GroundLooper wrote:Congratulations, for sure.
If you end up with a 172, don't sweat not having a hangar too much. Yep, good to get into one but you can keep the 172 parked outside in the meantime.
Do what you can to talk to and make friends with as many pilots and airport managers between seaside and HIO as you can. HIO seems like it would be spendier than other places you might be able to find.
More probability of corrosion on the coast but the farther the plane is away, the less you'll be able to fly. Mine is almost an hour away and it's kind of a pain.
I also wouldn't discount a rental hangar if one is available. Gives you a nice dry place to park while searching for one that is for sale.
Happy flying and hope to meet up with you sometime.
Craig
I have given considerable thought to where I want to store an airplane; the topic still isn't decided, but I'm leaning further away from Seaside every time I think about it. The salty air is one consideration, but a bigger one is weather. There are SO many days when the coast is completely socked in by early afternoon while the entire rest of the state is sunny and clear. I planned several XC flights to the coast during my training and never did make it there. I imagine the scenario where I leave in the morning and can't make it back to Seaside in the afternoon because of visibility, have to land at HIO, and ask somebody for a ride, pay to leave the airplane there overnight, get a ride back there, try to find an opening in the clouds, etc. Or, having time to fly after work in the evening but not being able to leave because of fog.
HIO is a little over an hour away from my house; it seems like a long drive, but I have been doing it several days each week for the last 4 years for my son's soccer (and all of last summer for my PPL) and the drive just doesn't seem too bad anymore. HIO is the closest non-coastal alternative; others are even further.