That made me queasy. I'm not saying you're doing it wrong but here's why I don't get my skylane that flat or slow any more:
1) Why? You'll never get out of a 500' strip even if you can land there.
2) I practice all my short field landings power off because an engine failure is the only real world situation I'll need to stuff it somewhere shorter than 1500'
3) Skylanes are a heavy machine when grossed out (I know you weren't) that's a lot of inertia to get moving again if the wind changes by 5 knots while the horn's sqeeking.
4) Dragging it in flat and powered means you're fukked if the fan quits turning.
5) I rarely land with more flap than I can go around with, that's 20 degrees for mine. I fly around ag planes a lot and I've had to go around more than once when "box of chocolates flying service" rolled out in front of me or landed coming my way. Once I had 40 hanging on short final with my whole family onboard and lots of gas, an Airtractor rolled out for departure right in front of us and it was tough to get a positive rate of climb again from that altitude and speed with that much flap. The difference for me between 20 and a forward slip and 40 isn't much and I can firewall it and climb immediately with 20.
Looks like a fun area to fly.
(there i go with bogus opinions again)....How in the world do you do that number in a Steaman or for that matter a J3? Keep using your peripheral vision... just fine tune it.

