WMAP and JES have just returned from yet another epic adventure.
This one was all kinds of eventful and all kinds of fun.
Believe me there are a gazillion blog posts about this journey on
their way. The short story is that JES and I managed to get through all three
legs from City to Waterloo and on to Tillsonburg before heading home back to
city, without crashing or annoying anyone too much.
In the interests of full disclosure though, here are some of the
things that WMAP failed to identify on this flight. And yet despite this , she
had the most fun, ever!
Go figure.
1)
The “Ident” button
on her transponder. I know where it isn’t. It isn’t the “Standby” button that I
pressed the first time ATC ever asked me to “Squawk Ident”. Despite this my
gaze failed to locate the button in question. Leading to a very embarrassed “Standby”
given to ATC while I tried to locate the damn thing. For the record, it is on
the top left hand side of the transponder (not the radio which is where I think
I was looking). It is difficult to miss and somehow I managed. There’s kind of an “inception” like quality about
someone who can’t identify the identify feature!
2)
Waterloo airport – Yup another one to
add to my list of “airports-that-elude-WMAP’s-not-so-watchful-gaze”. This one
is a major embarrassment. It’s a large
international airport. It shouldn’t be able to hide. Except that this one
decide to send out a decoy industrial estate to pretend to be an airport. Yet
again WMAP had to ‘fess up and say to the Tower once she’d been handed over “errr
be advised Waterloo tower, JES does NOT have you in sight”. I figured that I’d
rather tie up the frequency for a few seconds than screw up the traffic for
several minutes. Tower probably agreed, they kindly gave me pretty good
directions until I spotted them.
3)
Tillsonburgh airport
– Yeah, if Waterloo was elusive, I didn’t stand a freakin chance
with this little strip. As advertised I had real trouble with this one. I kinda, maybe cheated a little. More in
another post but I didn’t upset anyone on the way and landed without clipping any
trees either.
So if I spectacularly failed to identify pretty much anything I
needed to do this trip, how did it actually go so smoothly, I hear you ask.
Well the things I did manage to identify were probably the most
useful things a pilot can use. I correctly identified when I needed help and I successfully
identified where I could get that help from.
So this trip wasn’t exactly my own work but I’ve a reasonable
suspicion that I didn’t do anything that other pilots don’t do.
Of course I didn’t. I’m practically one of them now. BTW this flight,
I believe, marks the end of the official number of solo hours (total and cross
country) that I need to get my PPL.
Yes, you can probably hear me celebrating from wherever you are!
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