Dav8or
Final Approach
After reading through the first gen pilot thread I realized that many first generation pilots had a friend, or non blood relative introduce them to GA. Stories like "Took me for a ride in his Cub when I was 10..." , that kind of stuff. I thought it might be interesting to know how you first generation pilots got started down the actual path to the PPL. Sure, we all probably liked planes as a kid, had some models and probably could identify a few in the sky, but what actually got your butt down to the airport for the intro flight?
I thought that I could never be a pilot because I have to wear glasses, so taking flight lessons never occurred to me. I was living in Oakland and my best friend was living Camarillo and I was visiting when he told me that he had gone for an intro ride and was going to get his PPL. I was very curious as I thought he would not be eligible either due to eyesight. He explained to me what he had learned at the local flight school that gave him the intro flight under the AOPA "Be a Pilot" promotion.
We went to Camarillo (KCMA), had lunch at the diner and afterwards walked out onto the ramp. What a mind expanding experience that was.
"What you mean? We can just walk out there?"
"Yup."
"We don't have to show an ID, or something??!"
"Nope."
Imagine that. Walking around real airplanes just like it was the Sears parking lot. I still thought somebody with a badge would show up at any moment to escort us off. My friend proposed there on the ramp that we should get our PPLs together. He in Camarillo and me in Oakland. I sort of dismissed it, but a tiny little wheel started turning in my head.
I thought about it a lot on the drive back to Oakland. That week I cracked open a phone book (remember those?) and looked up flight instruction. My first stop was Sierra Academy, it's one of those airline flight academies with everyone walking round with bars on their shoulders. An instructor there told me of the tens of thousands of dollars it was going to cost to go through the program, the schedule, the ground school, all the supplies... it was not a good vibe for me. I think he realized that I wasn't going to be a "real" pilot and suggested I try Oakland Flyers down the road.
Sure enough, I show up at Oakland Flyers and there is the AOPA "Be a Pilot" sign in the window. I talked to the first available instructor there and he told me that what Sierra had told me was all crap and you didn't need all that to be a pilot. Then he said, "Wanna go fly?"
"What do you mean? Like, right now?!!"
.6 intro flight with me steering the plane around the sky and some instruction on how to do that and I was hooked. Signed up for lessons, it became my new obsession and I drove everyone around me crazy with airplane talk. I quickly got my license and my best friend never even went back for lesson 1.
The point of my long story is, if we want people to take up flying IMO, we need to-
1) Somehow educate the general populous about what is and isn't possible.
2) Invite people onto the ramp where they can look at real airplanes.
3) Do the promo intro flights. They really work.
I thought that I could never be a pilot because I have to wear glasses, so taking flight lessons never occurred to me. I was living in Oakland and my best friend was living Camarillo and I was visiting when he told me that he had gone for an intro ride and was going to get his PPL. I was very curious as I thought he would not be eligible either due to eyesight. He explained to me what he had learned at the local flight school that gave him the intro flight under the AOPA "Be a Pilot" promotion.
We went to Camarillo (KCMA), had lunch at the diner and afterwards walked out onto the ramp. What a mind expanding experience that was.
"What you mean? We can just walk out there?"
"Yup."
"We don't have to show an ID, or something??!"
"Nope."
Imagine that. Walking around real airplanes just like it was the Sears parking lot. I still thought somebody with a badge would show up at any moment to escort us off. My friend proposed there on the ramp that we should get our PPLs together. He in Camarillo and me in Oakland. I sort of dismissed it, but a tiny little wheel started turning in my head.
I thought about it a lot on the drive back to Oakland. That week I cracked open a phone book (remember those?) and looked up flight instruction. My first stop was Sierra Academy, it's one of those airline flight academies with everyone walking round with bars on their shoulders. An instructor there told me of the tens of thousands of dollars it was going to cost to go through the program, the schedule, the ground school, all the supplies... it was not a good vibe for me. I think he realized that I wasn't going to be a "real" pilot and suggested I try Oakland Flyers down the road.
Sure enough, I show up at Oakland Flyers and there is the AOPA "Be a Pilot" sign in the window. I talked to the first available instructor there and he told me that what Sierra had told me was all crap and you didn't need all that to be a pilot. Then he said, "Wanna go fly?"
"What do you mean? Like, right now?!!"
.6 intro flight with me steering the plane around the sky and some instruction on how to do that and I was hooked. Signed up for lessons, it became my new obsession and I drove everyone around me crazy with airplane talk. I quickly got my license and my best friend never even went back for lesson 1.
The point of my long story is, if we want people to take up flying IMO, we need to-
1) Somehow educate the general populous about what is and isn't possible.
2) Invite people onto the ramp where they can look at real airplanes.
3) Do the promo intro flights. They really work.