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Night flying is good flying, and in the Bay Area it's fantastic (I fly
out of University Airport near Sacramento). More than once I've flown over the Bay with a full moon and wished I had high-speed b&w film in an SLR to capture the view. Consider buying an LED headlamp in addition to a more traditional flashlight. I find the headlamp great for preflight inspection, cockpit arranging before starting, and postflight matters. Start by waiting for good weather and a forecast of good weather through the evening--no storms or fog. Pay particular attention to the temp/dew point spread. Start doing takeoffs and full stop landings before it gets dark, and continue until it is fully dark or you're tired or uncomfortable. Bring an experienced pilot or instructor as pax if you are not at all comfortable starting this way. That's enough for one outing. Do this again within a week or two. This time you should be more at ease, though perhaps not fully so. That's OK. Do a short night hop to a nearby airport that you have done many times in the daytime, for instance, San Carlos to Palo Alto or Reid-Hillview. Bring a GPS that you know completely how to use, it can really help at night. Don't let some weenie tell you that real pilots don't depend on GPS. You don't want to depend on it, but you do want it as a help. Once you've flown to 2 or 3 airports in the Bay Area at night, pick an airport outside the Bay Area, let's say Sacramento Executive. Fly there once in the day if you haven't done so before. Be damn sure you have a waypoint or two that is easy to spot and that you know what altitude you must be at to avoid the BA hills. You might fly there in the late afternoon, get dinner in the restaurant there, then fly back at night. That gives you a goal and a feeling of accomplishment. Use NorCal approach and ask for flight following. Half Moon Bay is another nice destination. The winter is good to fly there 'cause the coast doesn't have so much fog. Auburn in the foothills is good too, it has a good cafe (check the closing time). Northern California is an amazing place to fly, day *and* night. Good on you for wanting to become better at night flying. So many pilots avoid exploring their personal envelope...they're missing a lot of great flying. -- No great intellectual thing was ever done by great effort. Theodore Roosevelt |
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