Lowflynjack
En-Route
- Joined
- Oct 28, 2014
- Messages
- 4,309
- Display Name
Display name:
Jack Fleetwood
Took me awhile to come up with this title, and my numbers are way under actual prices!
You guys all know I'm an aviation photographer. You may even know I'm a private pilot with somewhere around 9400 hours (9k tailwheel). I grew up in a family with two uncles who were pilots and one of them managed an airport and was an A&P IA, so I got a lot of opportunities to fly and got to fly some cool planes over the years.
Anyway, I'm 47 now. I work for a large company as a purchasing manager and I've been doing that for around 17 years. I always tell people, don't let your kids go into purchasing. You're never good enough... you either don't have enough material or you have too much! I'm over it. Lately I've seen too many good friends make it to retirement only to die shortly after. I lost my Sister last week and she was only 49. I lost my Mom a few years ago at 58.
I want to retire from my day job and enjoy life. To do this, I will need to sell my house (it's a seller's market in the Austin area), buy an RV to live in, buy a plane cash, and make enough money to live. I can make some money through photography and the ultimate goal is to travel around the US with my girlfriend, who is working on learning to fly and eventually have her be my photo pilot.
So now that I've told you my aviation-life story, here's what I'm thinking about and I want input from those of you who have done it. Is it worth becoming a CFI? I'm sure it would be part time. When I do the simple math, it seems like I would need to spend a lot of money on IFR, Commercial, CFI and never come close to making that money back. I can afford it now and later it would be an extra source of income, but other than paying forward all of the great opportunities I've been given, is it worth it?
You guys all know I'm an aviation photographer. You may even know I'm a private pilot with somewhere around 9400 hours (9k tailwheel). I grew up in a family with two uncles who were pilots and one of them managed an airport and was an A&P IA, so I got a lot of opportunities to fly and got to fly some cool planes over the years.
Anyway, I'm 47 now. I work for a large company as a purchasing manager and I've been doing that for around 17 years. I always tell people, don't let your kids go into purchasing. You're never good enough... you either don't have enough material or you have too much! I'm over it. Lately I've seen too many good friends make it to retirement only to die shortly after. I lost my Sister last week and she was only 49. I lost my Mom a few years ago at 58.
I want to retire from my day job and enjoy life. To do this, I will need to sell my house (it's a seller's market in the Austin area), buy an RV to live in, buy a plane cash, and make enough money to live. I can make some money through photography and the ultimate goal is to travel around the US with my girlfriend, who is working on learning to fly and eventually have her be my photo pilot.
So now that I've told you my aviation-life story, here's what I'm thinking about and I want input from those of you who have done it. Is it worth becoming a CFI? I'm sure it would be part time. When I do the simple math, it seems like I would need to spend a lot of money on IFR, Commercial, CFI and never come close to making that money back. I can afford it now and later it would be an extra source of income, but other than paying forward all of the great opportunities I've been given, is it worth it?