Good evening, everyone. I returned to flying last year after a thirteen-year layoff after my daughter was born and have found this board to be incredibly valuable. When I stopped flying I had nearly 300 hours as an instrument rated private pilot. I also had a tailwheel endorsement and about ten hours of aerobatic time. My wife had always encouraged me to get back in the air. Nearly two years ago she and my daughter placed money on my FBO account for Father's Day. I think the reason it took me so long to get back in the air was perhaps an element of fear of something happening to me and leaving my family behind, but I also wanted my daughter to be exposed to aviation in a way I wasn't while growing up. My plan was to pursue the commercial rating as a way to regain proficiency.
So last August, on a hot and bumpy 92-degree day, I took back to the air. I will admit that I was pretty nervous and sometimes hoped for reasons to cancel. However, that first flight went well despite the turbulence and the gusty crosswinds. The instructor expected he'd need to take over the landing, but I put in the appropriate sideslip and make a firm but respectable landing. He described my flying as smooth especially given the conditions, and I walked away feeling pretty good. Unfortunately, he reached his 1500 hours shortly thereafter and left the flight school. While waiting to find a new instructor, I discovered a 2021 Super Decathlon nearby and decided to get an aerobatics refresher for good measure. We flew four flights, three aerobatics and one practicing the commercial maneuvers. Overall, my aerobatic flying was pretty solid, and I even added several new maneuvers. Unfortunately, my tailwheel landings were fairly rough on every flight, and I could never get my sight picture quite right, as I seemed to flair too high.
I found a new flight instructor at my flight school who I really liked. She was new to the school but had a great reputation. Our first flight together was also on a bumpy day and the plan was to work on my flight review. After performing maneuvers and various take off and landings, she was confident I was a safe pilot and was comfortable signing me off for the flight review. However, I didn't feel ready because I was still not landing consistently and smoothly as I expected, and I asked her to wait on signing off on the flight review until my landings were good enough to solo again. We've flown twice since and while my flying is fine, I'm still flaring too high. I've gotten to the point where I'm actually somewhat happy when we have to cancel for weather to either avoid the frustration of bad landings, or maybe even worse, getting to a point where I could actually "solo" again. I always feel terrible and like a coward afterwards. When I flew actively, I loved hopping in the plane and flying solo to new airports, especially while working to build XC time for the IR, so I wasn't a pilot who feared flying alone.
I know it's all in my head and it's either a fear of continuing to have disappointing landings, or maybe even the fear of actually succeeding and being in the plane alone again. I apologize for the long rant and life history, but hoping to hear from pilots who've come back after a long layoff who took a while to get comfortable again, or from instructors who've successfully coached said pilots. I know we often read about the pilots who hop back in the plane after 20 years and are ready to solo the same day. Thanks again.
So last August, on a hot and bumpy 92-degree day, I took back to the air. I will admit that I was pretty nervous and sometimes hoped for reasons to cancel. However, that first flight went well despite the turbulence and the gusty crosswinds. The instructor expected he'd need to take over the landing, but I put in the appropriate sideslip and make a firm but respectable landing. He described my flying as smooth especially given the conditions, and I walked away feeling pretty good. Unfortunately, he reached his 1500 hours shortly thereafter and left the flight school. While waiting to find a new instructor, I discovered a 2021 Super Decathlon nearby and decided to get an aerobatics refresher for good measure. We flew four flights, three aerobatics and one practicing the commercial maneuvers. Overall, my aerobatic flying was pretty solid, and I even added several new maneuvers. Unfortunately, my tailwheel landings were fairly rough on every flight, and I could never get my sight picture quite right, as I seemed to flair too high.
I found a new flight instructor at my flight school who I really liked. She was new to the school but had a great reputation. Our first flight together was also on a bumpy day and the plan was to work on my flight review. After performing maneuvers and various take off and landings, she was confident I was a safe pilot and was comfortable signing me off for the flight review. However, I didn't feel ready because I was still not landing consistently and smoothly as I expected, and I asked her to wait on signing off on the flight review until my landings were good enough to solo again. We've flown twice since and while my flying is fine, I'm still flaring too high. I've gotten to the point where I'm actually somewhat happy when we have to cancel for weather to either avoid the frustration of bad landings, or maybe even worse, getting to a point where I could actually "solo" again. I always feel terrible and like a coward afterwards. When I flew actively, I loved hopping in the plane and flying solo to new airports, especially while working to build XC time for the IR, so I wasn't a pilot who feared flying alone.
I know it's all in my head and it's either a fear of continuing to have disappointing landings, or maybe even the fear of actually succeeding and being in the plane alone again. I apologize for the long rant and life history, but hoping to hear from pilots who've come back after a long layoff who took a while to get comfortable again, or from instructors who've successfully coached said pilots. I know we often read about the pilots who hop back in the plane after 20 years and are ready to solo the same day. Thanks again.