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The interesting part of the flight was the demonstration again that
forecasters forecast and the Great Lakes do as they damn well please... FSS briefers insisted that my route was 10 miles viz and 12,000 foot broken in scattered light rain with conditions improving by my departure time - I kept peering out the window of my office as he was saying that and thinking, "jeez, that looks a lot lower than 12,000 and it looks dark to the West"... Deparitng an hour later, at 5000 I was in a solid layer and was forced back down to 3,500 under direction of flight rules... Visibility out over the lake was closer to 3 miles than 10 miles.... Going South across Canadian Lake Erie in zero horizon conditions (the sky and the water were exactly the same color) was made a bit more interesting when Detroit ATC controller said they could not get Cleveland to answer them on the connect line in order to hand me off for Lake Services... Detroit faded out a bit South of Pelee Island and I was left on my own in international airspace without ATC contact in violation of the regs again, sigh... Actually, this happens almost every time and I have come to expect it... As soon as I re-enter US airspace I change the squawk code back to 1200 and merrily continue on my way... There seems to be some hostility between Detroit and Cleveland controllers... Going past Cleveland the ceiling was definitely lowering... Dropping the passenger off, we had a quick coffee and departed for the return leg... After crossing Dryer VOR a look out at the lake revealed that the ceiling was now 2,000 foot with a 1,400 foot scattered layer... Going across 60 miles of water down that low in limited viz is not my idea of fun... I elected to avoid the two ATC centers that can't seem to communicate and we continued VFR flight west towards Toledo and then North to Saginaw, just missing the Detroit B... Over land I had a scattered layer at 1,600 and another scattered at 2,200 with rain and an indefinite ceiling above that.... Comfortable at 1,900 we trundled along... The only other traffic out was IFR and working ATC (with me listening) so we had our own private airspace with no bumps and moderate visibility of 5-7 miles... The good part of all that was the light drizzle kept the bugs mostly washed off and after landing it only took 2 minutes to finish wiping a few splotches... Just another typical day in the Great Lakes weather machine... denny |
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