Flying is like golf. You never master it, and we need to constantly be a student of it to become better.
We will al be students of aviation our whole lives.
Yep- 50 years of daily flying practice and it's al been training and preparation for my next flight.
no matter how bad you are, there is always someone worse
no matter how good you are, there is always someone who can humble you
@Ateaist -- Hello neighbor! Where are you flying out of? Hopefully the darned ocean will wake up and warm up so we can get rid of June gloom already -- it's a month late!
Hi neighbor - I'm flying out of MYF as well. Glad to hear you found an instructor and have started your training!
I can't wait to get rid of the marine layer; I can't remember it ever being this late (but then again I've not really paid any attention to it until this year)! If your CFI is instrument rated he can alway take you in and out of the mess, and you can go to Brown, Gillespie or Ramona to practice pattern and air work (I may have to do that for the checkride prep).
I'm the new guy here. I have no hours, no training, and no money. What I do have is a drive that tells me I will get my PPL eventually.
Currently I'm working on learning as much as I can from free sources online while I wait until spring. Once Taxes roll in, my plan is to put money aside for ground school and start saving up for rental time.
My biggest hurdle is whether at 6'9" I can fit in a cockpit to fly anything, but I've been told I can. While a 152 might not fit me very well I've been told there are planes that will fit. This means it will be a bit more expensive to get my PPL so it may take a bit longer but I'm going to do it.
I plan to schedule an introductory flight in Aug.
Boy this sounds familiar, (except the hours) I too started training at 16, 24 years ago. My high school offered an aeronautics class that offered free flight instruction. We didn't get a ton of hours, but in the 3 years I was in the course, I amassed 41 hours, include .5 PIC solo in the pattern at KSEE. Military service, marriage to an aviation hater, and life got in the way.
2 out of the 3 issues have been resolved. Only life remains. I'm currently looking for an instructor in the Myrtle Point, Roseburg, Oregon area.
I've started studying and trying to learn and relearn. Thinking about ordering some of the Kings courses for that areas that are kicking my butt. But then again maybe I'll just grab the Get it all kit, and cover all the bases.
for some reason I'm STILL waiting to start my dual xc's.
just curious, but for those who have solo'd AND started your xc's, about how long after solo did you start, wx factor removed, if possible? it's been over a month for me with no real wx related delays, and I'm not sure why.
for some reason I'm STILL waiting to start my dual xc's.
just curious, but for those who have solo'd AND started your xc's, about how long after solo did you start, wx factor removed, if possible? it's been over a month for me with no real wx related delays, and I'm not sure why.
for some reason I'm STILL waiting to start my dual xc's.
just curious, but for those who have solo'd AND started your xc's, about how long after solo did you start, wx factor removed, if possible? it's been over a month for me with no real wx related delays, and I'm not sure why.
I was doing dual XC almost immediately after I soloed, but I think that was due to me spending so much time with the instructor pre-solo, I didn't have much else to focus on. We did 2 short XC dual trips, then I was on my own for a short one, then a long one and now I have way more hours than I ever thought I would have pre-test. Testing in 1 week and absolutely petrified about the oral part of the exam. Feeling 99% confident with flying abilities but not so much with FAR/AIM stuff. Man this whole pilots license is way more than people make it out to be.
We ALL are students. Once you consider yourself done learning you are just waiting to star in a NTSB report. After nearly 16,000 hours I consider myself an "advanced beginner".