Do the pros cancel for a bad feeling, or maybe they just don't get them?
"AA452 has been canceled, the pilot has a bad feeling about this one"
Not being a smart azz, just wondering about the differences here.
Good question. I wasn't going to get in this discussion, but since you asked. My experience is a little different and probably not really going to be the answer you were looking for.
My experience here is about flying in Alaska. Flying in Alaska is different, very different. Well, at least northern, northwest and western Alaska is. VFR at 1000 and 1 mile is normal. So is 500 overcast and 2 miles. Special VFR several times in one day can be normal. Usually icing is reported something like 15 miles out on the 180 radial, so what we do is go out on the 160 radial until we can get around the icing and complete the trip.
Flying in white out conditions is normal. A white out doesn't mean it is snowing, it is a condition where the ground is covered with snow, and the sky is pretty much completely overcast, and the sun is at a low angle to the ground so the light goes flat and depth perception can go away. There may still be 10 miles visibility, but with the flat light all features just blend into a white condition.
Ice happens. Even if not forecasted. Trace ice is not noticed, at least not very much. Knowing how to get out of ice and still get to the destination is helpful.
I don't expect private pilots to be able to do what I did or even understand it. In fact I considered a private pilot from the lower 48 to be the worst passenger in the plane. They thought they knew it all.
I considered someone that has flown the area for 2 years as a FNG. The boss would know when the weather was crap to ask me first. If I didn't go then no one else should go.
I got in the plane several times with fear in my stomach. I times I landed and was shaking so bad I had to hold on to the plane to stand up. But I was a bush pilot, and completing the mission was important to me, to all the bush pilots. The local eskimos have more time riding in planes more than I have in flight time. They learn the good pilots real quick. Nothing was more satisfying than to complete a difficult flight and have an old eskimo come up to me and say, "Good pilot".
When I got into the Navajo and into the IFR system, life got easier. All I worried about then was ice and "0" visibility. But that is another story I'll save for a rainy day.
I can't imagine an airline pilot in the lower 48 cancelling for any reason except for maybe the airplane being on fire.....