mtuomi
En-Route
So, I flew into a cloud inadvertently. Was flying up the shoreline a few nights ago from KMIA to KJAX, when Miami Center vectored me offshore to heading 060 or something like that to avoid traffic inbound to KFLL. Completely pitch black, no way to see horizon, half moon not visible due to an overcast layer. Still legal though. Until it wasn't. I realized I was in a cloud when I could suddenly see my rotating beacon flashing all around me.
I kept flying the assigned heading, got turned back eventually, but was still in cloud.
I got the ATIS from the nearest field, which reported overcast 035 or thereabouts. I made sure I was over water, and requested a descent to 2500. I set my hard floor at 2000, where I would reconsider my options if I wasn't clear by then. Miami Center said standby, so I kept flying until they told me altitude at my discretion. Perhaps I should have told them I was a non-rated pilot in cloud to expedite my request, but at that moment I thought (and still do), that the best thing to do was to fly as normal as possible, with reference to the instruments (which I have no problem with), and wait for them to clear me down. Any urgency would probably just have increased my workload in there.
Anyway, back to reading instrument pilots handbook. That experience made me decide I need my IR sooner rather than later.
In a weird way, I really enjoyed that.
Now: Should I report it, why and where?
I kept flying the assigned heading, got turned back eventually, but was still in cloud.
I got the ATIS from the nearest field, which reported overcast 035 or thereabouts. I made sure I was over water, and requested a descent to 2500. I set my hard floor at 2000, where I would reconsider my options if I wasn't clear by then. Miami Center said standby, so I kept flying until they told me altitude at my discretion. Perhaps I should have told them I was a non-rated pilot in cloud to expedite my request, but at that moment I thought (and still do), that the best thing to do was to fly as normal as possible, with reference to the instruments (which I have no problem with), and wait for them to clear me down. Any urgency would probably just have increased my workload in there.
Anyway, back to reading instrument pilots handbook. That experience made me decide I need my IR sooner rather than later.
In a weird way, I really enjoyed that.
Now: Should I report it, why and where?