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M wrote:
Congrats! Now remember, IFR in a light plane can only really safely go in about 20% of the instrument weather mother nature can throw at you. However, an instrument rated pilot can go in about 40% of the VFR weather that would have been too risky for a VFR-only pilot to attempt, due to the the risk of weather closing in being too great. Therefore paradoxically, by getting an instrument rating you will find yourself flying a lot more VFR than you had before :-) Margy Natalie wrote: As of this morning Ron Natalie is an instrument rated pilot!! I guess all those impromptu extra vacation days due to haze are over :-). This is great! Margy We tend to spend lots of time in the mountains of WVA (often when other folks are plowing through VFR) not sure if the haze, clouds, mountains and us will all meet at the same time. We tend to be on the fairly conservative side although the XM weather makes some decisions easier then they were before. Of course sometimes it paints up all sorts of stuff we would never have imagined was out there before :-). We spent an entire day at our home airport this summer waiting to go to OSH because it was 700 broken and 1.5 miles. EVERY other airport within 20 miles was reporting CAVU. That really was not a good day! Margy |
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