Thinking about our Florida trip which we returned from on Monday....
Learned a lot, several encounters with weather. Sunday in particular:
We diverted to KSSI, on the coast of Georgia, Saturday night as the overcast merged with the undercast south of Savannah. Gorgeous place to be stranded, except that Sunday morning, the skies were clear, save for a little bit of fog blowing in from the ocean that stubbornly kept the awos reporting 300' ceilings.
Apparently the weather station is at the end of the runway closest the ocean, because the runway was clear, but the fog persisted just inside the fence. This being a non-towered field, SVFR never occurred to me, but from what I've been researching, apparently JAX could have cleared me to takeoff legally? Im certain I could've made a short field takeoff and remained clear of the fog wall, and it would've saved sitting at the (beautiful) FBO for 4 hours.
We eventually got off, but by that time storms over central Georgia had begun to develop. It turned out to be another very stressful day of dodging around trying to stay vfr that probably could have been avoided by an earlier departure.
And before you ask, yes I've started studying for my instrument rating.
Learned a lot, several encounters with weather. Sunday in particular:
We diverted to KSSI, on the coast of Georgia, Saturday night as the overcast merged with the undercast south of Savannah. Gorgeous place to be stranded, except that Sunday morning, the skies were clear, save for a little bit of fog blowing in from the ocean that stubbornly kept the awos reporting 300' ceilings.
Apparently the weather station is at the end of the runway closest the ocean, because the runway was clear, but the fog persisted just inside the fence. This being a non-towered field, SVFR never occurred to me, but from what I've been researching, apparently JAX could have cleared me to takeoff legally? Im certain I could've made a short field takeoff and remained clear of the fog wall, and it would've saved sitting at the (beautiful) FBO for 4 hours.
We eventually got off, but by that time storms over central Georgia had begun to develop. It turned out to be another very stressful day of dodging around trying to stay vfr that probably could have been avoided by an earlier departure.
And before you ask, yes I've started studying for my instrument rating.