Ed Haywood
En-Route
On Friday I flew in my Decathlon from Tampa to GVL in North Georgia to visit my son. Had planned on flying to Chapel Hill, North Carolina on Saturday morning for a social event. A cold front was pushing in from the west, with forecast arrival of hard IFR at midnight. My plane and I are VFR only.
Checking weather at dinner, it became apparent that if I stayed til morning, I would be stuck there for several days. So, I made the decision to fly at night, which I usually enjoy.
When I got to the airport at 9:30pm, the sky was clear, with stars visible above and to the horizon in direction of flight. All airfields in the area reported VFR. Near optimal conditions except moonrise not until 3am. I felt comfortable launching. It took about 30 minutes to get gassed up and in the air.
I climbed up to 3500 and it was dark. So dark. I dialed up ATIS/AWOS at several local fields and all were reporting overcast 3600. Felt like I was under the blackest cloud ever. Ceiling had completely closed up in those 30 minutes.
At that point I got concerned about the wisdom of pressing on. I descended to 500 below the ceiling, turned 90 degrees south so I would not get farther from my departure field, and reduced power to slow cruise while I decided what to do.
I could see ground lights from Athens 20 miles to the east. I decided to hop from airport to airport while monitoring ATIS/AWOS in front of me. When I got to the GA/SC line after about 30 minutes of flying, reported ceiling ahead was clear below 12K. I climbed to 5500' and continued to my destination without concern.
It was a successful flight, but more stressful than I cared for. Not being able to see the ceiling above you is spooky.
So my personal lesson learned is that I don't care for VFR night flight on moonless nights, and will avoid that in the future.
Checking weather at dinner, it became apparent that if I stayed til morning, I would be stuck there for several days. So, I made the decision to fly at night, which I usually enjoy.
When I got to the airport at 9:30pm, the sky was clear, with stars visible above and to the horizon in direction of flight. All airfields in the area reported VFR. Near optimal conditions except moonrise not until 3am. I felt comfortable launching. It took about 30 minutes to get gassed up and in the air.
I climbed up to 3500 and it was dark. So dark. I dialed up ATIS/AWOS at several local fields and all were reporting overcast 3600. Felt like I was under the blackest cloud ever. Ceiling had completely closed up in those 30 minutes.
At that point I got concerned about the wisdom of pressing on. I descended to 500 below the ceiling, turned 90 degrees south so I would not get farther from my departure field, and reduced power to slow cruise while I decided what to do.
I could see ground lights from Athens 20 miles to the east. I decided to hop from airport to airport while monitoring ATIS/AWOS in front of me. When I got to the GA/SC line after about 30 minutes of flying, reported ceiling ahead was clear below 12K. I climbed to 5500' and continued to my destination without concern.
It was a successful flight, but more stressful than I cared for. Not being able to see the ceiling above you is spooky.
So my personal lesson learned is that I don't care for VFR night flight on moonless nights, and will avoid that in the future.
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