leloup6989 wrote:And besides how can you grow your skills and knowledge with out the experience?
How about getting some dual from a knowledgeable local instructor skilled in flying those canyons? You can fly the canyons together in good weather and learn the gotchas. If nothing else, dual will help you work out just how low and tight you can turn around, and how to do it.
It sounds like you had good info on what the clouds were doing and things obviously worked out. Many times, the ceiling over a canyon descends along with the river. Then, you can get squeezed down to the point where a 180 is no longer possible. You might come around a corner and find white all of the way down to the water. A rain dog in the wrong place can mess you up in a tight turn. The canyon behind may have closed down. There might be wires, a cable crossing or a pack bridge that rule out that last 100' above the water. BTDT on several of these, and I'm not proud of it. Punching up out of a canyon relying on terrain awareness isn't the same as shooting an approach and going missed. Say you turn up Moose Creek and there's nothing but yellow and red ahead. How do you know which red is the lowest? What if the gps loses a couple of satellites and is slow in updating your position and direction? It's pretty disconcerting seeing the HSI on my gps spin when when I'm looking out the window and I
know I'm not in a turn.
Ordinarily, I'd keep my mouth shut and figure everyone has their own minimums and judgment. There are things I see on BCP that strike me as absolutely nuts, but the fact that some folks have a higher tolerance for risk is none of my business, as long as they don't splat me or innocents and don't bring on more regulations. But you did say this was your first trip, so there's a chance that your tolerance for risk is closer to my own, which I think is pretty normal. So I'm offering this in the hope that it may be helpful. There are some great instructors up there, and flying with them is a blast.
My $.02. And I did enjoy the scenery.
CAVU