Thursday, December 19, 2013

Reflection 2013: A Year of Change

When the days become short, gusty winds rob the body of heat with breathtaking efficiency, and footing is treacherous outside the hangar due to snow and ice, it is a good time to stay inside. Sitting in a comfortable chair and reviewing my logbook leaves me with a sense that 2013 was a year of significant change in my flying.  Here is my annual review of the year's highlights along with some of my favorite photographs.

Warrior N21481 outside of the hangar at Williamson-Sodus Airport
("A Bird's Eye View")
I now own Warrior 481 outright.  Three days prior to the ninth anniversary of buying the Warrior in Guthrie, OK, I made my last airplane payment.

Low scud over Ontario, Canada
("From the North Coast to the Third Coast")
I earned my instrument rating!  After over a decade of VFR-only flying, this required a significant mental adjustment for me in terms of go/no-go decision making.  But I like having the new skill and the expanded envelope of capability. It's too bad that low, icy clouds of winter render the rating virtually useless this time of year. In 2013, I logged 21.8 and 5.7 hours of simulated and actual IMC flight time, respectively, with 48 approaches (15 ILS, 20 RNAV, and 13 VOR).

Clouds over Le Roy, NY
("Escape to Lock Haven"
I moved from the Le Roy Airport to the Williamson-Sodus Airport.  This was a tremendous change for me after seven years of considering Le Roy my home. While I will always have a special place in my heart for Le Roy and the pilots based there, the move shortened my commute significantly and brought me to a more active airport.

Sunset from over Seneca Falls, NY
("In Search of a Silent Killer")
I exchanged my iFly 700 portable GPS for an iPad using Foreflight/Stratus. The iFly is a great device with a remarkably intuitive interface and a terrific development team supporting it. When I began instrument training, however, I found it to be cumbersome for displaying/zooming approach plates. I already owned an iPad and needed a hardware upgrade to take advantage of ADS-B weather, so I chose the Foreflight/Stratus pathway. I experienced some remorse after making the change because the iPad overheated on a couple of early flights.  However, I found that keeping it on my left leg did an excellent job of protecting it from the sun and I flew many hours with it during the peak of summer without an issue.  The iPad is a more capable flight planning tool and also works remarkably well in a pinch for aerial photography (e.g., the sunset photo above).

The Bear flying the Warrior 481
("Yankin' and Bankin'")
The Bear became much more comfortable at the controls of the airplane.  This year, she had a lot of fun busting cloudstaking the controls and shooting pictures.  She flew 30.7 hours in 2013, surpassing the 200 hour mark to end the year with a total of 224.6 hours in the Warrior since infancy.

Warrior 481 at Hampton Roads Executive Airport, Chesapeake, VA
("The Voyage to Hampton Roads")
In 2013, I logged my greatest number of flight hours ever, 128.6. This can be attributed to a mix of pleasure flying, instrument training, and cross country trips. In July, as I neared completion of my instrument rating, I flew almost as many hours in a single month as I did in flying the family to Florida in 2005 and 2011.

Sunset over the Oregon Inlet (Outer Banks, NC)
("In Blackbeard's Wake")
I also logged 10.5 hours of night flight in 2013, my most to date. I notice that my night hours are slowly creeping higher as time goes by.

Wright Brothers National Memorial, Kill Devil Hills, NC
("In Commemoration of the Conquest of the Air")
My family and I landed at First Flight Airport, completing a quest started in 2011.

Bodie Island Lighthouse, Outer Banks, NC
("In Blackbeard's Wake")
The landing at First Flight was part of of our annual family flying trip. We loved the Outer Banks.  The Bear earned her Junior Flight Ranger badge at Wright Brothers National Memorial and swam in the Atlantic. Along the way, we flew through the Washington DC SFRA for the first time (twice!), gained some actual IMC time, and had lunch with one of my favorite aviation bloggers.


Outlet of the St Clair River into Lake St Clair
("From the North Coast to the Third Coast")
In July 2013, Warrior 481's Lycoming O-320 entered middle age: 1000 hours on the tachometer since the 2003 overhaul.

Control tower at the Kalamazoo / Battle Creek International Airport (AZO)
("Stuck in Time")
I/we visited some great aviation museums in 2013: The Piper Aviation Museum (Lock Haven, PA), the Air Heritage Museum (Beaver Falls, PA), the Intrepid Air, Sea, and Space Museum (New York, NY), the Tennessee Museum of Aviation (Sevierville, TN), and of course, my extremely-biased favorite: the Air Zoo (Kalamazoo, MI).

The Bear with Warrior 481 in Williamsport, PA
("The Bluebear of Spring")
In addition to flying with The Bear, I made more of an effort to expose young people to general aviation. Emily, Maggie, and Ben (all college students) each spent some at the controls of Warrior 481. I also flew with a gypsy and did some outreach at my daughter's school.

South Haven, MI
("Stuck in Time")
I had the good fortune to visit my old home base airport in South Haven, MI for the first time since 2008.

Welland Canal, Ontario, Canada
("From the North Coast to the Third Coast")
Overall, I think that 2013 was a year of achievement and change.  Here are the statistics accumulated by MyFlightbook for 2013:

ASEL: 128.6 (178 Landings, 48 Approaches)
Approaches: ILS: 15 / RNAV: 20 / VOR: 13
Solo Time: 62.6
Cross Country: 53.9
Night: 10.4
IMC: 5.7
Simulated Instrument: 21.8
Dual: 5.6
PIC: 128.6

In addition to New York, I landed in Maryland (1st time), Michigan, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, and Virginia.

Clouds over Le Roy, NY
("Escape to Lock Haven")
My goals for next year are really very simple:
1.  Exercise the instrument rating!
2.  Visit some new states!
3.  Take more people flying!

Outer Banks, NC
("In Commemoration of the Conquest of the Air")
It is always difficult to forecast what the future will bring. As 2014 nears, I suspect that there may be even more profound change in store; call it a hunch.

Happy holidays and best wishes for a high flying 2014 to all!

13 comments:

  1. Merry Christmas and Happy New Year! A hunch eh? I'm already guessing...........

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    1. Thanks, Geoff. Honestly, I'm guessing, too...

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  2. Chris, Excellent recap and love the photos from the year, a nice touch. The IR really racks up the flight hours and just fine tunes the skills so much. I'm looking forward to your 2014 adventures and more great pictures!

    "more profound change in store", I haven't a clue but it does make one wonder. Merry Christmas to you and yours.....looking forward to finally catching up in 14.

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    1. Merry Christmas to you, too, Gary! And yes, we should definitely have some kind of "Blogger Rendezvous" in 2014!

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  3. I would say 2013 was certainly a year of achievement, Chris. Looking forward to the year ahead. Merry Christmas to you and your family.

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    1. Thanks, Ed. It's great to hear from you. Merry Christmas to you and Joan!

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  4. Great year Chris! Your pictures are some of the best from the flying blogs I read. I'm looking forward to putting my "Year in Review" together as well in the next week. Hopefully I'll get to add a couple of hours to it prior to that though. Merry Christmas to you and your family!

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    1. Thanks Jeff and Merry Christmas to you, too! I hope to add a couple of hours yet this year too, but the weather outlook here is absolutely dismal. I'm sure it's been an eventful year for you, too - you always manage some great trips! I am looking forward to hearing about your 2014 adventures from the new home base.

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  5. Quite the year, sir! Hope you and the family had a wonderful Christmas and have a safe New Year.

    I love that The Bear's logbook has a total time nearly as high as my own. She's grown up in your plane and I'm sure that's a wonderful thing she'll cherish forever.

    Nice cameo by the Christmas card photo, too. :)

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    1. Thank YOU, sir! I hope it's something she'll cherish...the real impact of an experience is rarely known until it exists only in memory.

      Yeah, I worry that I have overused that photo! But I like it and, with me almost always behind the camera, it's rare for us to have a true family photo.

      I certainly have a trip to Dayton on my 2014 wish list.

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    2. Nothing wrong with the photo. I approve of any photo that contains an airplane. Obviously.

      You guys are always welcome around here. Hope it works out - lots of cool aviation stuff around these parts. And, as we've discussed with Gary, maybe we can all make a meetup happen next year!

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  6. I'm all in for a meetup. I don't have a proposal yet, but suspect that it will I've in PA somewhere!

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