Register

Unusual Attitudes: The Almost-First Dual Cross-Country

** Though I never got to fly the 182 on our trip to the
Bahamas, I learned more than I'd bargained for.**
Gemini Sparkle

Key Takeaways:

  • In 1962, two sisters, Martha and Mary, embark on an adventurous, unauthorized flight to the Bahamas with their flight instructors, overcoming initial grounding and mechanical obstacles.
  • The journey was eventful, featuring encounters with challenging weather, mid-flight radio failures, and significant icing, which tested the nascent instrument skills of the young instructors.
  • Despite being pitched as a "cross-country dual" opportunity, the sisters gained little hands-on experience during this trip, completing their actual training separately.
See a mistake? Contact us.

It was late January 1962 and my sister Mary and I had been taking flying lessons for about a month, but I don’t think either of us had soloed yet. The Ercoupe — loaned to us by an incredibly generous friend — had sat forlornly in the weeds for some time, so there were issues: little ones like nests of assorted critters and big ones like a nosewheel tire beyond repair and a leaky wing tank. In this classic Ohio Valley winter, ice and snow alternated with rain and freezing rain and the skies were a monotonous gray overcast. Even getting N341 to the gas pump was a challenge; whenever things began to thaw the sod became a quagmire of mud. But, hey, life was good; “weather” or not, we were learning to fly.

Actually, I was grounded … sort of. My father was less than pleased that the straight A’s of my freshman year in college had fallen to mostly B’s, and even less pleased when he discovered why — I was taking flying lessons and “majoring” in airplanes. Anglo-Saxon literature wasn’t nearly as interesting as Stick and Rudder and learning the intricacies of an E-6B computer. When I got downtown on the city bus each morning I was supposed to transfer to the Green Line and Villa Madonna College in Covington, Kentucky. But I could also hop on an East End bus that ran out to Lunken Airport, and the school allowed unlimited class cuts after the first year. Before my parents left for a vacation in Mexico, Dad declared the airport off-limits, locked the family car in the garage, and left his ancient stick-shift station wagon in the driveway. Worse, he put a chain with a padlock through the propeller of the Ercoupe.

Martha Lunken

Martha Lunken is a lifelong pilot, former FAA inspector and defrocked pilot examiner. She flies a Cessna 180 and anything with a tailwheel, from Cubs to DC-3s.

Ready to Sell Your Aircraft?

List your airplane on AircraftForSale.com and reach qualified buyers.

List Your Aircraft
AircraftForSale Logo | FLYING Logo
Pilot in aircraft
Sign-up for newsletters & special offers!

Get the latest stories & special offers delivered directly to your inbox.

SUBSCRIBE