General discussion for aviators





Long x-country…

Well, as I type this our 17-year-old is on his long cross country
flight, on a picture-perfect Midwestern fall day.

Imagine yourself a teenager again, alone in a clapped out old Cessna
150, high above the harvested cornfields of Iowa, trying to find
Grinnell, Ames and Iowa City without so much as a GPS on board!

Luckily he’s inherited Mary’s sense of direction, so he stands a good
chance of making it…

;-)

Jay Honeck
Iowa City, IA
Pathfinder N56993
www.AlexisParkInn.com
"Your Aviation Destination"

posted by admin in Uncategorized and have Comments (24)






24 Responses to “Long x-country…”

  1. admin says:

    Jay

    Be sure and remind him that the fence lines run N-S and E-W in Iowa.
    Great help in navigation.

    Big John

    *********************************************

    On Sun, 28 Oct 2007 08:55:58 -0700, Jay Honeck <jjhon…@mchsi.com>
    wrote:

    - Hide quoted text — Show quoted text -

    >Well, as I type this our 17-year-old is on his long cross country
    >flight, on a picture-perfect Midwestern fall day.

    >Imagine yourself a teenager again, alone in a clapped out old Cessna
    >150, high above the harvested cornfields of Iowa, trying to find
    >Grinnell, Ames and Iowa City without so much as a GPS on board!

    >Luckily he’s inherited Mary’s sense of direction, so he stands a good
    >chance of making it…

    >;-)

  2. admin says:

    On Oct 28, 10:14 am, Big John <BigJ…@hotmail.com> wrote:

    > Jay

    > Be sure and remind him that the fence lines run N-S and E-W in Iowa.
    > Great help in navigation.

    > Big John

    Don’t they run like that everywhere? When I got my training in Ohio, I
    was never taught to use the furrow/fence lines in navigation, and I
    never even noticed that they could be useful for such. Once I started
    instructing in California, I happened to notice they can be really
    helpful in navigating, and I now can’t imagine trying to navigate
    without them.

  3. admin says:

    "buttman" <nbvF…@gmail.com> wrote in message

    news:1193600924.940919.229290@v29g2000prd.googlegroups.com…

    > On Oct 28, 10:14 am, Big John <BigJ…@hotmail.com> wrote:
    >> Jay

    >> Be sure and remind him that the fence lines run N-S and E-W in Iowa.
    >> Great help in navigation.

    >> Big John

    > Don’t they run like that everywhere?

    Nope.   In hilly terrain, they run any-which-way.

    Jim in NC

  4. admin says:

    Morgans wrote:
    > "buttman" <nbvF…@gmail.com> wrote in message
    > news:1193600924.940919.229290@v29g2000prd.googlegroups.com…
    >> On Oct 28, 10:14 am, Big John <BigJ…@hotmail.com> wrote:
    >>> Jay

    >>> Be sure and remind him that the fence lines run N-S and E-W in Iowa.
    >>> Great help in navigation.

    >>> Big John

    >> Don’t they run like that everywhere?

    > Nope.   In hilly terrain, they run any-which-way.

    That rules out 95% of Iowa (and the rest of the plains)…

  5. admin says:

    "ManhattanMan" <um…@binlaidon.com> wrote in message

    news:4z6Vi.2181$tj6.663@newsfe18.lga…

    - Hide quoted text — Show quoted text -

    > Morgans wrote:
    >> "buttman" <nbvF…@gmail.com> wrote in message
    >> news:1193600924.940919.229290@v29g2000prd.googlegroups.com…
    >>> On Oct 28, 10:14 am, Big John <BigJ…@hotmail.com> wrote:
    >>>> Jay

    >>>> Be sure and remind him that the fence lines run N-S and E-W in Iowa.
    >>>> Great help in navigation.

    >>>> Big John

    >>> Don’t they run like that everywhere?

    >> Nope.   In hilly terrain, they run any-which-way.

    > That rules out 95% of Iowa (and the rest of the plains)…

    Fence lines typically run along property lines, and since the overwhelming
    majority of property lines are configured N-S and E-W, it only stands to
    reason that fence lines would also, regardless of terrain.


    Matt Barrow
    Performance Homes, LLC.
    Cheyenne, WY

  6. admin says:

    > > Jay
    > > Be sure and remind him that the fence lines run N-S and E-W in Iowa.
    > > Great help in navigation.
    > Don’t they run like that everywhere? When I got my training in Ohio, I
    > was never taught to use the furrow/fence lines in navigation, and I
    > never even noticed that they could be useful for such.

    Not all of Ohio does.
    Part of Ohio came from the Western Reserve, another from Virginia
    expanse. Two different surveying systems were used.

  7. admin says:

    On Sun, 28 Oct 2007 19:48:44 -0000, buttman <nbvF…@gmail.com> wrote:

    >Don’t they run like that everywhere? When I got my training in Ohio,

    Sportys, or a certain university?

  8. admin says:

    On Sun, 28 Oct 2007 16:22:26 -0400, "Morgans"

    <jsmor…@charterJUNK.net> wrote:

    >Nope.   In hilly terrain, they run any-which-way.

    This is true in New England.

  9. admin says:

    Jay,

    Be sure to post a note on how it went.

  10. admin says:

    - Hide quoted text — Show quoted text -

    buttman wrote:
    > On Oct 28, 10:14 am, Big John <BigJ…@hotmail.com> wrote:
    >> Jay

    >> Be sure and remind him that the fence lines run N-S and E-W in Iowa.
    >> Great help in navigation.

    >> Big John

    > Don’t they run like that everywhere? When I got my training in Ohio, I
    > was never taught to use the furrow/fence lines in navigation, and I
    > never even noticed that they could be useful for such. Once I started
    > instructing in California, I happened to notice they can be really
    > helpful in navigating, and I now can’t imagine trying to navigate
    > without them.

    Not anywhere with mountains.  Here in PA the fence lines are more random
    and a function of terrain rather than magnetic direction.

    Matt

  11. admin says:

    "buttman" <nbvF…@gmail.com> wrote in message

    news:1193600924.940919.229290@v29g2000prd.googlegroups.com…

    > On Oct 28, 10:14 am, Big John <BigJ…@hotmail.com> wrote:
    >> Jay

    >> Be sure and remind him that the fence lines run N-S and E-W in Iowa.
    >> Great help in navigation.

    >> Big John

    > Don’t they run like that everywhere?

    No. They only run where ther are section lines. The property lines in the
    east are run along the "metes and bounds" system. Farmer Johns property run
    along the creek to the top of the hill over to the big rock and back, based
    on topography.

    Surveying by using section lines happened during the time the west was
    "won." Section lines start to show up in eastern Ohio and go west from
    there.

    That’s why there are no straight roads in New England.

    Karl Curator

  12. admin says:

    "Matt Barrow" <mbar…@performancehomes.com> wrote in message

    news:UJ6Vi.2182$tj6.1052@newsfe18.lga…

    - Hide quoted text — Show quoted text -

    > "ManhattanMan" <um…@binlaidon.com> wrote in message
    > news:4z6Vi.2181$tj6.663@newsfe18.lga…
    >> Morgans wrote:
    >>> "buttman" <nbvF…@gmail.com> wrote in message
    >>> news:1193600924.940919.229290@v29g2000prd.googlegroups.com…
    >>>> On Oct 28, 10:14 am, Big John <BigJ…@hotmail.com> wrote:
    >>>>> Jay

    >>>>> Be sure and remind him that the fence lines run N-S and E-W in Iowa.
    >>>>> Great help in navigation.

    >>>>> Big John

    >>>> Don’t they run like that everywhere?

    >>> Nope.   In hilly terrain, they run any-which-way.

    >> That rules out 95% of Iowa (and the rest of the plains)…
    > Fence lines typically run along property lines, and since the overwhelming
    > majority of property lines are configured N-S and E-W, it only stands to
    > reason that fence lines would also, regardless of terrain.

    > —
    > Matt Barrow
    > Performance Homes, LLC.
    > Cheyenne, WY

    I believe that a lot of property in the original 13 states has been
    subdivided from plots that predated the grid system.  A lot of the old
    descriptions follow ridge lines, rivers and streams, and a lot of old roads
    and trails.  In any case, I can attest that landmarks along cardinal compass
    points are the exception rather then the rule in the western parts of the
    Carolinas and Virginia.

    OTOH, magnetic north is close enough to true north in those same areas to
    easily place the next waypoint/landmark in easy view.  Therefore, the
    hardship is not nearly so great as it might be further west.

    Just my $0.02
    Peter

  13. admin says:

    "karl gruber" <removeskywa…@gmail.com> wrote in message

    news:fg35sr$a8i$1@aioe.org…

    - Hide quoted text — Show quoted text -

    > "buttman" <nbvF…@gmail.com> wrote in message
    > news:1193600924.940919.229290@v29g2000prd.googlegroups.com…
    >> On Oct 28, 10:14 am, Big John <BigJ…@hotmail.com> wrote:
    >>> Jay

    >>> Be sure and remind him that the fence lines run N-S and E-W in Iowa.
    >>> Great help in navigation.

    >>> Big John

    >> Don’t they run like that everywhere?

    > No. They only run where ther are section lines. The property lines in the
    > east are run along the "metes and bounds" system. Farmer Johns property
    > run along the creek to the top of the hill over to the big rock and back,
    > based on topography.

    > Surveying by using section lines happened during the time the west was
    > "won." Section lines start to show up in eastern Ohio and go west from
    > there.

    > That’s why there are no straight roads in New England.

    > Karl Curator

    I should have read to the end before posting, as I see that several of you
    have already stated much the same thing.

    Peter

  14. admin says:

    > Be sure to post a note on how it went.

    Well, we’re all back home, safe and sound.

    Mary, our daughter, and I flew to Praire du Chein (PDC) to meet this
    group’s own Jim Burns and his family for Sunday brunch at the Isle of
    Capri casino.  Meanwhile, Joe was off, safely completing his round
    robin cross country flight from Iowa City (IOW) to Grinnell (GGI),
    from Grinnell to Ames (AMW), from Ames back to Grinnell, and finally
    back to Iowa City.

    Best of all, we were able to hear Joe en route on 122.8, as he came
    into land on Rwy 31 in Grinnell, while we droned along over N.E Iowa.
    It was an amazing feeling, listening to him coming into land at a
    strange airport, far from home…

    Joe’s story was typical of most students, I suspect.   He took off for
    Grinnell at 10:30 AM, and headed north up to I-80.  At the interstate,
    he hung a left, and flew West 55 miles to Grinnell — simple as pie.

    Upon landing, he was shocked to find the airport office closed!   They
    don’t open until 1 PM on Sunday, so he called me (we hadn’t left for
    the airport yet) for advice.  I told him to simply find *anyone* on
    the field, and ask them to sign his book.

    He found a guy working on an old biplane, who gladly signed his log.
    They chatted a bit, Joe ate his trail mix, drank his diet coke, and
    then he departed for Ames.

    Half way to Ames the turbulence got going, and he climbed to 3500
    feet, where it was a bit smoother.  From that altitude it was harder
    to see his landmarks, so he became a bit disoriented.  After a bit he
    checked his sectional for a road that would take him to Ames.

    He found a freeway off to the west, and followed it right to Ames.
    There the winds, which had been just 4 knots in Iowa City, were 10
    gusting to 17!   A bit of a pucker for a new pilot, but he apparently
    had no troubles.

    He spent a while in the Ames FBO relaxing (remember how tiring that
    flight was, when you were a student?), got the FBO girl to sign his
    log book, and then departed for Grinnell once again.

    The flight to GGI was uneventful, although his landing was interesting
    with the winds picking up.  Joe says it wasn’t his smoothest
    touchdown, but it wasn’t his worst, either.

    This time the FBO was open, but they had no snack machines.  For a 17
    year old boy, THIS was a crisis.  (We have to feed him every few
    hours, it seems.)

    According to Joe, a "95 year old lady" (probably 55) told him that
    they were cooking bratwurst on the grill, and offered him one.  This
    was music to his ears, and he enjoyed the camaraderie and food of a
    typical smalltown Iowa airport.

    After enjoying his brat, he suddenly realized that it was 1:45 PM, and
    he only had the 150 reserved till 2 PM!  Hustling through his
    preflight, he made good use of a 20 knot tailwind all the way home to
    Iowa City, where he was met by the disgruntled renter, and a not-so-
    happy FBO clerk.  He apologized, and headed for home, beat.

    Mary and I got home a little while ago, after our own uneventful
    flight home from Wisconsin, to find him curled up in a blanket on the
    couch, exhausted.   It’s been a great day of flying for the Honeck
    family, and he’s now one big step closer to earning that ticket.

    I told him this evening that he can now *really* call himself a
    "pilot".  Soloing was a huge step, but there is nothing like that
    first trip out of the nest to really test your mettle — and he passed
    with flying colors.

    Tomorrow, he’s off to Cedar Rapids for some tower practice, then it’ll
    be time to take the written, do some brush up, and take the exams!

    Jay Honeck
    Iowa City, IA
    Pathfinder N56993
    http://www.AlexisParkInn.com
    "Your Aviation Destination"

  15. admin says:

    On Oct 28, 10:14 am, Big John <BigJ…@hotmail.com> wrote:
     > Jay
     >
     > Be sure and remind him that the fence lines run N-S and E-W in Iowa.
     > Great help in navigation.
     >
     > Big John

    Reminds me of when …

    My first USAF assignment was Wright Field (Dayton).  During my checkout
    at the Aero Club, I got thoroughly disoriented because the roads and
    field boundaries went every which way.  The only order I could discern
    was ‘spokes of a wheel’ converging on one town or another.

    With my girlfriend and my family in Kansas, and two T-34s in the Aero
    Club, I made many trips to visit home.  I soon noticed that somewhere
    west of Dayton the pattern on the ground returned to normal.  (I learned
    to fly at USAFA, so ‘normal’ to me was the grid pattern of N-S and E-W
    roads and fence lines across eastern Colorado and Kansas.)

     From this experience, I’ve advanced this theory:  During the great
    migration westward, it was at about the Ohio-Indiana border where the
    land surveyors caught up with and passed the settlers.

    Jay – congratulations to your son for his accomplishment, and thank you
    for sharing it with us.  Such stories bring back great memories, and
    give promise that our world of general aviation will live on.

    george

  16. admin says:

    "Jay Honeck" <jjhon…@mchsi.com> wrote in message

    news:1193617337.632753.219690@z9g2000hsf.googlegroups.com…
    —–much snipped—-
    > Upon landing, he was shocked to find the airport office closed!   They
    > don’t open until 1 PM on Sunday, so he called me (we hadn’t left for
    > the airport yet) for advice.  I told him to simply find *anyone* on
    > the field, and ask them to sign his book.

    > He found a guy working on an old biplane, who gladly signed his log.
    > They chatted a bit, Joe ate his trail mix, drank his diet coke, and
    > then he departed for Ames.

    Have they really gone back to that insanity of requiring logbook signatures
    at landing airports on cross countries; or is this just his particular
    instructor?

    (Grrrrr)
    Peter

  17. admin says:

    "Peter Dohm" <lefty…@bellsouth.net>

    > I believe that a lot of property in the original 13 states has been
    > subdivided from plots that predated the grid system.  A lot of the old
    > descriptions follow ridge lines, rivers and streams, and a lot of old
    > roads and trails.  In any case, I can attest that landmarks along cardinal
    > compass points are the exception rather then the rule in the western parts
    > of the Carolinas and Virginia.

    What he said.

    More often than not, the property in my area (Western NC) follows streams,
    ridges, and roads.  The roads were usually laid out following streams, or
    ridges, or easy ways to cross ridges from one population center to the next.

    Jim in NC

  18. admin says:

    There’s no reg for that so has to be the instructor.  Seems pretty childish.

    - Hide quoted text — Show quoted text -

    Peter Dohm wrote:
    > "Jay Honeck" <jjhon…@mchsi.com> wrote in message
    > news:1193617337.632753.219690@z9g2000hsf.googlegroups.com…
    > —–much snipped—-

    >>Upon landing, he was shocked to find the airport office closed!   They
    >>don’t open until 1 PM on Sunday, so he called me (we hadn’t left for
    >>the airport yet) for advice.  I told him to simply find *anyone* on
    >>the field, and ask them to sign his book.

    >>He found a guy working on an old biplane, who gladly signed his log.
    >>They chatted a bit, Joe ate his trail mix, drank his diet coke, and
    >>then he departed for Ames.

    > Have they really gone back to that insanity of requiring logbook signatures
    > at landing airports on cross countries; or is this just his particular
    > instructor?

    > (Grrrrr)
    > Peter

  19. admin says:

    > Have they really gone back to that insanity of requiring logbook signatures
    > at landing airports on cross countries; or is this just his particular
    > instructor?

    Really?  I didn’t know this wasn’t a common rule.

    Every FBO around here has their own special stamper, with "I certify
    that __________ did fly into ________ solo"  that they use on every
    student’s logbook…

    Jay Honeck
    Iowa City, IA
    Pathfinder N56993
    http://www.AlexisParkInn.com
    "Your Aviation Destination"

  20. admin says:

    - Hide quoted text — Show quoted text -

    Jay Honeck wrote:
    >>Have they really gone back to that insanity of requiring logbook signatures
    >>at landing airports on cross countries; or is this just his particular
    >>instructor?

    > Really?  I didn’t know this wasn’t a common rule.

    > Every FBO around here has their own special stamper, with "I certify
    > that __________ did fly into ________ solo"  that they use on every
    > student’s logbook…
    > —
    > Jay Honeck
    > Iowa City, IA
    > Pathfinder N56993
    > http://www.AlexisParkInn.com
    > "Your Aviation Destination"

    It’s a throwback, but a fun one.  The solo student gets a big welcome
    and congrats from whoever is there, but now with many airports with
    minimal coverage it can be hard to find someone.

    Margy

  21. admin says:

    > It’s a throwback, but a fun one.  The solo student gets a big welcome
    > and congrats from whoever is there, but now with many airports with
    > minimal coverage it can be hard to find someone.

    It worries me that these rites of passage are apparently becoming rare
    in parts of the country.  These are important things that we shouldn’t
    allow to die.

    Tearing off the shirt of a solo pilot is apparently not the tradition
    it once was, either, but our little family now has three of those very
    special mementos hanging on our wall.  The solo stamps/signatures in
    my logbook (and the feeling of being "welcomed to the club" at every
    airport I visited as a student) trigger wonderful memories, and served
    to give me more incentive to actually finish up the private.

    Jay Honeck
    Iowa City, IA
    Pathfinder N56993
    http://www.AlexisParkInn.com
    "Your Aviation Destination"

  22. admin says:

    "Back in the day" I remember, on one occasion, having to walk 1/2 mile to
    the nearest farm house to get a signature for my long cc.  The housewife I
    encountered was familiar with the procedure as apparently I hadn’t been the
    first to present her with the request.  She was as happy to sign it as I was
    proud of asking her.  We both knew I had accomplished something.

    There are several reasons this tradition should continue, whether required
    by the feds or not.  It gets the pilot out of the airplane and forces him to
    encounter the local pilots and public.  They learn about the layout of the
    fbo, fuel systems, and services available.  All of which they may need some
    day or worse, some dark night when that night time roughness develops.

    Without exception, I know of no pilot that would hesitate to scribe his name
    and a short congrats in a fledgling’s log book.  I’ve signed several and
    I’ll admit most where because I initiated the conversation and asked to sign
    their logbook.  Part of an instructors job is to expose their student to the
    world of aviation that exists outside his local airport.  The FAA
    requirements afford the instructor ample opportunity but the instructor
    should know how to take advantage of those situations.  People are aviation.
    Airports and airplanes are simply their tools.  Ask your student to have
    his/her logbook signed.  You never know who he/she may encounter or what
    they may learn.

    Jim

    "Jay Honeck" <jjhon…@mchsi.com> wrote in message

    news:1193624900.087693.256140@d55g2000hsg.googlegroups.com…

    - Hide quoted text — Show quoted text -

    >> It’s a throwback, but a fun one.  The solo student gets a big welcome
    >> and congrats from whoever is there, but now with many airports with
    >> minimal coverage it can be hard to find someone.

    > It worries me that these rites of passage are apparently becoming rare
    > in parts of the country.  These are important things that we shouldn’t
    > allow to die.

    > Tearing off the shirt of a solo pilot is apparently not the tradition
    > it once was, either, but our little family now has three of those very
    > special mementos hanging on our wall.  The solo stamps/signatures in
    > my logbook (and the feeling of being "welcomed to the club" at every
    > airport I visited as a student) trigger wonderful memories, and served
    > to give me more incentive to actually finish up the private.
    > —
    > Jay Honeck
    > Iowa City, IA
    > Pathfinder N56993
    > http://www.AlexisParkInn.com
    > "Your Aviation Destination"

  23. admin says:

    On Oct 29, 4:55 am, Jay Honeck <jjhon…@mchsi.com> wrote:

    > Well, as I type this our 17-year-old is on his long cross country
    > flight, on a picture-perfect Midwestern fall day.

    > Imagine yourself a teenager again, alone in a clapped out old Cessna
    > 150, high above the harvested cornfields of Iowa, trying to find
    > Grinnell, Ames and Iowa City without so much as a GPS on board!

    > Luckily he’s inherited Mary’s sense of direction, so he stands a good
    > chance of making it…

    Aww, c’mon he has got a compass, watch and a Xcountry flight plan!
    He’s spreading his wings and will soon leave the nest!
    :-)

    Cheers

  24. admin says:

    On Oct 29, 8:48 am, buttman <nbvF…@gmail.com> wrote:

    > Don’t they run like that everywhere? When I got my training in Ohio, I
    > was never taught to use the furrow/fence lines in navigation, and I
    > never even noticed that they could be useful for such. Once I started
    > instructing in California, I happened to notice they can be really
    > helpful in navigating, and I now can’t imagine trying to navigate
    > without them.

    I’d say that assuming cardinal ground reference is inferior to the
    proper use of a magnetic compass. In my limited experience fence lines
    can and do run in all directions…

    my 2c

    Cheers







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