Breakfast at the hotel was included and good. While I was eating in the cafeteria, an old geezer with a cane walked in and sat down at a nearby table. The woman in the kitchen knew him by name and brought him a cup of coffee without even being asked. He threw down a five-dollar bill. After a few minutes, he looked over at me:
Geezer: You in oil?
Me: No.
Geezer: You a terrorist?
Me: You mean ANTIFA?
Geezer: Yup.
Me: No.
Geezer: You of the conservative persuasion?
Me: Yup.
Geezer: I like your shirt.
Me: Thanks.
I got to the airport nice and early and was ready to takeoff by just a couple minutes after 7:00, my target departure time. However, the eastern sky was just
barely beginning to lighten up by that time and I couldn’t see the clouds well enough to feel comfortable taking off, so I just relaxed in the pilot’s lounge for a few minutes, made one final visit to the bathroom, and sipped a free Dr. Pepper on the sofa. It wasn’t long at all before I thanked the extraordinarily if not excessively respectful, friendly, and slightly formal Ace, airport manager, and headed out to my plane.
Ceiling was good, but there was some weather ahead. Every day of this trip has stretched me as a pilot, not hard to do when one has virtually zero experience. From turbulence and downdrafts to smoke to high density altitude (I thought about adding “only 3 cylinders functioning!” but I knew I would just stress people out—it’s a shame to waste humor) to new airports to clouds and rain. I took advantage of my ADS-B and had Stratus Insight show radar on the screen. Then I animated it to see if I could see a trend. What the iPad showed was verified by what I could see out in front of me—a couple cells with mostly light rain but with a hot spot, particularly off to the left.
I veered slightly to the right and picked my target location for passage. The air was smooth and my plane got a bit of a bath. I could hear the rain hitting the plane, even with an active noise cancelling headset over my ears. After that line of clouds which I crossed over its narrow axis, it was clear of rain clouds all the way to Castroville. When I’d landed the day before, a Cessna 420 pulled up next to me on the ramp in Pecos, the pilot walked over, and we talked for a bit. He said he kept his J-3 Cub there and there were a number of other retired pilots doing lots of work on their planes each morning, so that was my first target landing zone of the day, quite a long leg for me.
Not long after passing the line of rain clouds, the skies cleared and the terrain changed to low ridges and shallow valleys with the occasional snaking river. I couldn’t help myself. I remembered how much I’d enjoyed flying down in the canyons in Utah. I descended until I was within a few hundred feet of the ground. I cruised along at 100 mph for more than an hour, following the valleys, banking around corners, and popping up over the occasional ridge line that got in my way. I absolutely loved it! With the Luscombe’s leisurely cruise speed, I find flying low very enjoyable, with an amazing view of what’s just under the wingtips.
Eventually, the air started getting bumpy, enough so that I got annoyed, and so I ascended a few thousand feet in the hope of finding a bit smoother air. Not only did it smooth out some, but it cooled off a bit. On the downside, I started getting pretty tired. I hadn’t gotten enough sleep the night before, and, while I’d felt good on the ground and for the first part of the trip, it caught up with me. Falling asleep at the stick could’ve been bad news. I was anxious to arrive at Castroville.
Before I knew it, I was receiving weather and was only a few miles out. I wasn’t excited about a bit of a crosswind, quartering right at 7 knots. I orbited the field and looked at the windsock, briefly considering landing on the grass, but I landed on the hard, black stuff and didn’t have too much of a problem. After fueling up, I parked and then had a brief chat with a guy that had landed just after me. He was flying a Jabiru and it was a really neat plane. I’d heard of their engines, but didn’t know they also made props and planes.
I then proceed into the pilot’s lounge, possibly the nicest out of the modicum that I’ve visited. It was really nice. Air conditioned, nice bathrooms,
lots of aviation-related reading material—a veritable aviation library—plenty of comfortable seating, a vending machine, and generally nice aviation-related decorations. The only thing I couldn’t find was the Wi-Fi password and no one to give it to me. No biggie. After resting for a bit and reviewing my route to San Marcos, I headed back out.
As I approached my plane, I encountered someone walking around it eyeballing all the details. He asked if it was my plane and I answered in the affirmative. We chatted about planes for a bit—he and a friend (son?)—were in a Cirrus. He asked what my shirt meant. I got a kick out of that. I asked the other guy if he knew. He laughed and said he did. I said he could explain it later. That opened up a brief conversation about politics. We were certainly on the same page, not unlike I imagine I would be with a majority of Texans. My shirt has a silhouette of an AR-15 and the text says “It’s because I’m black, isn’t it?”
They taxied out and I taxied out. I followed shortly after them, waited for them to turn right crosswind, then made my turn to the northeast. I climbed to 1,800 and flew under the shelves of Saint Tony’s class Charlie airspace, only a slight detour and probably the quickest way to get to San Marcos.
Maybe 20 miles out, I listened to San Marcos ATIS and then began monitoring the tower. He gave another plane vectors and referenced the “weather out to the southwest.” Hmm. I’m to the southwest. Is there weather up ahead? I then realized I wasn’t seeing said weather on the iPad and did what I always seem to have to do after turning it on—go into its settings and connect it to the Stratus Wi-Fi, as it always connects first to one of my action cams. After that, I had it show me radar again. Ah!
That weather! There was definitely precip straight ahead. I began to veer slightly to the north, but it then occurred to me that I had a left crosswind. I thought maybe the wind would blow those cells south of my current course, and so I reduced my veerage. My plane got another mild bath, but I was able to stay mostly on course. I contacted the tower and he put me on a left base for 3-5. Although the wind had been all over the place, even up to 12G17, at that moment, wind was right down 3-5 at around 10 knots. Pretty good.
A Citation got vectored in ahead of me—even though he was much farther away—and I was cleared to land, number two after the Cessna. Ahem. The
other kind of Cessna. I affirmed my clearance, and cut the base to final short. No reason to drag things out. I came in a bit hot and made a half-way-decent wheel landing. I got progressives to the FBO, got fuel, went through my usual routine of removing cameras from the plane, getting my bags ready for transport, and just made sure things were all buttoned up.
I was overwhelmed by the reception I received at San Marcos. Josh Flowers and so many of you were there to greet me on my great trek. What a pleasure! Just kidding. No one was there. Not even crickets.
I spent a while in the comfortable FBO after paying for the small top-up, looking for a hotel with an airport shuttle. Gave up after a bit. An Uber was pretty cheap.
I’m spending an extra night here. My sister and brother-in-law are on the way down right now from Tyler. We’ll spend the day visiting and then they’ll head back. Tomorrow morning, I’ll plan on heading down to Brownsville. There’s some interesting weather out over the Gulf, so things might be interesting over the next few days. I think I'll beat the tropical storm, but there's still some rain forecast over the eastern part of Texas. After I’m west of Laredo, I think I’ll be able to relax a little more.
Threading the needle just east of Pecos.
Low and slow in West Texas
Low and slow in West Texas
Low and slow in West Texas
Popping up over a ridge in West Texas
Low and slow in West Texas...not as slow as the traffic, though!
Low and slow in West Texas
Low and slow in West Texas
Castroville (KCVB)
Wheel landing at San Marcos (KHYI)