We left our home field 80nm north of KMSN around 6:00am local time in CAVU conditions.
So... Home of the brewery, the foundry, or the rapids?
Below the clouds in a hot muggy airplane that I swore was an enraged bull on whose back I was forced to ride
Love that image, and it's the truth sometimes!
It's also the best reason to get your IR so you can cruise on top in cool, smooth air.
I was exhausted from fighting the airplane and beginning to question the wisdom in attempting to navigate into Florida with a lot of thunderstorm activity at night. So we spent the night in Alma.
Good call. And that sort of thing is why I tell my pax that GA is always an adventure, just not necessarily the adventure you had planned! If you go into it with that sort of positive attitude, some of those unplanned stops turn into really neat experiences.
While still obviously speaking English, the Bahamian accent of the approach controller was not something I was prepared for; it suddenly clicked in my brain that "holy crap I just flew this thing to a foreign country!".
Yeah, I had a terrible time understanding the ground controller at Freeport when we left there. I must have had to ask him to "say again" about six times!
On a related note, stormscopes (at least the one I have) are even more worthless. They show lightening strikes and their relative position left/right etc of you. But once there are enough different cells around, the whole thing just lights up like a christmas tree and you can't make heads or tails out of it. I imagine more sophisticated ones would perform better?
I dunno, the one I have (whose model number I keep forgetting) is supposed to be one of the better ones - Slaved to the HSI so it moves the strikes when you turn, etc - but I haven't been able to gain enough confidence in it to use it for much other than a supplementary piece of info. The problem is that it's essentially guessing where a strike is based on the strength of the pulse and the direction it's coming from. In the ConUS, the National Lightning Detection Network is way more accurate, so it might be worth waiting the few minutes for the ADS-B datalinked lightning instead.
It's too bad onboard radar is so dang expensive.
This trip convinced me that I needed to finish my IFR rating, which I did in November.
Congrats! It's a very useful rating, and really essential if you're going to use GA for travel on a regular basis.
Sounds like a heckuva trip! Not too shabby for a 150-hour n00b.
Actually, I wish more people would tackle trips like this. Too many are scared and think they need more experience, when really it's more planning that makes things go better. Now, you have much more experience than your total hours would indicate, and you'll be more likely to use GA for travel in the future. That's how it ought to be!
The next stop on the bucket list is Teterboro (KTEB) - so I'm open to any feedback from anyone and everyone that's been there.
When I went to NYC last, I went to KCDW instead - Just a few miles west of KTEB, easy in and out, and much lower fees. Really, nothing to worry about. I've also been to KFRG.
When flying East, you'll find that "cleared as filed" will only happen until Pennsylvania or so. Once you're talking to New York Center, or maybe before, expect a reroute that involves airways. It can be cool, though - Going into KFRG, my re-route had me go past a spot where there were La Guardia arrivals above me and Newark arrivals below me.