Apr 13/14 – Text exchange with Scott this pm.

Scott:

Great weekend Andre….looking forward to the next time…hope the weather cooperates for u guys. BTW what spooked me the most today was not being able to get in the seat for a few minutes. Once I was in the seat I felt better.

Me:

Yes. That is bit scary, not being able to get in the seat right the way. Although safe. Trust me, you’re not going to believe how much better the second flight is going to feel – so much more easier and how much more in control you’re going to be. It will only get better, less work  – more fun.

You have just summited the pyramid of hard work and are about to start climbing the pyramid of fun…

Apr 13/14 – PPG course day 2 – am

Started at 8 am with great conditions at the field.

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Scott had his first flight. Great take off but6 afyter take off he started to fly directly at Jim who was facing Scott and acting like a deer in headlights. Since Jim was not moving I asked Scott to put bit more brake on to overfly Jim at safe altitude but Scott pretty much burried the brakes which made me to to say “hands up, hands up , hand up” he did and from then on it was OK. After 1 circuit I have noticed that Scott did not have much penetration so we have prepared for landing. It was good and very soft one one but like majority of students did not stay on jhis feet and went down on his knees. Very common on the first flight!

Once Scott landed we took small break to debrief.

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After both Jim and Talitha put the motors on their back and ground handled with those no problem.

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They are ready to fly. Just need calm conditions.

Eventually wind picked up and startyed to gust to 35 km/h We could only use the small training paragliders and even then it was getting to be too much. We packed up at noon – its siesta time. Back at it in the evening.

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Congrats Scott on you first solo flight!

 

Apr 12/14 – First PPG course of 2014

3 students attending

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from left to right Talitha, Scott and Jim

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Tal in simulator

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Jim practicing his procedures

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Scott sitting in his new Kangook paramotor with Moster engine

Once ground school was completed we went of to the training field for kiting.

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April 2/14 – Another fun flight today.

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March 18/14 – Another awesome and warm flight

One of the requirements to get my private pilot license is to fly cross country flight over 150 NM with at least two stops. The weather today was absolutely amazing so I went for it. From St. Catharines to St. Thomas to Hamilton and back to St. Catharines. All went according to plan, there was not even minor hick up. I felt super camfortable talking to Toronto Terminal and to the Hamiton Tower and my landings were buttery smooth…. Just one amazing flight. All together 2 hr 30 min.

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In St.Thomas

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My route today

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March 11/14 – Flying an aeroplane – write up by Mark; my buddy and PPG pilot.

Andre, as anyone who follows this site will know, has recently gained his recreational pilot license. He is now able to take a passenger. Having recently turned 40 (in December), Andre suggested beers and a flight as a gift. We did the beers in December, but I had to wait until Andre passed his exams to go for the flight. Well, Andre passed with ‘flying colours’ so to speak, coming top of his class (2013) at the St Catharines Flying Club. We headed out for an evening flight on Sunday. It was a couple of degrees below zero, but it felt a lot colder as Andre took me around the plane for some pre-flight checks. I must say, flying a plane has always seemed a lot of hassle to me. There are so many things to remember… important things. That’s why they have written check lists to follow. We checked for fuel levels, water in the fuel, air speed indicator, oil levels, moving surfaces etc and then climbed in. The cabin was preheated. Apparently engines don’t like cold starts, so they get them toasty warm before you set off. The upshot is the cabin was very much warmer than the outside. We spent another 10 minutes or so going through lots of pre-flight checks in the cabin. The array of dials, instruments and buttons looks overwhelming, but Andre knew his stuff and rattled off all the safety checks like a pro.

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There was a moment during his safety briefing where I though Andre was suggesting we would bail out without parachutes in an emergency, but it turned out he was talking about an emergency on the ground.. pheww!

We taxied to the end of the runway, Andre did his golf, november, oscar, papa talk with the control tower and we prepared to take off. Speeding up down the runway, we were airborne in no time.
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We gained altitude and move away from the St Catharines airport, then did some sight-seeing. We took a look at Niagara Falls, visited the airfield we fly from when training powered paragliding,
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then Andre showed me some of the maneuvers he had learned. First we slowed our airspeed right down, the stall warning went off and the nose dropped suddenly. My stomach leapt into my mouth and the plane dove forwards before regaining flying airspeed. That was a full stall but quick application of full power got us flying again in no time. Then we banked hard, pulling some g’s. Out of the right window I could see sky, out of the left window I could see the ground. This was a ‘steep 45 degree bank 360 degree turn’.
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Then Andre dropped us a few hundred feet with a full application of right rudder and left aileron. This, I was informed, was forward-slipping. It allows a quick loss of altitude without pitching the aircraft forward. We were now much lower and on an approach to Welland airport.
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Andre announced his intentions over the radio to fly low and inspect the runway. We did that then banked around and approached for a landing. This is where it got interesting. Having only been in light aircraft a couple of times (for sky-diving) I have very little to judge an approach by. Flying in a paraglider is easy because you can see exactly where your feet are with relation to the ground. With a low wing Piper, it’s a bit different. You really can’t see that much, so it’s very difficult to tell when you are actually going to land. This made me a little nervous, but I had every confidence in Andre’s piloting skills and we were down smoothly in gusty conditions. As soon as we landed, Andre spun the plane around, backtracked the runway and we were off again.
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This time he was keen to show off a so-called soft ground take-off. Off we went hurtling down the runway a second time. After seeing that cloudbase was lowering and snow seemed possible we headed back to St Catharines.
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This landing was a little bumpier, but Andre informed me still much better than some of his earlier attempts. Once the plane was parked up, we hauled our gear out and headed back to Andre’s for some liquid refreshments.
Thanks Andre

March 10/14 – May course full

PPG COURSE DATES FOR 2014 

April 12 to April 18 – 7 day course – 3 people booked, this course is full
May 10 to May 16 – 7 day course – 3 people booked, this course is full
June 14 to June 20 – 7 day course
July 12 to July 18 – 7 day course – I am not available July 17 from 9:30 am to 12:30 pm
Aug 9 to Aug 15 – 7 day course
Sep 13 to Sep 19 – 7 day course

March 9/14 – I guess I do not suck at flying an aeroplane

Last night our St. Catharines Flying Club hosted an Annual banquet. It is dress up dinner affair where certificates of achievement are handed over to pilots who either get their Recreational permit or Private license or additional ratings such as night flying, multiengine, IFR, commercial etc.

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It was a great time. I have met new pilots, had very tasty meal and enjoyed keynote speaker Ricardo Traven who is the test pilot for the Super Hornet fighter jet by Boeing. I have received my Recreational permit certificate but I was also announced as Recreational Pilot of the Year! The flying club combines the student’s score from the written exam and from the practical flight test and who ever scores the highest, will get their name on the “Recreational Pilot of the Year” trophy. This year it was me!

Wow I did not expect this at all. I am used to perfection when I am flying PPG, but I am certinately not perfect when it comes to flying an aeroplane. With the instructor always demanding higher level of skill and new excersises being introduced all the time, you always feel like you suck at it especially because you can’t compare your self with other students. Anyway, I guess I am not that bad and I have pictures and trophy to prove it!

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And here again with my instructor Chris

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Mar 7/14 – More flying today

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Our stop over for breakfast and coffee in Tillsonburg.

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What a great day to fly. Blue sky, no wind, warm!

Feb 25/14 – Got my Aeroplane Recreational Permit

I have passed my Private Pilot License written exam two weeks ago and last Thursday passed my practical flight test with Transport Canada examiner. I have my Recreational Permit which means I can fly aeroplanes anywhere in Canada under VFR rules with one passenger on board. So I do…

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I went for nice flight this Sunday afternoon, air was smooth and visibility near perfect. Took off from St. Catharines (CYSN), went by Niagara Falls, Fort Erie then followed lakeshore to Dunnville at 4500 ft ASL. Oh boy, is it ever nice to have heat in the cabin this time a year. There was some minor turbulence in the middle of the peninsula but nothing to be concern with. Visited Stoney Creek for “low and over” and followed the south lakeshore of lake Ontario at 3500 ASL back to St. Catharines. Total flight time 1.2 hrs. Just an awesome flight.

I also flew yesterday. We had lake effect snow squalls coming off lake Ontario and on my way back to St. Catharines near the airport I got caught in one of them. Visibility got so bad that I had to fly by instruments for 5 min or so. It was lucky that I had FSS watching me on radar and advising me on directions to the clear sky. Not fun at all. I do not have any IFR training yet. I am glad I have been using X-plane flight simulator and have practiced for something like this on my own. Stupid beginner mistake. Since CYSN had 0 visibility so I had to divert to Welland (CNQ3) and land in 25 kts gusty cross wind. I was little concerned but all went well. I ended up hanging out at CNQ3 until conditions in St. Catharines improved which took couple of hours and then I flew back. Very important lesson – turn around as soon as you start entering “milky” stuff and get the hell out! Mind you I have been told that many times by my instructor but it kind of sucks you in…

Here is a pic from my yesterdays adventure.

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I am working on my PPL and hope to have it done by the end of March.