Today, I became a licensed sport pilot! It has been the most difficult six months! I sat down on Thursday, August 2nd for my stage three check. We sat down at a desk and I got out my flight plan and planner and was ready to talk about my preparations for the practical exam. He then asked me content knowledge covering all 17 chapters of the Rod Machado Pilot Handbook. It was rough and mentally exhausting. I only got hung up on ATC light gun signals. I lifted up my sectional and flight plan from my knee board to take a peak and he urged me to dig deep in my memory to pull the information. I countered with a safe and responsible pilot should know everything but if one forgets something, the safe and responsible pilot will know exactly where to find the information. He countered with, dig deeper, I'm sure you can recall the information. After four hours sitting across the desk from the FAA examiner, the weather had changed for the worse and I asked to postpone the practical portion of the exam. Mike was proud of me for making a good decision and not rushing into the practical flight test in excitement, but to be a safe and responsible pilot and make safe and good decisions. We rescheduled for early this morning.
I taxied down to the engine run up for runway 11 and I noticed that there were hundreds of geese on the center line in the middle of the runway. I called on the unicom and asked for anyone at the airport operations office to drive a golf cart down the taxiway to spook the birds. I called a few times but remembered that the office was closed when I arrived and possibly, no one was in this early on a Saturday. I was panicking but finally made a decision, I told Mike I was going to abort the take-off and taxi back to the tarmac and hope that the birds would scare and fly off along the way. Mike said he was about a minute away from failing me because I needed to make a decision. He was happy I did, gave me the benefit of the doubt, and suggested that I advise the CTAF that I would taxi down the runway to clear the geese and to make the advisement a few times very clearly. I thanked him profusely and made the call. I taxied down the runway until the geese were airborne. We exited the runway and began the engine run up procedures again.
My wife came over and took a few pictures and got in the plane and flew up north along the eastern shore of the Chesapeake Bay and flew towards Chestertown. We then flew west below the restricted airspace of Martin State and Aberdeen Proving Grounds in the hopes of seeing an A-10 on final approach. With no jets in sight, we headed back for W29 and had a bit of a round landing. Maybe I was feeling too confident and I had to remind myself on that very first licensed flight, that I am always a student of the sport, I will always stay current, I will always follow the ADMP to ensure my safety, my passengers safety, and the safety of everyone flying around me.
This certainly was a life changing opportunity that I set out on back in December 2011 and I am so proud of everything that I have learned. I look forward to all the experiences I will get to share with my students in the ground school course at SRHS in the hopes of instilling the lessons I learned and encouraging them to take up the same opportunity I was given months ago, to become an aviator!