Bob had kicked me up there solo with instructions to do two or
three circuits and then bring her back (the unspoken implication being “in one
piece.”) We both knew that previously my landings had been a bit on the flat
and springy side!
I was nervous about going up on my own but probably less than I thought
I was going to be. I was a little anxious, a bit wary but mostly just
hyperaware of what was going on around me but not in a “paralysed by fear” way.
This is a definite improvement.
I taxied out, reminding ATC that I was still on my old transponder code
(they got me to change it) and did my stuff in the run-up area. My takeoff
briefing consisted of the usual “Don’t break the effing plane.”
Circuit #1 started off great. Fantastic directional and altitude control,
reasonable turn to base and approach to final, and then the landing. Oh dear!
Boingity boing!
After the second boing, where I came down harder than the first, I
decided now was not the time to argue with the plane. I literally said out loud
“F@ck this for a game of chess, you obviously still wanna fly.” So I pushed the
throttle in and around we went.
Circuit #2 was pretty much the same, bouncity bounce and around we go. Leaving me feeling slightly
bemused and once again talking to myself. “Lovely circuits WMAP but you are going
to have to land eventually”
Circuit #3 I concentrated really hard. I knew what I’d been doing
wrong. I was coming in too fast and with no head wind , even a few knots over
the magic 65 meant that I came in like a rocket, saw the runway disappearing
underneath me and panicked, forcing the nose down. I briefly mulled over asking
ATC for an extended downwind to give me time to stabilise my approach. As luck
would have it traffic meant that they got me to anyway. I set myself up on a nice
long final, tried not to drag it in under power and prayed for third time
lucky. I bounced a little but it settled down. I kept the column back and
exited the runway.
The landings may have been crappy but I made the right decisions in
a split second. Having the confidence to know that I do make the right call was
a far more valuable lesson than landing perfectly each time.
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