- Joined
- Jul 17, 2019
- Messages
- 1,933
- Location
- Chicago suburbs
- Display Name
Display name:
The Little Arrow That Could
I've been trying to leave Pittsburgh for 3 days to get back home to Chicago (I've been on a solo vacation), but as a non-instrument pilot I've had to continually push it back due to low ceilings and other issues on the en-route path. It's been more than a little frustrating as I constantly watch the weather and see no gap for me to get out. I like Pittsburgh a lot, so it's been OK hanging out, just a little annoying to keep paying for a hotel and ramp fee. Plus being generally eager to fly.
Anyways, today I finally had my chance. Ceilings were still MVFR in the immediate area but both METARs and TAFs show improvement on my planned route. So I'm doing my preflight prep checking the weather and I notice there's an AIRMET for moderate turbulence going all the way from my departure to western Ohio, it's not expected to improve throughout the flight.
"Ok" I tell myself, might be a bumpy ride -- but that's not the end of the world. I wouldn't normally start a long flight that takes me through that much expected turbulence -- but I convinced myself that might just be the cost of getting home.
Then I see a few PIREPs pop up in the area from regional jets citing moderate turbulence. "Ok, well that's not great if they're eating some turbulence -- but what should I have expected? The AIRMET does say moderate."
Then I take 20-30m... I'm watching ForeFlight weather and I see a couple 172s/182s take off in the vicinity-ish and immediately land within a 5-10 mins after takeoff. "Ok, maybe they were not planning on doing much flying today. Might not be weather related. Who knows?"
Then 2 pilots come into the FBO who just landed a citation jet talking about their "sporty" landing with a bumpy crosswind ride on the way in. "Ok, well that's disconcerting maybe I'll just give it a little bit longer before I go?"
Within about 30 mins I see 3 PIREPs pop up: two north of me, one south -- all 3 are planes comparable to my size. They're citing "severe" turbulence at low levels not the far below my cruising altitude (again ceilings were lower than I'd like).
Then I see some ceilings lower on my flight path which aren't living up to the TAF I'd seen earlier, which would force me to fly a bit below my originally planned altitude. "Not the end of the world, it's only for like 85 mile stretch" is what I tell myself.
I'm not deterred. I fire up the plane after waiting another 20 mins, and then turn on ATIS and get a warning that there's a center weather advisory for severe turbulence particularly at low altitudes.
In one less act of stubbornness I still refuse to throw in the towel. I call flight services to get information on the advisory, and only then did I decide to ground the flight and try again tomorrow.
When I look back at that, and this was all a grand total of maybe 2 hours ago -- I'm completely embarrassed that I almost let my impatience get the better of me. Conditions were below my minimums and I had trouble accepting it. I'd checked out of the hotel, Uber'd 30 minutes to the FBO, had spent more than 3 days waiting. So at each progressive piece of bad news I negotiated with myself that the incremental change from each update wasn't "that much worse". That's where I caught myself and did a reality check "if I was looking at this weather report for the first time, would I fly today?". The answer was a resounding NO.
Who knows, maybe it would have been an OK flight and everything would have gone fine? But I'm pretty sure that at a minimum it would have been a low altitude, white knuckle ride that was entirely preventable. And when it comes down to it -- pushing the return trip back another day or two is the smallest cost to pay for a safe flight.
Wondering how many people have caught themselves negotiating down their minimums to make a flight happen? I'm glad I didn't fly, I'm just embarrassed that I didn't throw in the towel earlier.
(Also, a total aside, but the cemetery adjacent to the west end of the Lynx FBO tarmac at Allegheny county airport (AGC) is a nice reminder of why it's better not to chance it...)
Anyways, today I finally had my chance. Ceilings were still MVFR in the immediate area but both METARs and TAFs show improvement on my planned route. So I'm doing my preflight prep checking the weather and I notice there's an AIRMET for moderate turbulence going all the way from my departure to western Ohio, it's not expected to improve throughout the flight.
"Ok" I tell myself, might be a bumpy ride -- but that's not the end of the world. I wouldn't normally start a long flight that takes me through that much expected turbulence -- but I convinced myself that might just be the cost of getting home.
Then I see a few PIREPs pop up in the area from regional jets citing moderate turbulence. "Ok, well that's not great if they're eating some turbulence -- but what should I have expected? The AIRMET does say moderate."
Then I take 20-30m... I'm watching ForeFlight weather and I see a couple 172s/182s take off in the vicinity-ish and immediately land within a 5-10 mins after takeoff. "Ok, maybe they were not planning on doing much flying today. Might not be weather related. Who knows?"
Then 2 pilots come into the FBO who just landed a citation jet talking about their "sporty" landing with a bumpy crosswind ride on the way in. "Ok, well that's disconcerting maybe I'll just give it a little bit longer before I go?"
Within about 30 mins I see 3 PIREPs pop up: two north of me, one south -- all 3 are planes comparable to my size. They're citing "severe" turbulence at low levels not the far below my cruising altitude (again ceilings were lower than I'd like).
Then I see some ceilings lower on my flight path which aren't living up to the TAF I'd seen earlier, which would force me to fly a bit below my originally planned altitude. "Not the end of the world, it's only for like 85 mile stretch" is what I tell myself.
I'm not deterred. I fire up the plane after waiting another 20 mins, and then turn on ATIS and get a warning that there's a center weather advisory for severe turbulence particularly at low altitudes.
In one less act of stubbornness I still refuse to throw in the towel. I call flight services to get information on the advisory, and only then did I decide to ground the flight and try again tomorrow.
When I look back at that, and this was all a grand total of maybe 2 hours ago -- I'm completely embarrassed that I almost let my impatience get the better of me. Conditions were below my minimums and I had trouble accepting it. I'd checked out of the hotel, Uber'd 30 minutes to the FBO, had spent more than 3 days waiting. So at each progressive piece of bad news I negotiated with myself that the incremental change from each update wasn't "that much worse". That's where I caught myself and did a reality check "if I was looking at this weather report for the first time, would I fly today?". The answer was a resounding NO.
Who knows, maybe it would have been an OK flight and everything would have gone fine? But I'm pretty sure that at a minimum it would have been a low altitude, white knuckle ride that was entirely preventable. And when it comes down to it -- pushing the return trip back another day or two is the smallest cost to pay for a safe flight.
Wondering how many people have caught themselves negotiating down their minimums to make a flight happen? I'm glad I didn't fly, I'm just embarrassed that I didn't throw in the towel earlier.
(Also, a total aside, but the cemetery adjacent to the west end of the Lynx FBO tarmac at Allegheny county airport (AGC) is a nice reminder of why it's better not to chance it...)