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Monday, February 27, 2017

Constellations

Date Aircraft Route of Flight Time (hrs) Total (hrs)
27 Feb 2017 N21481 SDC (Sodus, NY) - GVQ (Batavia, NY) - 5G0 (Le Roy, NY) - SDC 1.5 1622.1

On dark moonless nights, the brightest constellations lie below.




This was a pleasant and routine night currency flight with visits to old haunts. There is no story to tell, but there were a few observations (what George Carlin would have called "brain droppings").

My carbon monoxide monitor often gives warnings when the airplane is on the ground, though these can be kept in check with aggressive leaning. It is common for me to silence it during taxi and runup (while still prudently monitoring it, of course). On takeoff, the readings always drop rapidly to zero and stay that way in flight. Once I was leveled off in cruise flight and pointed at Rochester, it still showed a high reading. I was about to turn around for a preemptive landing when I noticed the word "PEAK" on the display in small letters that my on-the-verge-of-needing-bifocals eyes almost didn't catch. I had bumped the wrong button when I tried to silence the monitor on the ground. I cycled the display until it showed the real-time reading: "0 ppm". Well, that was scary for a moment.

While I prefer my still camera with its capable optical zoom for most aerial photography tasks, it struggles to pull in adequate light quickly enough at night to create sharp images. My iPhone 5S on the other hand is astonishingly adept at this. This post is a case in point.

When did the synthetic voice of the Genesee County AWOS begin speaking with a twang? That's just disconcerting.

The runway markings at Genesee County have faded so much that I almost could not geneSEE them at all. Lack of contrast made it difficult to judge height above the runway in the dark, but the landing was a good one nonetheless. Frequent practice clearly pays dividends.

Finally, I am certain that I unburdened myself of a fair amount of occupational stress while enjoying the gift of such a beautiful evening. Actually, I feel like I have relieved a lot of stress aloft over the years. Maybe it's all still up there, floating around and eventually accreting like plastic refuse in the ocean, vast islands of aggregated professional angst. I would not care to fly through one of those.

2 comments:

  1. I am always amazed at the pictures our iPhones capture. Mary and I really should look into a camera for our travels.

    Good to see you are once again night current. I am reading blogs and watching youtube to get my flying fix. Thanks for providing some entertainment.

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    Replies
    1. Happy to do my part, Gary! It looks like your recovery is coming along well!

      (I still prefer my regular camera for daytime photos!)

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