eetrojan
Pattern Altitude
Here’s an annotated video of my long cross country flight from John Wayne to Santa Barbara Airport:
http://youtu.be/4RPUNzrWb2w
The flight was northwest at 3000, under the LAX bravo shelves, and then west at 6500 over Burbank. From a few months ago, but got sidetracked on the editing until now.
I flew a second leg to Camarillo on the way back, and then headed home. It was a fun day, and it was nice to remember it while finishing up the edits.
The flight was beautiful in that the last 20-30 minutes were along the Santa Barbara coastline, with the Pacific Ocean to the left and the mountains to the right.
It was a little smoggy at the start of the flight, but otherwise a clear California day.
I planned to try the GPS on this flight as I had little experience with it up to this point. I painstakingly entered my flight path into the Garmin, only to have it stop working early in the flight. It did work during legs 2 and 3 (and was comforting to have), but it was a good lesson in not relying on it.
The flight was a lot more relaxing than it might seem due to the editing. In real time, there was a lot of dead time to just look around and soak it all in. I cut out most of the talking to myself (haha), but left some of my verbal 'thinking" so you can see how I occupied some of that time.
I saw an E-2 Hawkeye on the way ("Ghost 21"), a twin-prop plane with a radar dish on top. It was called out by approach, but I didn't know what it was until I did the editing. Darn. Had I known, I would have focused on it a little more.
My landing was pretty crappy owing to the light crosswind and my student skill, but all worked out well.
This was a few months ago. I finished my training and am now a private pilot. I didn't think I'd ever get back to this, but finally found some time to do the editing.
http://youtu.be/4RPUNzrWb2w
The flight was northwest at 3000, under the LAX bravo shelves, and then west at 6500 over Burbank. From a few months ago, but got sidetracked on the editing until now.
I flew a second leg to Camarillo on the way back, and then headed home. It was a fun day, and it was nice to remember it while finishing up the edits.
The flight was beautiful in that the last 20-30 minutes were along the Santa Barbara coastline, with the Pacific Ocean to the left and the mountains to the right.
It was a little smoggy at the start of the flight, but otherwise a clear California day.
I planned to try the GPS on this flight as I had little experience with it up to this point. I painstakingly entered my flight path into the Garmin, only to have it stop working early in the flight. It did work during legs 2 and 3 (and was comforting to have), but it was a good lesson in not relying on it.
The flight was a lot more relaxing than it might seem due to the editing. In real time, there was a lot of dead time to just look around and soak it all in. I cut out most of the talking to myself (haha), but left some of my verbal 'thinking" so you can see how I occupied some of that time.
I saw an E-2 Hawkeye on the way ("Ghost 21"), a twin-prop plane with a radar dish on top. It was called out by approach, but I didn't know what it was until I did the editing. Darn. Had I known, I would have focused on it a little more.
My landing was pretty crappy owing to the light crosswind and my student skill, but all worked out well.
This was a few months ago. I finished my training and am now a private pilot. I didn't think I'd ever get back to this, but finally found some time to do the editing.
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