| Date | Aircraft | Route of Flight | Time (hrs) | Total (hrs)
 | 
                | 18 Mar 2010
 | N21481 | 
5G0 (Le Roy, NY) -                 1B1 (Hudson, NY) - BDL (Windsor Locks, CT) | 2.3 | 796.9 | 
                | 18 Mar 2010
 | N21481 | BDL -                 5G0 | 2.9 | 799.8 | 
Like much of the country, Upstate NY experienced an       early thaw in mid-March.  Snow banks melted away as temperatures rose       into the 50's and grass became visible for the first time since before       Christmas.  Granted, it was ugly brown grass, but it was grass all       the same.  With the return of sunshine and grass, I was inspired to       venture out of the local area.  I chose the New England Air Museum       near Bradley International Airport in Windsor Locks, CT as my destination.
I departed Le Roy at 9:30 am and climbed to       7500'.  Relatively high winds aloft pushed my groundspeed up to 150       knots (173 MPH).
Most of the world moving under my wings was brown,       but I discovered a little residual patch of winter still clinging to the       Catskills as I passed them.  My first stop was at the Columbia County       Airport (1B1) located south of Albany between the Hudson River and the Massachusetts       border.  While descending toward the airport, I encountered rough air       from where the Catskills perturbed the westerly airflow.  Crossing       the Hudson River, Warrior 481 hit a bump that flung me straight up out of       my seat.  My head stopped just short of the Piper's ceiling when my       seatbelt interceded.
Columbia County was a nice, active country airport       with cheap fuel: $4.10/gal.  Thanks to the tailwind, I arrived there       one hour and 15 minutes after departing Le Roy.
Bradley was not far from Columbia County.        Inbound, I tuned the ATIS (Automated Terminal Information Service) to get       current weather, altimeter, and other pertinent notices.  This is       usually a trivial part of flying into any towered field.  At the       time, Bradley was reporting lightly gusting       winds and both runways 24 and 33 in use.
ATIS broadcasts are assigned a letter identifier as       they are updated throughout the day; Alpha goes to Bravo, then to Charlie,       and so on.  Upon contacting air traffic control, pilots are supposed       to give the current identifier so that the controller can verify that the       pilot has the most current information.  Simple.
Unlike most airports I have experience with,       Bradley's ATIS was not a human recording, but a somewhat muddy computer       synthesized voice.  I listened to the broadcast twice to verify that       "Information Golf" was current.
With all the necessary information gleaned from ATIS,       I tuned the appropriate of       three approach frequencies and announced my presence.
"Bradley approach, Warrior 21481."
"Calling Bradley, say again."  The       controller sounded distracted.
"Bradley approach, Warrior 21481, 25 miles       northwest at 5,500, landing with 'Golf'."
The controller's tone became agitated.        "Landing where?  Golf is not current for any of the fields I'm       working."
"Uh..."  This was the sound of my       hard won "professional radio voice" crumbing into bits.  I was       literally at a loss for words.  "Sorry, just listened to Bradley       ATIS and understood Golf as current."
"Warrior 481, continue inbound, expect runway       24, remain at or above 4500 feet."  I repeated the       instructions.  Then, after a pause,  "Warrior 481, winds are out of 290 at 18 gusting       22.  Do you want runway 24 or 33?"  Runway 33 made the most       sense with respect to the wind and to minimize taxiing on the field.        I responded with 33 as my preference.  Despite having given me the       option, the controller seemed annoyed by my choice.  All the while,       Warrior 481 continued to buck through rough air like a possessed colt and, though I held my       assigned altitude well, I was working for it.
Approach vectored me to a high downwind       (I was still at 4500')       for runway 33 while directing the inbound airliners to queue up for runway       24.  Finally, I was granted permission to descend, switched over to       tower, and cleared to land on 33.  This photo was taken as a one-off       blind shot out the windscreen after stabilizing on a very long, high final       approach course.
I am not very interested in flying       Greyhounds and rarely take pictures of them, but sharing pavement with one       is novel for me.  I was on runway 33 holding short of 24 while a       Southwest flight completed its landing roll out.  I do not see many behemoths       like this at Le Roy.  
I parked at Signature, nose to       nose with this little fellow.  In the lobby, I was the only       "flight crew" member wearing jeans amongst uniformed       professionals and their well-dressed customers.  Despite the fuel       price ($5.92/gal - egad), or perhaps directly because of it, the folks at Signature       were terrific and very accommodating.  They provided me with a       ride to the museum and a coupon for $1 off museum admission.  This       took 1.5% of the sting out of paying $65 for three hours of parking and 8       gallons of avgas.  Bradley was not an inexpensive place to fly into,       but the team at Signature (or, "$ignature", as they are often called on the web) worked to deliver value for the money,       even to small potatoes pilots like me.
The New England Air Museum exceeded my       expectations.  It was filled with airplanes, helicopters, and great       stories.  Here's a sampling of what I saw, starting with a P-47       Thunderbolt parked at the entrance to the Warbirds Hangar.  
  
The Civilian Hangar was dominated by       the "Excambian", a massive Sikorsky VS-44 Flying Boat.        Wow.  This thing is HUGE.  I took this photo by holding the       camera well above my head and shooting over the wing of a Stinson.
  
A Lockheed Electra, very similar to the       one flown by Amelia Earhart.  Not a great photo, but I always thought       the Electra was a good looking airplane and just had to include it.
In my opinion, this is the crown jewel       in the collection: "Jack's Hack", a restored B-29 Superfortress. 
The nose art on "Jack's Hack"       was not as racy as some that I have seen.
I spent about two hours at the museum       and walked back to the FBO so that I could enjoy the fresh, warm       air.  At Signature, I was offered a crew car to get       lunch.  It was a fairly new Ford Fusion and definitely not of the       "don't drive it any further than you're willing to walk" variety       I usually get.  The only stipulation placed on me was that I       "bring the car back the same size it was when I got it".  I       agreed that this was a perfectly reasonable request.
After lunch and back in Warrior 481, I       prepared to do a better job with Bradley's air traffic control.  I       double checked the Bradley ATIS (Automated Terminal Information Service)       frequency against two sources and verified that I was using the correct       frequency.  I also noted that the broadcast began with       "Bradley International".  Information       "Charlie" was current.
I contacted clearance delivery and gave       my spiel on who I was, that I had "Charlie", where I was, where       I wanted to go, and how high I wanted to fly.  The controller's tone       was bright and friendly on the radio.  She provided my clearance       along with all the numbers I needed, and then offered, "by the way,       information 'Golf' is current."  Hmmm...
I switched immediately back to the ATIS       broadcast and discovered that it had just been updated...to       "Delta", not "Golf".
Are you kidding me?        Something was obviously out of sync somewhere.  But other than being       a head scratcher, this did not present any real problem.  I taxied       off the Signature ramp behind a corporate jet.  My original       taxi clearance involved taxiing about 2/3 of a mile to runway 33 via a       small handful of taxiways.  I was just barely on my way when Ground       Control called again to offer an intersection departure on runway 24 just       ahead of my current position.  "Available take off distance is       2500 feet," the controller added helpfully.  It was a win-win       and I accepted; easier for me and easier for them.
Runway 24 is 200 feet wide and, to my       eye, felt more like a parking ramp than a runway.  With a gusty       crosswind I broke ground in a fraction of the available distance and       immediately crabbed about 30° into the wind to track out on runway       heading.
The Catskills were still stuck in       winter as I passed them traveling much slower than before.  My       heading toward Rochester was aligned directly into a 25 knot headwind that       suppressed my groundspeed to just shy of 100 knots.  The Turbulence       Fairy seemed to have left a lot of bumps for me to find along the way,       too.  After nearly three hours of bumping along while making       continuous heading and altitude corrections, I returned home quite tired       and made an unremarkable landing in 22 knot winds gusting to 28.
  
This is the radar track of my return       voyage as captured by Flight Aware.  That little kink in my route       near the Hudson River was me deliberately avoiding the tallest peaks of       the Catskills.  Who needed more bumps thrown at them on an already       bumpy day?
When I recounted the day's events to my       wife, she shook her head and offered sympathy for it having been a bad       day.  A bad day??!  I spent time flying my humble little       airplane, visited two new airports, enjoyed a terrific aviation museum,       and successfully took a mental break from work for an extended period of       time.
In my book, that's a pretty good day.