Monday, October 22, 2007

Cessna 195

Check out this really cool Cessna 195 we saw at the Big Bear Airport. What a beauty!







Saturday, October 13, 2007

Sunday Morning Flying with Sammi

It was a beautiful day in Southern California on September 30, 2007. For about a week my youngest daughter Sammi (10) and I had been planning on taking a "training" flight in the Arrow. It would be just her and I and a huge empty sky.

we got up really early... well really early for Sam. I'm usually up early on a Sunday morning. We drove from Glendale California to Redlands Municipal airport (where the airplane is based). Its about an hour drive. But a drive with Sam is never boring as we discuss all kids of hot 5th grader topics.

After a through pre-flight we were off into the wild blue yonder. Of course since we were in the area we had to buzz grandma & grandpa's house in Colton. Then practice some 45 degree bank turns around Auntie Marylin's house. Then it was off to Big Bear.

Since this was to be a training flight we flew east over Banning towards Palm Springs. After a quick demonstration on how to maneuver the airplane I handed it over to Sam. Amazingly enough she got it right away. As we climbed to altitude Sam handled the "yoke." She had no trouble keep the wings level or performing standard-rate turns (not that she knew she was doing that).

After about 30 minutes with her hands on the yoke I took control again to land the airplane at Big Bear. From there we ate a great breakfast. We flew back to Redlands via Lake Arrowhead, the El Cajon Pass and Mount Baldy @ 12,500 feet. Sammi especially liked the fast decent, Mount Baldy to Redlands in under 10 minutes (@ 175 knots).

Here is some video footage we shot along the way. Enjoy.

Friday, November 18, 2005

Flight To Oakland

On Our Way North

On November 12th I got to do something that I don't get to do enough. I took the Arrow out and flew it on an over-night trip. We departed from Redlands airport early in the afternoon. Our flight plan took us through the Cajon Pass, through the Antelope Valley over Lancaster and Palmdale, beyond the Tehachapi's and Bakersfield, up through the Central Valley, over the coastal hills and ultimately to Oakland International Airport (OAK). Our final destination was San Francisco. We stayed over night in 'Frisco' and returned to Los Angeles on Sunday.

The flight up was absolutely wonderful. You couldn't have asked for a better day to go flying. The weather was clear. The visibility had to be at least 150 miles (at 10,500 feet that is). We flew with Class C services which turned out to be a good thing. Center handed us off to Oakland Approach and then to the tower without incident. Much better to have them know you are coming than to show-up, 20 miles out and want to land. Oakland is an extremely busy airport. It is right across the bay from San Francisco International (SFO) and there was traffic all over he place. If you listen carefully and do as Air Traffic Control says, you'll be fine.



We encountered these clouds past the Tehachapi mountains
trapped in a pocket at the south end of the Central Valley.





Its kind of hard to see because I couldn't get my camera out and on fast enough. That white speck in the middle of the pictures was a Beech Bonanza that passed about 500 feet below us. ATC was talking to both of us so we got plenty of warning that our paths were going to cross.





Even at 10,500 feet up, we're not all that! The corporate jet you see flying above is cruising at over 40,000 feet.





The sun is beginning to sink low into the sky over the Monterey Bay.





We're on a ten mile final to Oakland International. We look closer don't we...





Here's a zoom-shot. Can you see the San Francisco skyline in the background?





Short final, we're about to land.



On Our Way South

The flight home was better than the flight up if you can believe that. We left around 4:30 in the evening. The sun was low in the sky and we weren't going to have much light left. On our way out there was even more traffic than the day before. The commercial flights were all over the sky. Every where you looked you could see the dark cigar shaped silhouetted against the late afternoon sky. Once we cleared the Bay Area air space it got real quiet. Sometimes 10 minutes would pass with no radio communication on Center's frequency.

Once the sun went down and the full moon came out the cities and towns below lit up with a soft amber glow. The street lights form grids that looked like circuit boards printed on the ground below.

Home was visible in the distance. While flying over Fresno at 11,500 feet we could see the soft glow of Los Angeles over the Tehachapi Mountains.

We flew directly south following the 5 freeway. Our ground-speed averaged about 170 knots (about 195 mph). Since it was night we decided to do the LA cruise over Southern California. We flew south of the San Gabriel Mountains soaking in the lights below. LA looks beautiful at night.

I love night flying.


The sundown sky over the San Luis Reservoir





You'll never see a sunset that beautiful on the ground!





The moon was so big and so bright you could almost touch it.