Again I really appreciate all your input and opinions (well, most of your opinions...) and have a few more comments/questions if you will. I haven't mastered the quoting ability of this forum sufficiently to quote multiple replies in one response so this will have to do.
And I am going to focus on and get down this landing business before I start worrying about Hammer's blue knob.
Zane, you asked about the leading edge and it does have the Horton STOL kit. Practicing slow flight and stalls at altitude, well, power on it just won't stall, it'll just hang there suspended with the airspeed indicator reading 0, pretty impressive really.
Someone mentioned perhaps we're coming in too fast and I am thinking that is probably the case and will try slowing it up. Any recommendations on approach and landing speeds? Right now I am aiming for 70 and 65 respectively with a passenger, 65 and 60 alone... that would be mph not knots. How slow do you think we can go?
As for the CFI issues, this has been a bit of a problem since I started to learn to fly the 140. We have a pretty young and budding flight school here on the field and there is not one instructor on board with them who has any 140 or 170 time. One of the mechanics on the field is a CFI who does most of the local tailwheel instruction and the fellow we bought the 140 from is a CFI but a full time attorney; he did Hammer's tail wheel endorsement and got me to my first solo, but then I had to supplement.
I can't really say much good or bad about my training; it is what it is/was what it was, and I was grateful I had these two guys I could work with. I also had a lot of help from Hammer as we spent a lot of time of course flying together. I trudged through the requirements for my checkride and did fine despite the, well, less then ideal teaching and training, but I tried to get the most out of it I could and I practiced, practiced, practiced.
I am no maverick, I have no false sense of immortality as so many young (or not so young) men have who learn to fly. I don't make assumptions and I don't take chances; I am very conservative in that regard. So while Mike may quiver in his britches at the idea of my being signed off to fly the 170 without a "complete checkout", I have no intention of being alone in that plane until I am absolutely confident that I have the skills, the practice and the tools I need to be safe. I know the 2 CFIs I have flown with know that about me, and whether or not that plays a part in their decisions I don't know.
That said yesterday afternoon I was able to get the mechanic CFI to go up with me in the 170 after being able to practice some slow flight and landings with Hammer earlier in the morning. The first thing he did (he had obviously seen some of our less then perfect attempts at 3 points) was ask if I had a couple of cases of oil. Sure I said, come to find out all the bottles were empty... How about that toolbox he said, that'll work. So he hoisted one of the many, many hangar toolboxes and slid it into the back of the plane, laid it on it's side and secured it.
I had been kidding about the 50 lb bag of salt in the back of the plane to help with the bouncy landings, which a couple of you guys picked right up on, but hey, it really helped. It was a little more squirrelly on the two point take-offs and we could actually get a power on stall at elevation with the extra 50 plus pounds in the back. So we need to get a really heavy survival gear bag back there, or better yet, a pony keg, yeah, that'd work. So the trick as many of you have stated is to try and keep that tail low on approach and landing, and slow it down. It's all coming together and the forecast is calling for sunny skies.
Again, I have appreciated all you have had to say and I'll be working or Hammer's blue knob soon.