Since you’re open to relocating for the duration of your training, you have a major leg up. I’ll offer the following advice, I’ve been on your path and offer this small change as the newly minted, and that is to say just barely established chief pilot of a heli company who’s spent a good deal of time in the industry in varied work. That is to say I’ve punished my wife sufficiently the last 14 years and now get to be home at night more than I’m not.
First off, I’d train in the mountains and big trees. To me that says west coast, in your country Washington state is where I would look. Flat land helicopter flying isn’t what helicopters do best, helicopters go where no other aircraft can, and often in poorer weather than you would in a fixed wing. Mountains bring all that. Weather, genuinely tight confined areas, altitude, limited landing areas due to slope and having to build the understanding of how to judge them. If you get a leg up in these early, you’ll be miles ahead. I’ve seen a lot of flat land pilots struggle to progress in the industry, I was one once, having trained in the mountains and then left to the flat parts of the North for a decade.
Secondly, I’d train on a type you have a hope of getting hired in, or buying and operating as a private owner if that’s the direction you want. Many, many accidents in rotary can be traced back to type unfamiliarity. A recent accident report I read on a tragic B3E crash that killed most of a family and the incorrect muting of the horn comes to mind. The machines are going to be simple at the training level, but getting established with a type you’ll likely fly after the licence is cheap insurance and will make your progression easier. That to me means R44, or the Jet Ranger… Jet Ranger only if you have deep pockets.
I’d avoid a 3-5hr tack on turbine endorsement after, you won’t be ready or retain enough to use it, and this is the “undercoating” sold at many schools at the end of the program. Any operator is going to put you through an apprenticeship phase before cutting you loose to work with their machine, especially a turbine, that 5hrs won’t be worth anything resume wise, but will cost you a mint. And odds are you won’t get to use it until you’ve forgotten most of it.
Good luck in the quest! If considering cross border operations, Chinook Helicopters in Abbotsford is a complete class act, and highly professional school with big college level facilitates.
Angus