Took the 182 up to Bozeman over the long holiday weekend. This is the first trip since I brought it home from Idaho, and was a bit of a homecoming for this plane as it still has the old MT registration tag on the tail. My route in took me towards Cody for fuel, however I had to divert to South Big Horn towards the end of that leg due to thunderstorm buildup and a 20+ mile wide line of virga in my way. Where I ended up is a lonely place when nobody is around, but they have some sort of C119 Flying Boxcar boneyard out there. Some cool stuff sitting in the dirt. I think the then-closed large hangar does some sort of restoration or whatever.


From Big Horn I made my way between storms up towards Billings, before finding sunshine over the MT border and curving back to Bozeman. Fortunately the storms were very slow moving and mostly raining themselves out, so my gap remained and I didn't have to get stuck in Wyoming. ADS-B weather was helpful for determining cell breadth and motion, though the resolution difference between ADS-B and what I got from a cellular connection was significant.

From Bozeman we explored southwest Montana over some previously Google-Earth'ed waypoints for future hunting purposes, which turned out to be a quite effective way to cover what would have involved weeks of driving and hiking otherwise.


(^ Potential hunting area. No I'm not telling where it is. Yes we spotted about 100 elk in the vicinity.)
Coming back to Denver, I went south over Yellowstone and Teton. I managed to catch Old Faithful right as it popped, and had some amazing scenery otherwise. I stopped in Laramie for fuel and a pit stop, and had a civilian CH-47 take off behind me to go fight a fire somewhere. The rest of the short trip from LAR to FTG involved constant light and occasional moderate turbulence, so I was glad to get on the ground at home by that point. DEN approach was having a very slow day, so they let me slowly descend across most of their northern and eastern Class B and save some time.






The plane did fantastic. The new engine mounts we put in cut down the vibration a good bit, though it does still need a prop balance. The new BAS harnesses made me feel a lot better about my well-being should anything unplanned happen. My radios and audio panel sucked (a lot), so I may be redoing that part sooner than expected. Oil use was a touch higher than I'd have liked, however fuel burn and airspeed were right where they should be, and these old 182's are at home playing in higher altitudes. The takeoff and initial climb performance continue to make me grin every time, though my climb out of BZN took some circling, and the oil temp rose a bit more than I thought it would during that. It settled back down once in cruise however, and CHT/EGT were never a concern (for what they're worth on the ancient single-cylinder Cessna gauges).
I have no complaints with this plane that can't be resolved, she flies smooth and true and performs as good or better than I expected. I'll upgrade some things to modernize and equip to my liking, but I am looking forward to all the new places we'll explore.