xcalibursword wrote:So you're in Mexico? My sister is on a missions trip to Monterey. I have often wondered what flying down there was like. Is it militaristic? Or is my perception so misguided by propaganda that I have no clue?
Maybe a bit of both. Certainly there is more of a military presence. Many, many airports have outposts on them. Even my base, which until two years ago was a dirt strip and still only gets maybe five operations per day, has a military presence. That said, even though you will likely be approached by someone in uniform at every airport you go to, they have been - without exception - polite and courteous in my experience. They will have a clipboard and request your name and departure/destination. They will usually be 18 years old and just doing time. They will speak zero english. Usually, since they don't understand my name and I don't know how to spell it in Spanish, I'll just cautiously reach one hand for their clipboard and make a writing motion with the other while saying something like "perdon, yo escribe?" Then I write what they need and everyone is happy.
Occasionally, even for domestic flights - but *always* if your departure or destination is international, they will walk a dog around after asking you to make your bags available on the ramp. Again, they have always been polite. They were even polite when my smart ass friend was blasting Camino de Guanajuato from his car on the ramp while they did their inspection.
The reason I call him a smart ass, the lyrics of the first verse are approximately "life is worthless, you come into the world crying, you leave the world crying, life is worthless". It's actually one of my favorite songs and is written about one of my favorite cities, but I still wasn't sure I would be cranking it. Oh, and it was stuck on repeat while he went into the Comandante's office to talk about a hanger issue. The military just chuckled, did their job, cleared me to go and wandered back to their base.
So that's the military part, and indeed there is more of it than you experience in the US. But it's no headache.
To the degree there is a headache it's not on the military side. It's that you can plan on an extra 15-20 minutes for each flight due to non-military issues (or paying an FBO $50 to deal with the hassle for you). The hassle is that you have to go to 2-4 different places to do a flight. Firstly, every flight requires a flight plan. Even if you're just going up for some pattern work. This needs to be stamped by the Comandante.
You go to another office to order fuel.
You go to another office to pay for fuel.
You go to another office for a flight briefing.
If you are arriving or departing for the US, then you have to figure out where customs and immigration are also.
Once you know the system, it's really not that bad. In IT we would call it "trivial but time consuming". The first time we came it took us over two hours to get everything figured out. But, true to what we've found nation wide in terms of Mexican hospitality, the flight briefer was super kind and gave us her card with her personal cell phone on it so that if we got in a pinch and needed help navigating the system from someone who spoke english, we could call her.
Lots more can be found on our blog. This one is a good starting point.
http://leftbase.com/?p=1046