U
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AdamZ said:Ok Unregistered thank you for sharing that. I think it would be VERY helpful to the board VFR pilots, IR pilots and even CFIs to hear how exactly you got yourself into that situation. To me it would seem obvious to a VFR pilot that he was heading into IMC before he got there. If thats not the case we can all learn from your experience.( I guess Haze is an exception) Not being critical here. But if you can tell us what led you to get into the IMC perhaps those VFR pilots can avoid your mistake and perhaps your story can better help a CFI prepare his PPL student to avoid IMC.
Well, sort of. I had landed outside of a major KY city and re-checked the weather at their terminal. Had considered just getting a rental car as I was less than 50 NM from my destination, tho the weather still showed VFR and marginal VFR. Ceilings would have allowed (barely) the flight. my route was outside the area for occ. mountain obs. ... at least on the map.
Nobody up there has a yard stick, and the bottoms of crummy clouds are hardly flat sheets, so staying below and side to side at legal separation is hardly a science. Yes, I know I could have just flown well below the minimums, and maybe that's one of the lessons I learned here. I also learned that gray on gray under gray makes for poor depth perception. Anyway, when I got to the point where the ceilings were coming down and the hills were coming up and I could no longer rationally believe that I could maintain safe separation to my destination, I started to assess my exit strategy (ie east or west turn). There are some mountains with tall towers on them, and although they shouldn't be near my route based on my pre-flight review, at that moment I was not in a position to pull out the sectional to verify. I hemmed and hawed for about a minute running through scenarios, and by that point I had to decide if I was going to get real close to the clouds or the ground...i chose the clouds. Started my standard rate turn just at the same time that I entered the cloud....and got the leans I mentioned earlier. Luckily, the time spent under the hood proved very useful, and I was able to complete the turn with a small descent without it getting too much more hairier. Made it into a small strip still legal, and the operator was very nice old guy who probably knew I had busted regs just to get down to where he was. Still, had a story about his younger flying days that made me realize how much one can learn in a very short and scary period of time.
In retrospect, I should have trusted my instinct while I was on the ground checking weather and stayed there. It was definitely get-there-itis coupled with too much trust in the technology. If I had gone on, I am sure I would have been in all IFR weather, despite what the Metars said about the area being VFR/MVFR.