Learning to fly is still one of the greatest adventures, even in this modern high-tech digital era. And the first solo is for most pilots the most memorable flight. I was so euphoric when my instructor climbed out of the Aeronca 7AC and told me to take it once around the pattern that I forgot to push the carb heat knob back in after our last landing and took off with less than max available power. But without a 200-plus-pound instructor in the back seat, the eager Champ seemed to literally leap into the air. Though it was decades ago, I can still remember the chilling thought after reaching pattern altitude that getting safely back on the ground, now 1,000 feet below, depended solely on my newly acquired and never-tested skill and judgment.
Lesson Learned on a Flight in Unfamiliar Territory
Key Takeaways:
- An experienced pilot joins a medical mission to Baja California, Mexico, but an unexpected mechanical failure grounds their assigned aircraft.
- He is unexpectedly made pilot-in-command of a single-engine plane for the final leg, carrying medical personnel.
- Mid-flight, he realizes a critical oversight: he failed to obtain sunset times for the unfamiliar Mexican territory, creating a race against darkness due to regulations prohibiting single-engine night flying.
- He successfully lands just as the sun sets, highlighting the crucial lesson learned about the absolute necessity of comprehensive pre-flight planning and briefing, even when circumstances change unexpectedly.
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