Fri Aug 21, 2009 10:43 am
I started 61, finished 141 in a Diamond Katana, of all the unlikely airplanes for ever getting off airport. Five years later, I'm experienced enough to know that I am not even close to good yet at handling, much less pushing the performance limits, a PA-12 with tundra tires and the gentlest stalls I've ever flown. In another five or six hundred hours, I'll... probably have an even better appreciation for how much I have to learn!
First, get your license. Once you have your license, you can find anything out there and people to teach you how to fly it - just like getting your driver's license. For flying off-airport later, start practicing the skills you'll need now. It's a bad idea to start trying to learn precision landing on a scratch strip in the mountains, or figuring out your takeoff distance when the water's rising on a sandbar. Now, while you have plenty of runway and time, learn to plant the airplane exactly where you want it, every time. Vary this, too, once you get the hang of it - land on the numbers with the intent to do so one day, on the marker the next. Land on the centerline every time, so you know without a doubt you can put the plane on the best patch of dirt. Always but always land with the nose straight ahead - be on top of the rudder!
How long is it taking you to get off? When you're first learning, I expect you'll be concentrating on the taking off - but later on, remember taxiway lights are usually spaced 200 feet apart, and figure out what your actual performance is compared to book. If you're in something bigger than 2-place, talk your instructor into letting you ride in the back with another student - some things are easier to see when you're not overwhelmed with flying the plane. Return the favor by taking another student up with you, and see how the plane performs differently when loaded. Check your fuel carefully, and if you ever fly with quarter-tanks instead of full, note the difference in the plane's response. Go to airports of different lengths and widths, and test your ability to enter well, scan the area (where is the windsock? What does it say, no matter what the ASOS says?), fly a correct pattern and land well. Hone your short and soft field landings, no matter how long and paved the runway really is - the important part is that you have the skill, as that carries with you when you get to short and soft fields.
If your 141 has in-house mechanics, stop by and talk to them. Learn how to better take care of your airplane, and encourage them to grouse and warn you on how student pilots break planes. You'll learn as much from the A&P's about what not to do to the plane as you will from your CFI, and more often you'll learn why it's a bad idea. Take notes from your flights, your debriefs, and when you go home, review your flight and chair-fly it as it should be. Study up the next one and hone your checklist with practice - the ability to pay attention to details is never a bad thing. The next flight, ask questions and make sure you understand in a pre-flight brief before getting in the airplane. As a side benefit, not only will this make you more prepared for more interesting airfields, it'll also help you be a focused and thoughtful pilot, and progress more quickly through your training.