I could be wrong, but I also seem to recall OP Bob had a medical setback due to some sort of AC related poisoning at a hotel.
Yes, got a lung full of pure ammonia from a minibar fridge. That messed me up for a while. But most of it is that we have one airplane, lots of students, and also others that rent it (at times for the whole weekend, one person), plane has been grounded a few times because of problems, and then normal service. Weather has been bad the last few years.
Summertime when the sun is up late, I can fly after work, and on weekends. But winter is the opposite, much less daylight hours, and then it is mondays and weekends.. my CFI is very flexible in hours, but of course also is flying acro, in competition, and sometimes away. When he is away and we’ve tried to get another CFI to take over so far it has never happened. We send out email asking and either no replies or replies that they need to use the time with their students.
And then we have the weather which this last year has been a lot of storms, bad weather.
I have a friend from when we met at the three day ground school intensive course (the rest was all online, and I struggled with technical Norwegian) before taking the exam. We passed at the same time. He JUST now got his PPL, and I guess he has about 50 or a little over hours. That was from starting a little under two years ago. Same time as I. He also struggled getting hours, and was frustrated but had a job where he could fly a good deal during the day. I watched the bookings (trying to fit in bookings for myself) and it was most often weekdays he was getting the most luck if weather held.
I have saved up a lot of vacation time, talked to my work and am planning on doing out days when the weather ought to be ok, the plane has enough hours before scheduled service during the daytime. That’s the plan. I had to cancel two flights now that could have gone, because the heat wave we have now is just hitting me too much. Zero energy and no way I am able to be effective, concentrated.
Stalls don't have to be aggressive to learn them. You just need to set a pitch attitude that has you losing 1-2kts per second on the AI and be patient. In my opinion this is a more realistic was of doing it.
For power off stalls, setup the plane for landing (flaps, carb heat, pump, whatever). Set Speed to whatever you fly down final. Set the throttle to give you a 500fpm descent....
To enter the stall, pull the throttle and simply try to "extend the glide with pitch", by bringing the nose up to or slightly above the horizon. Then wait. To get it flying, you just need to let the nose come down below the horizon and add full power. Most of the time there really isn't any pushing needing, just releasing the back pressure.
I would like to try that way, but so far the instruction I’m getting is, after preliminary checks, straight and level flying, I pull throttle back to idle, keep the nose up to not lose altitude, keep adding back pressure, stall horn, buffeting, etc. and wait until the stall breaks. Recovery should be release back pressure, and THEN Full throttle (and I believe he has said “after positive rate of climb” with throttle. I will have to check again if he did say that.
Last flight on Monday I got us into what seemed radical nose down. He recovered along with me doing it.
He said to not go so far down with the nose, I tried again, same thing. Once more, same...he then demonstrated twice, and I still thought I was doing the same thing as he in his demonstration. Tried again, still didn’t have it.
I had done this same maneuver before and it went ok, after the first time I ever tried it when I did the same.
I think the advice here can help, definitely thinking of just using fingers on the yoke so no thumb wrapped around it in case I am pushing forward instead of just lessening back pressure. Also am wondering if I am doing something aggressive to get us in the stall. Maybe too eager to force it. I’m just not sure.
I was just asking here to hear tips and think a little more about it. Of course the real course of action is next time I fly I go over what happened with my CFI, hear if he saw or knows what I was doing wrong, and maybe I will ask about doing it more as you mention here...at least to see, and maybe after that goes ok try this type of stall again.