We briefed for a flight out to the practice area, some steep turns
(worked in as part of the HASEL check) and then some stalls. In Bob’s words “nothing
too drastic, we’ll start with some power off ones and then maybe progress to
some at 1500rpm”
I agreed (what else was I going to do?) and we set out to the
practice area. The steep turns were ok,
the ones to the left better than the right. After 720 + degrees I had to roll
out of the right hand turn because I was getting dizzy!
Then the stalls, power off, full flaps. I made a distinct effort to
lean back in the seat so that I wasn’t subconsciously pushing the controls
forward. We stalled. I recovered. I
complained. Nothing new there.
Bob: “see that wasn’t so bad was it?
I blew a raspberry and gave him the thumbs down! But in reality I
was ok
Bob: “let’s do another”
So we did. I’m not a fan, but I survived.
We climbed back up to 3300ft, turned round so we were in our little
section of the practice area.
Bob: “OK WMAP, set us up 1500rpm and full flaps”
Me: “I really don’t want to”
Bob : “Ok , do you want me to demo one? I have control”
Me: “NO!! I don’t want you to, I guess I’ll do it”
Apparently the thought of experiencing a stall where I’m not in
control of the recovery scares me worse than actually doing them!
So I did one, the wing dropped a little. I picked it up with the
rudder. Done! Out the way. Or so I thought
``That was great WMAP, let’s do another, while we are on a roll”
So we did, this time the other wing to what I was expecting
dropped. I realised just in time that I was about to step on the wrong rudder.
“I’d be so happy WMAP if we did another one of those”
I pull a face, we do another
And another
And anotherAll the time Bob pushing me to try it one more time, again and again.
The problem with asking someone to bully you is that occasionally
they do. Whether you like it or not. I never should have given him permission
to! I'm so easily manipulated into doing what Bob wants, it's ridiculous.
Seriously though, I’m never going to be a fan of stalls but the
fear is gone. I know that I can cope with the worst that they can throw at me. Lesson achieved, even if I do feel like I’ve
been through the ringer.
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