Flight School - Lesson #19 - 10:00AM-12:00PM - VOR & SWF

Friday, February 9th, 2007

Hours - 23.2

Another cold day for a lesson. This one was last Saturday morning. We used up some time cleaning the snow off the plane, but still got a good 1.2 hours in. I wanted to go up to 1B1, but that wasn’t going to happen…not enough time. I just can’t seem to get up to that airport. I really can’t wait for the good weather to come back. It seems like my life now needs warmer weather. I miss , hiking and landscaping. From my previous posts, you can probably tell that I like plants, shrubs and flowers. Oh well.

We hopped in the plane and did our thing. I climbed to about 3,500FT and headed towards . I must say that I was a little razzled because of the cold and the snow. Also, my whole game plan had been thrown off, so I was in the middle of nowhere in my mind. This is probably good practice for what to do if an unexpected event arises while as pilot in command. Everything you do is good practice when .

Yigal was throwing things at me left and right. He had me head towards the Pawling . Once I had that established, he told me to head towards the Huguenot . Things were coming pretty fast. I tend to forget some things while under pressure, but I will get it. I was having a little trouble with the NAV part of the radio. I forgot how to refine the frequency after the dot…like 116.1. Then, he told me to land at for a touch and go. I started to put in the frequency for , 121.0, but forgot to listen to the ATIS at 124.57. You need to listen to the ATIS before calling the tower while entering class D airspace. The ATIS will tell a pilot important information that would take up too much time for to say every single time to every pilot. At the end of each recording, the ATIS tells you which version of information you just heard…like, “This is information Bravo.” The tower updates this information continuously throughout the day, so it is important that you tell the tower which version you heard.

I tuned in to the ATIS and listened to the information. Yigal started going over something, so I never got to record which version I just heard. I didn’t realize this until I made my radio call to the tower. I made my call, told them my position, my altitude and made a request for clearance to land for a touch and go. Right at that point, I knew I didn’t know what version of information I heard, so I left it off. Oh well. We landed for a touch and go and then came back for another.

After we were through there, I headed back to MGJ and entered the pattern just fine. Yigal wanted to land the plane because the runway was a sheet of ice. He did a good job, but I would’ve preferred it if he had asked me for some advice. I am rather good at these things you know.

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Flight School - Lesson #18 - 10:00AM-12:00PM - Cross Country

Wednesday, January 24th, 2007

Hours - 22

This Sunday, I decided that it would be nice to take a cruise to Waterbury/Oxford Airport () in Connecticut. We would depart from MGJ, fly to the Kingston station in Poughkeepsie and from there, head straight to . The round trip would take about 1 1/2 hours.

We took off and everything was great. I set up everything for navigation and pilotage and headed towards the station. I finished my navigation log earlier that morning. I made a few radio calls to the tower at () (my first checkpoint) and transitioned through their class D airspace. I found the station just fine, changed my heading and continued to my next checkpoint, which was Rt.22/Pawling. This flight was really fun. I love navigation and am actually getting pretty good at it. We crossed over Candlelight Airport in Sherman, CT at 5500FT. I looked to the right and saw the Long Island Sound as well as the island itself. You can really see a lot from that altitude. I also saw my destination airport 17 nautical miles ahead.

Things started getting a little tricky as I approached the airport. There was a bit of turbulence and I started my descent late. We had to descend faster than my ears would’ve liked. Also, I kind of screwed up my radio calls to the tower. My landing was even worse. For such a nice day, it was quite gusty at this airport. It must be in some valley or something. I came in sideways and had to correct by giving the airplane some throttle to re-land. We got down on the runway and taxied to stay ahead of a pretty good sized commercial jet. We took off before them and I screwed up my last call to the tower on my way out. Oh well…practice will make perfect.

The trip home was pretty uneventful. Made some pretty good calls to and flew over ’s airspace. I screwed up a radio call to MGJ, but came in and entered the pattern nicely for a good landing.

There really was a lot to handle on this trip and I was exposed to a lot. I am confident that my radio calls will get better in the future as I practice more. Yigal says that it is common to kind of shut down when things get hairy for students on their first cross countries. I guess so, but I am going to do better next time. This Friday, if we fly, we are going to PA. Till then!

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About Me

This is my blog. Welcome to it. I write a lot of stuff that doesn't pertain to anything in particular, but you may find a common theme in here somewhere. Enjoy. More

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