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I am a student pilot with 18 hours of flight time, and have been told
that I am very close to soloing. However, I have reached the point that I am about to give it up, and not because, I cannot fly the pattern, do landings, steep turns, etc., or even costs or medical. This is why: 1. I have a competent, patient, and otherwise very good CFI. However, he can never be on time, and as a busy professional, and despite many discussions, I cannot live with this. Not 10 or 20 min late, but 1 to 2 hours late, and frequent. He is the only CFI at this airport. Unfortunately, the next closest airport with flight instruction is 65 miles from here, so my choices are non-existent, unless I want to spend many hours on the road. Besides, untimely and tardy CFIs are a common disease in GA so I hear. 2. GA seems economically distressed. The aviation company that employs him has junk equipment, 2 days in a row now two different planes would not start. And never mind the lack of money to plow snow or remove compacted ice on the runway. I just don't want to spend my money in what looks to me to be a distressed industry that may not even have a bottom line in some sectors. 3. Living in the Great Lakes area, just how practical is all of this, with 5 to 6 months of crappy weather being typical. It is perpetual IFR, lots of icing, and when the plane will start, crosswind 2x or more the POH limitations, and headwinds that leave driving a car faster. Even scheduling 2 to 3 times a week, maybe only 50% of my lessons could go forward, and even those sometimes were marginal conditions. I am disappointed that this is not more practical. I learned many things, made better progress than I had envisioned, and really enjoyed the few timely, good days that were available, and really enjoyed the reading and learning. I had wanted to get my private pilot certif. For business and pleasure purposes. The best of luck to those of you who have better circumstances, I am really sorry to have to give it up. |
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