Ed Haywood
En-Route
“show up over Ripon early…..beat the chaos later in the day."
The chaos is part of the fun!
“show up over Ripon early…..beat the chaos later in the day."
Watch these videos from EAA: Click Here. My first year flying in, I watched every video I could find on YouTube and when I arrived, it all looked familiar.
Print the NOTAM, highlight the important parts. Throw away the sheets you don't need. For me, I throw out Seaplane, IFR, etc. You can highlight a lot of things before you even print it out, then highlight anything else you think is important.
On the morning you're flying in, listen to ATIS to determine which Transition Point they're starting at and which runways are in use. Pull out the two sheets that have the Runways in use and have them at the top of the stack for quick reference. Don't forget to breathe!
Here's an example of what I have printed for landing on RWYs 36L/R. Quick and easy reference for when things get overwhelming.
View attachment 137862
This is somewhat dependent on weather. In a normal year, coming in the weekend beforehand can work well because despite the large amount of traffic arriving, there are plenty of hours to space it all out. I have had particularly good luck starting the procedure at 7-7:30 PM, because most people coming from farther away are already in. Sometimes, the traffic starts getting slow enough that they even let you skip part or all of the procedure, but that's cheating!My bucket list has on it "Fly FISK Arrival". When is a good day to arrive and depart as a "first timer"? What day is less crowded than O'Hare at Thanksgiving? Arrive Monday July 21? Tues July 22? When to depart? Friday, Sat, Sun?
Depends, If you want a reasonable parking space, I recommend just going ahead and flying it now.
This is good advice. And I would avoid trying to arrive before maybe 10 AM, because there are a TON of people who will overnight somewhere in or near Wisconsin and then fly in first thing. Later in the day things can be a bit more spaced out. If you come in after the show has started, there'll be another surge right at the end of the airshow, so if you can come in during about the 10 AM - 1 PM timeframe it'll be a bit calmer.It is of course weather dependent but I would say avoid Arriving via Fisk on Sunday unless you are feeling bold and have a second pair of eyes. If weather messes up Sunday, the hornets nest starts at whatever day/time it clears up. I think Saturday or Monday will give you that bucket list / rush without feeling like you have just flown through chaos.
They're starting to crack down on people who can fly at both 90 and 135 knots now, though. If you're in an airplane like a Cirrus, an old Cirrus (Bonanza), an efficient old Cirrus like me or a "poor man's" old Cirrus like @SixPapaCharlieIf your plane is like mine and "Can't maintain 90 knots" you can fly the high route which is much quieter but you still have to merge with the common folk when they turn you off the tracks. Read the NOTAM and at the endeavor bridge if it is really busy, just pick a plane and follow it a mile in trail and you will be fine.
This. Stop somewhere within ~1 hour of Ripon. Stretch your legs, fuel your plane, have at least a snack, maybe do a quick final review of the NOTAM procedures, and THEN go in. Even when it's not a madhouse, you need to be on top of your game and that isn't what you are at the end of a four-hour leg. Plus, you don't want to get near the front of the line and then realize you need to divert for fuel.Lastly, whatever day you go, plan for early. Stuff can happen, weather, crashes, closed runways, holds, etc and the window to get in before they close the airspace shrinks.
It is worth looking at those segments that don't apply to you once, just to understand where everyone is going to be. There is not a section of air that doesn't have traffic in it. Helis and ultralights at 300 feet, departures at 500 feet, arrivals at 1000 and 1500 for the most part. Fisk arrivals from the southwest, seaplanes and warbirds from the southeast, locals and demo flights from the northwest, IFR from the east.Print the NOTAM, highlight the important parts. Throw away the sheets you don't need. For me, I throw out Seaplane, IFR, etc. You can highlight a lot of things before you even print it out, then highlight anything else you think is important.
And be ready for this, and everything else, to change.On the morning you're flying in, listen to ATIS to determine which Transition Point they're starting at and which runways are in use. Pull out the two sheets that have the Runways in use and have them at the top of the stack for quick reference. Don't forget to breathe!
Excellent advice.Some additional advice to piggyback on what’s already been posted:
— Read the NOTAM (notice a recurring theme here?)
— print out your parking signs (see the links I already posted)
— bring good tiedowns
— practice maintaining airspeed and altitude (ideally 90kts and 1000”AGL) while following a ground track, plus spot landings.
So far, my transportation is set, but if it falls through, I could right seat for you to help out.My bucket list has on it "Fly FISK Arrival". When is a good day to arrive and depart as a "first timer"? What day is less crowded than O'Hare at Thanksgiving? Arrive Monday July 21? Tues July 22? When to depart? Friday, Sat, Sun?