Funny timing on this thread- I just spent this morning creating "Ski Landings" and "Ski Time" headings in the blank columns of my old log books, and tallying them up just for personal interest. I subscribe to the diary value: records of different airports, different passengers, how much ground roll to take off with 2 on board and full fuel from such-and-such a strip. How much time in different planes. What the call out number was to get the fuel truck to drive out from town, and what hours they actually answer. How long a backcountry strip was when I actually paced it off, and where the soft spots and hummocks are on it. The name of the guy who runs the bootleg hunting camp on one remote strip I use, so I don't get met with a loaded gun next time. Sometimes I write down when it got actually dark in an entry, and a couple years later I'll pull out the log book in flight to find out when it will get dark on me this time. Functional civil twilight is pretty inexact in Alaska. Oh yeah, it's useful for insurance and currency, but that's the least interesting aspect of it, really. I just use my watch from engine start to engine stop.
-DP
Last edited by
denalipilot on Sun Feb 24, 2008 12:55 pm, edited 1 time in total.