Wednesday, May 30, 2007
Epilogue
Coolest places visited that I would want to see again: Austin, TX, northern Arizona, Martha's Vineyard, out-of-the-way places in California, and (of course) anywhere along the Carolina Coast.
I can't begin to tell you what this trip meant to me - on so many different levels. Having three weeks alone to reflect on what is important in my life is probably the most significant. There's lots more to say about that, but you'll have to read the book I intend to begin writing as soon as I find a publisher. The richness of this experience is unparalleled in my life. Besides making me a better and more confident pilot, it has made me a better and more confident person. As much as I like flying, it's the rest of my being that needed the most work.
God bless, and I hope to write more again some day.
Monday, May 28, 2007
The Final Stop
Friday, May 25, 2007
On Hallowed Ground
The Carolina Coast
Everyone who lives close to a coastline has their own favorite places to visit along the water. As for me, it would have to be the area just north of Charleston. We've rented the same house right on the beach at Wild Dunes twice in the last year and I'd go back in a heartbeat. Even though I was born a Yankee, this is home for me now. And you know what they say about home. It's where the heart is.
Wednesday, May 23, 2007
From Sea to Shining Sea
The Island of the Rich and Famous
The scene in the middle photo below might look familiar to fans of Jaws One. It is Menemsha Harbor, which became Amityville in the movie. There are still some vestiges of the production props, but it takes a knowledgeable local to show you where to look. As for some of the other notable sights, lower left across the water in the middle of the row of houses is the backdrop for the remake of Sabrina. The house is also formerly home to Billy Joel. If you click on the gravestone picture (lower right) you'll see it marks the burial place of John Belushi. Doug told me Belushi's fans will frequently leave beer cans as an offering to the departed star. The inscription on Belushi's headstone reads "I may be gone, but Rock and Roll lives on."
Pilots of the Future
Sunday, May 20, 2007
Warm Thoughts on a Chilly Day
Cleveland Rocks!
Thursday, May 17, 2007
Pennies, Nickels, Dimes and Quarters
In case you were wondering, Mt. Rushmore is what brought me to Rapid City, SD on my eastbound trek. Just like the Grand Canyon, it was one of those places of interest that I had never visited but wanted to see. Man's sculpting efforts can never match the grandeur of what Mother Nature accomplished in the Grand Canyon, but it is impressive in it's own right.
From Reno to Ogden (Salt Lake area)
Back to the Future
My mother was waiting inside the terminal building when I walked in. Her warm smile and welcoming hug made me feel right at home. She has been closely following my every day's progress on her old TIME maps, carefully drawing lines with colored magic markers from point to point, seeing what I'm flying over and paying special attention to the terrain. What can I say - she's my Mother!!! Thank goodness she has a washing machine and lots of soap! I have ten days of laundry to do before I leave for the rest of my trip!
To get here by Wednesday night meant flying nearly 16 hours over the past two days (1743.6nm), from Reno to Ogden, UT and on to Rapid City, SD, and then to Cedar Rapids, IA for a fuel stop enroute to Hamilton. Strong northwesterly winds pushed me along at speeds up to 160 knots on the legs southeast from Rapid City.
Monday, May 14, 2007
Flying High
I had considered making Reno just a fuel stop enroute to Salt Lake City. But after checking the weather I decided to spend the night here and let a cold front currently moving through the Sasquatch and upper Plains states get a little farther east. I need as few clouds as possible when the temperatures at 13,000 feet are minus 3-5 degrees Celsius. Flying through clouds at that kind of temperature is an invitation for icing to form on the airplane.
Sunday, May 13, 2007
Sideways in Sonoma
The Canyon and Beyond
Mountain Flying
Having grown up as a flatlander and having done most of my flying around the east coast, mountain flying is mostly a new experience for me. The scenery is breathtaking, as is the oxygen level above 11,000 feet, which is why I'm wearing the cannula. It's connected to an oxygen tank sitting on the floor of the airplane. Hypoxia is a very real concern when flying at high altitudes. Before leaving on my trip I completed the Mountain Flying course offered online by the Aircraft Owners and Pilots Association (AOPA). It's very good information covering the unique risks associated with mountain flying. High altitudes affect not only humans - they affect airplane performance as well. And mountains generate wind conditions which, if you're not expecting them, can turn fun to fright in an instant. In my hundreds of miles of flights over the mountains of New Mexico, Arizona and California I have experienced some of the most severe turbulence I have ever encountered. For the most part, it was all fairly predictable based on what I learned in the mountain flying course.
Standin On A Corner
From Albuquerque I flew west into the high desert of Arizona. In my itinerary planning for this epic journey, Winslow, AZ was a primary destination. Why Winslow? If you don't know the answer let me share a few lyrics from the hit song "Take It Easy" written by Jackson Browne but made famous by Don Henley, Glenn Frey and the Eagles: "Well I been standin' on a corner in Winslow, Arizona...I'm such a fine sight to see. It's a girl, my Lord, in a flatbed Ford slowin' down to take a look at me..." It's a theme song that put Winslow on the baby boomer map. But as I came to learn while I visited there, Winslow has been "on the map" for other reasons for several generations.
Behind the bronze statue of a young guitar player leaning against a light pole is a painted mural showing the reflection of a passing flatbed Ford driven by a girl, my Lord. That is the fantasy image that brings hundreds of thousands of middle-aged visitors to Winslow every year. They've even created a park (Standin' on the Corner Park) smack dab in the middle of town. The wall, as you can see in the upper left photo, is in danger of collapsing, which is why they have blocked off the adjacent sidewalk. Locals tell me there are plans to save the mural wall and expand the park by tearing down the remainder of the structure. It was supposed to be done by now, but there has been some "difference of opinion" about the best way to do it.
That was what brought me to Winslow. But as I mentioned above, "Standin On a Corner" is just the latest reason why people would stop in Winslow. Winslow actually became an important destination when Charles Lindbergh decided he would build an airport there as a fueling stop for airplanes flying between Chicago and Los Angeles. The airport, situated only one mile from the town, is the Winslow Lindbergh Airport, built back in the late 1920's.
Winslow is also on Route 66, which prior to modern freeways was the most traveled route from Chicago to LA and had its own musical theme. Locals tell me they see a lot of people passing through Winslow who are "gettin' their kicks on Route 66."
But the other reason Winslow has been on the map was the Sante Fe Railway. In the heyday of rail travel, Sante Fe built several grand hotels along its main line. Winslow was home to one, known as "La Posada." You can check out the hotel in more detail by clicking on "laposada.org." I had breakfast there on the morning I arrived to visit the park and was so impressed with the hotel that I canceled other reservations and spent the night there.
Thursday, May 10, 2007
Breathtaking
This was a pretty intensive flying day, nearly six and a half hours in the cockpit. But it went by so quickly that it didn't seem nearly that long. I remember as a passenger flying from Boston to Manchester, England that same amount of time seemed to be an eternity.
There were two legs to today's flight: From San Marcos to Midland (no, I did not rent a car and drive out to W's ranch in Crawford) and from Midland to ABQ. Total air miles were 560 nautical miles. I flew at 6,000 feet to Midland and at 10,000 feet to Albuquerque. Tomorrow I break out the oxygen cannister for my flight into Arizona at 12,000 feet.
Actually, I would spell Albuquerque Albu-quirky. Kinda weird. I spent an appropriate amount of time on a barstool at The Library, a well-known watering hole on Central at 4th. The locals say it's the best place to be at 3:00 in the afternoon. As long as the bar is open and they're serving Margaritas, I don't much care where I am as long as there's something to watch. It's an interesting place to sit and form opinions. The more I consume, the more philosophical I get. So...I figure people in Albu-quirky are not your type-A personalities...if you know what I mean. They're pretty laid back and definitely into their own things. Makes for an interesting sight, if you're a southerner just out for a good time of people-watching. Lots and lots of pick-ups and motorcycles. It's sort of what I expect tomorrow when I'm "standin' on the corner in Winslow, Arizona." I guess it just comes with the territory. Sort of like what I remember seeing and feeling when I was in Alaska a couple of years ago. People who live there, according to well-informed sources, are there because they want to get away from everybody and everything else. You could come to Albu-quirky and do the same thing and nobody would ever think the worse of you.
Hell, I could go on forever about the thoughts I had sitting on that barstool. Yes, I stopped the flow of alcohol in plenty of time to be ready for my 6:00am departure tomorrow. As my instrument instructor told me, "12 hours from bottle to throttle." Yes, I remember even the most trivial of details. Later.
Refreshed and Re-routed
Wednesday, May 9, 2007
Westward Whoa!
Tuesday, May 8, 2007
Westward Ho!
The flight over from New Orleans was lengthened somewhat by air traffic control vectoring me around Houoston. I was cleared direct to San Marcos from New Orleans, but my flight path conflicted with landing traffic at IAH (Houston) and there was weather developing in the area so was re-routed several times. My GPS got a real workout. West of Houston I was once again cleared direct to San Marcos and it was smooth sailing from there.
For the record, the flight was 3:30 minutes at 8000 feet with a nice tailwind helping me average a groundspeed of 135 knots.
My night out in Austin was fantastic. Thanks to the front desk clerk at my hotel I discovered a great Mexican restaurant named "Polvos" which specializes in South Central Mexican cuisine. It's the first Mexican restaurant I've experienced where they offer Chile Rellenos prepared more than one way. (I had the original recipe.) They also had a self-service salsa bar that included jalapeno-pickled carrots. I haven't seen those since eating at Mi Pueblo on Euclid Avenue in Cleveland.
You can't visit Austin without visiting 6th Street, home to some of Austin's renowned nightspots. They humbly call it the "Live Music Capital of the World." You can walk along the street and hear an eclectic mix of Jazz, Rock'n'Roll, Hip-Hop, Country...you name it. If I hadn't planned an early morning departure enroute to Las Cruces I might have hung out there until they closed.