Which was actually the point of today’s lesson. I need to start learning how to navigate my way to the practice area, prepping for the time when I’m cut loose on my own out there. Actually it wasn’t as bad as I thought. I am slowly starting to learn the local landmarks. I need to practice my position calls a bit more. I’m out of practice, more used to doing my circuit calls.
The original plan was to do some steep turns and some approach
stalls. The cloud base wasn’t cooperating though. So we made it out to
Claremont and decided to stick to steep turns instead. You could see there was
a lot of moisture and precipitation in the air and to be honest it made me kind
of nervous. That combined with the mechanical turbulence generated by the
northerly winds made for slightly uncomfortable flying. It took me into about
half the lesson before I felt comfortable. I haven’t felt that unsettled for a
while.
Steep turns were fine, maybe more about that in another post. The
fun came on the return journey. Navigating back is a lot easier, as long as you
can see the big pointy thing you are good. Failing that you fly til you hit the
shoreline and then make a right. I requested and was duly given an approach
over the lake to runway 33. Then ATC
changed their mind, pushing me north of the CN tower. With some prompting from Bob,
we declined their invitation to climb into the low cloud over the city and we
maintained our altitude as requested.
I’ve never landed on 33 before, the approach is unfamiliar, and I’ve
got no visual markers to fall back on.
Mentally I’d probably already set myself up to have a hard time. The
main problem was I was already well high thanks to ATC. I wasn’t ahead of the
plane and found myself having to dump altitude pretty damn quick.
To be 100% honest I was so far behind the plane I may as well have
been in a different time zone. I didn’t make the mental transition from
returning from the practice area to being back in the circuit. I didn’t manage
my speed in the base turn, I looked confused when Bob prompted me to make the
radio call before turning final.
I genuinely think that I forgot I needed to land the plane. Looking
back I’ve never come back from the practice area and landed.
Subconsciously I was waiting for Bob to say “I have control” and land the
thing. Apparently that’s my job now J
Despite approaching high and fast, I still managed to get the plane
on the ground with no civilian casualties. I’ll get there. Despite the slight
unease on the way out and the hectic approach on the way back I’m slowly
getting the hang of this stuff.
There's an old saying in aviation: takeoffs are optional but landings are mandatory. :-)
ReplyDeleteAs for Bob's supposed reluctance to take control, that is one of those tricks that Flying Instructors like to pull. It's called giving the student as much responsibility for the flight as you think they can handle.
so true!
DeleteI was just so far behind the plane it wasn't funny!
and yeah, Bob likes to pile it on sometimes! I guess the fact that I'm still alive and still enjoying it means he's doing something right.