I started flight training last spring. I intended to be done no later than the end of July. I soloed in June and flew less after my solo than before. The reason for it was I soloed at about 16 hours and was only really prepared for prefectly calm days, which are rare at S10, not to mention the cliffs and other gust and sinker causing stuff we have. I was pretty much scared to fly on my own and new I was making mistakes.
I was having trouble with my instuctor. I would go to him (had to physically go and find him on his farm) for advice or words of wisdom and get "You've got books, look that up yourself" Ok, I can read, but it is not the same as talking it over with an experienced person, and since I am paying for his experience, I expected him to offer the information to me in a pleasant, patient, and understanding way. I even got yelled at by the old f&%k&r several times for asking something to be clarified that he thought I should have known.
So, I didn't fly. I even started thinking maybe I wasn't going to be good at it and it was better to just quit than die because I wasn't good at it.
Then I started talking to a few people around the airport who were too affraid of the guy to warn students away from him. I got some good stories about just what an asshat the guy is (along with a few about finding him passed out drunk on his farm which borders the airport) and that there is a recently laid off pilot (FBO closed) who was going to take on students at my airport.
Turns out I don't suck. Today I reached a new level of confidence in my approaches, and did it on runway 02, with a gusting crosswind. No more feeling like I am going to die 100 feet before the end of the runway, no more over correcting, no more POS alcholic flight instructor with a bad attitude that smells like pesticides.
Whats my point? My point is that if you are doing training and you are not 100% impressed with your instructor, get a new one. Also, if you know a student is using an instructor that he or she is not meshing with, advise them to move on before they waste money, get hurt, or get dead.
For what it costs to fly, it should be fun, filled with information, and safe. I wish I would have dropped the guy the first time he yelled at me instead of teaching me (I guess I was just suposed to know how to taxi down hill with a tail wind)
I now have an enthusiastic new instructor who is willing to help me get to my check ride within two weeks, and I am confident that I can safely do my cross country flights even if I get into some windy conditions at my destination.
P.S My Champ is also about a week from having paint!!!!! So hopefully I will have a flying airplane in a month, and my new instructor arrived today in a Citabria and is looking forward to signing me off to fly my Champ.
D.


