my hangar. And the scotch is on me!
I'm almost 52. I share a hangar with the owners of a Pilatus PC-12. They're in their late 60's but are not pilots. The two pilots they employ, both good friends of mine, are 45 and 28. The 28-year-old guy flies with me all the time; we met at OSH last summer and have become fast friends.
We have a number of very busy flying clubs on our field, with lots of instruction going on... everything from PPL's to tailwheel endorsements to Acro to CFI, CFII and ATP. Across from my hangar is parked the busiest 172 on the field; it's the primary trainer for one of the most active flying clubs. It's in the air constantly and I often see it being preflighted by young men and women in their late teens and early twenties. One of the waiters at a nearby restaurant I frequent is 19 and working on his instrument ticket. He just enrolled in the aviation school at K-State.
My CFII is 35 and flies a Falcon jet for a living. Very ambitious fellow. Has his ATP and is an FAA examiner. I've been flying with him for ten years.
On Saturday mornings in the summer time, the Wings Over the Rockies Aviation Museum takes school teachers and young kids for free rides in their Stearman to help promote aviation among our youth and those who teach them. The program is wildly successful.
So, Jay, next time you're feeling blue about the future of GA, c'mon up to APA in your RV-8A. I'll invite all my flying friends, young and old, and we'll kick it for an afternoon in my hangar. And the scotch is on me!