I am looking for a flight school that allows grass strip landings or train at a grass strip airport. Post location, independent cfi and/or school name. Thank you
I am looking for a flight school that allows grass strip landings or train at a grass strip airport. Post location, independent cfi and/or school name. Thank you
I’ve made thousands of landings on grass, but probably less than a dozen soft field operations.I think it’s borderline negligent to sign off a Private Pilot applicant with only simulated soft field experience.
Pardon my sloppy nomenclature. I generally consider grass takeoffs and landings as soft field operations, but that may be too broad a definition.I’ve made thousands of landings on grass, but probably less than a dozen soft field operations.
I guess I would tend to disagree, primarily because it would often end up being one or two operations to “check the box” with an instructor who’s scared of grass.Pardon my sloppy nomenclature. I generally consider grass takeoffs and landings as soft field operations, but that may be too broad a definition.
How about “I think it’s borderline negligent to sign off a Private Pilot applicant without grass field experience.”
In my defense, I’m not alone in my definition.I guess I would tend to disagree, primarily because it would often end up being one or two operations to “check the box” with an instructor who’s scared of grass.
Grass is awesome!None of those annoying squawksit makes me feel like a better pilot lol.Not to mention way more fun
Pardon my sloppy nomenclature. I generally consider grass takeoffs and landings as soft field operations, but that may be too broad a definition.
How about “I think it’s borderline negligent to sign off a Private Pilot applicant without grass field experience.”
I think it’s borderline negligent to sign off a Private Pilot applicant with only simulated soft field experience.
Everything is negotiable on insurance. In our club, we had less issue getting the "hard surfaced" restriction removed (they decided to limit us to landing at airports) than certain other restrictions. In fact, almost always it's up to the insured to write what they want as restrictions and then run it by the insurer to see what quote they get back.Insurance requirements are likely to be the controlling factor. I don’t think i’ve ever had a rental policy (required by most flight schools to offload insurance responsibility to students & renter) that didn’t exclude grass strip or off field operations. Grass fields, speaking very generally, tend to be shorter, narrower, & plagued by obsticals in the approaches that make them more challenging, for students or licensed pilots. Grass fields also present less reliable conditions than paved (soft spots & mud, long wet grass that sharply increase takeoff rolls & offer more skidding hazards on landing than pavement.)
Really. AVEMCO doesn’t. If it is an airport you are covered.Insurance requirements are likely to be the controlling factor. I don’t think i’ve ever had a rental policy (required by most flight schools to offload insurance responsibility to students & renter) that didn’t exclude grass strip or off field operations. Grass fields, speaking very generally, tend to be shorter, narrower, & plagued by obsticals in the approaches that make them more challenging, for students or licensed pilots. Grass fields also present less reliable conditions than paved (soft spots & mud, long wet grass that sharply increase takeoff rolls & offer more skidding hazards on landing than pavement.)
But i’m sure they are out there. Just not as plentiful as you’d have hoped.
I’m not saying it isn’t a common misnomer, but it directly conflicts with POHs that give takeoff and landing distances for grass runways.In my defense, I’m not alone in my definition.
In part:
”The soft field landing maneuver is used when landing on grass or other soft landing surfaces. It demonstrates how the airplane needs to be handled differently on these high-drag surfaces. Mastering this maneuver will help pilots become comfortable operating to and from grass strips.”
I’m guessing this language comes from the Private Pilot ACS, but I’m too tired right now to research it further.
Are there no grass strips within a reasonable distance? A student’s long crosscountry might include one of those.I live in Nevada and we don’t have grass. My grass runway landings are in Illinois, Texas, and Georgia. My students here have no grass options.
Are there no grass strips within a reasonable distance? A student’s long crosscountry might include one of those.
Wow! I didn't realize you flew there (unless I knew but forgot). I know the jump planes used the grass all the time but AFAIK, the flight school in in early 1990s didn't. I suspect the operation's insurance prevented it, like at so many other places. I didn't have my first grass landing until I was in Colorado. Too long ago to be relevant, but the flight school I used permitted grass landings with a an oral checkout.We just “did it”.
Small airport, 1800’ foot strip. We at times just opted to land east grass or west grass. Especially the jump planes. (Grass left or right of runway).
@midlifeflyer trained at same airport, perhaps he can expound.
No clue if it was actually approved, but we often did it.
No grass strips when I was training. Rentals from the FBO were specifically prohibited from landing on anything but pavement. My first operation on grass was with an instructor in a flying club plane, and was also a soft-field operation because the grass was tall and thick. I've flown from grass a few times since then, ranging from "oh-crap-this-stuff-is-wet-and-slippery" to Gaston's, which may as well have been paved.I guess people don't land on grass runways during private training anymore? I recently met a 135 pilot who claimed to have >5000 hrs and was making his first-ever off pavement landing.