Friday, August 24, 2007

It's been a while since I've posted, and Kelly is requesting posts to read, so here we go. After I finished my Commercial 1 stage check (I think that's what my last post was about) I began working on my Instrument Rating, which means I'm now flying the Cessna 182. I MUST have my Instrument Rating finished by the end of this semester, which means I don't have time to really get a feel for the 182 before I start working on the Rating. The Instrument Rating is, obviously, all about flying IFR (Instrument Flight Rules) which means we're practicing flying solely by our instruments. This means that the vast majority of my time in the 182 is spent wearing a hood, a vision limiting device that keeps me from being able to see outside the airplane. So I'm trying to learn to fly the 182 while not being able to see outside the 182. It's kind of frustrating sometimes. But I'm doing better than I personally expected to, and better, I think, than my instructor expected me to. This just might work out, after all.

My classes started on Monday. I'm taking one classroom class and two online classes. I naively thought the online classes would be a little easier than a classroom class, which is why I took 2 of them. I was mistaken. They involve obscene amounts of reading, both from books and from the internet. It's taken me a few days to get used to them and sort of settle into them. Ultimately, I'd prefer to sit in a classroom a couple days a week. Lesson learned.

I started my job 2 weeks ago. I got a work study position in the aviation department. As a work study, I'm only allowed 16 hours per week, and 12 of them are scheduled for office work (mostly keeping up on the paperwork that keeps the FAA off our backs). The other 4 hours, however, are open hours for the weekend, so I can help the fueler/washers wash airplanes. Since the fueler/washers and I are all new to the job, we had to wash a plane last Thursday AND last Friday. It's much harder, physically, than I expected it to be, because we not only wash the planes, we also wax them. Even with 3 of us on the job, it still takes somewhere around 3 hours.

All told, between the new classes, the job, and the 182, this has been a hard week. It's been quite some time since I was actually busy on a daily basis, and I'm still trying to hit my stride. But the 182 is going to bring us one step closer to Africa, the job is going to pad our savings account for our Michigan Christmas trip, and the classes are giving me full-time status so I can keep pouring large amounts of financial aid into my flight account. It's all quite a change for me, but it's also all working for our good.

7 comments:

Anonymous said...

Josh-
Glad things are going well for you and that you are getting more comfortable with the 182. Hope you enjoy your workstudy and get lots of experience with it.
Saw your Dad last weekend at Northwoods, we had a nice chat with him.
Take care,
Barbara

Kelly Glupker said...

Hey Josh,
Thanks for the reading material! Sounds like you have been pretty busy. Maybe that will help the semester pass by quickly. Good luck with your classes.

Josh said...

You're welcome, Kelly. I would have written more, but I only had about 15 minutes til I had to walk to work.

Thanks for your comment, Barb.

Kara said...

Hi Josh! THank you for the update, Jenny does keep me informed, but it is always nice to hear about things from your perspective, too. :) Nobody can tell an aviation story like you can.

Anonymous said...

Hey Josh.
The way you describe wearing the hood and being able to see the instruments and not the outside of the plane made me think of when the old people drive the huge cars and can't see over the steering wheel.
Just don't leave your turn signal on when you are flying.
Glad to hear that except for being very busy things are going well.
Matt

Anonymous said...

Hey Josh.
The way you describe wearing the hood and being able to see the instruments and not the outside of the plane made me think of when the old people drive the huge cars and can't see over the steering wheel.
Just don't leave your turn signal on when you are flying.
Glad to hear that except for being very busy things are going well.
Matt

Anonymous said...

Not sure why it posted twice.
Matt