“A Pilot Again!” Greg’s June, 2014 Flying Carpet column

GregBrownFT714_1570edeSmw1200Back in the cockpit after nine years away

What a kick, for Mary Katherine Jackson to experience her dad piloting an airplane. Sure, she knew his credentials, but their previous father-daughter flight was nearly beyond memory, when she was just six years old.

Richard Jackson crafts exhibit prints for fine-art photographers. The day we met, he was printing National Geographic’s iconic, “Afghan Girl,” cover photo for famed photographer Steve McCurry. Only when we later began working together did I learn of Richard’s aviation background. As a US Air Force combat photographer in Viet Nam, he documented military action from such legendary aircraft as the F-100 “Thud,” C-130 Hercules, and Chinook and Huey helicopters.

Following his tour, Richard qualified as an instrument-rated commercial pilot. He’d accumulated 1,100 hours and was training for his CFI when personal and career pressures derailed his flying during a busy period of his life.

GregBrownFT714_1566eSmw1200Then, 2½ years ago, Richard and I flew from Flagstaff to Phoenix to proof some prints. Remembering his piloting background, I offered the controls as we taxied out. He never returned them.

Seven years after his previous flight, Richard expertly took off, negotiated traffic and radar vectors to Sky Harbor International Airport, and landed, all from the right seat. Based on the joy in his eyes and his virtuoso performance, I urged him to get current again.

“One of these days, I will,” he replied. While Richard’s piloting passion and skills clearly survived, the requisite resources, motivation, and time had yet to converge. More concerning was something unspoken. Experience tells me the confidence to go back to piloting erodes long before the competence does. Flight proficiency usually returns quickly even after a long hiatus; the bigger obstacle is turning the key and driving to the airport. And the longer pilots are away from flying, the less likely they’ll return to it…

READ THE WHOLE STORY in this month’s Flying Carpet column, “A Pilot Again!” (Please allow a moment for the article to load.)

Photo: Richard Jackson treats daughter Mary Katherine to a ride, on his first command flight after returning to the cockpit.

(This column first appeared in the June, 2014 issue of AOPA Flight Training magazine.)

©2014 Gregory N.Brown

“Pep Rally,” Greg’s May, 2014 Flying Carpet column

StudentPilotPepTalkFacebookGroup-MeyerEclipseJet_0854eSmw1200Share your gift of flight

When pilots-in-training get disheartened, a few well-placed words of encouragement can often keep them flying. So several years ago I organized a “Student Pilot Pep Talk” Facebook group.

Friendships blossomed, and some Southwest-area members recently proposed our first-ever fly-in rendezvous at Lake Havasu City Airport, Arizona (KHII). I asked along student pilot Victoria Coleman, who’d recently celebrated her first solo. When Victoria boasted of her husband Paul helping her study, I invited him too.

Victoria and I agreed that rather than make this a “lesson,” we’d share piloting duties as equals: she’d handle the radios and navigate while I flew. Once aloft, Paul enthused about his wife’s newfound skills.

“We recently bought property in Pagosa Springs,” he said. “Victoria will be able to pilot us there!” Although Victoria was yet to start cross-country training, she’d thoroughly scouted our route and destination airport, and compiled relevant radio frequencies. And though new to aerial navigation, she precisely tracked our location via outside landmarks. It turned out she’s always loved maps, and as a child aspired to be a cartographer.

“You’re a natural at this!” I said.

“I felt that way, until the other day,” Victoria replied. “I recently had a great solo day in the pattern. But last time I flew, there was a light crosswind. I wasn’t sure I could handle it, so I landed. Now I’m nervous about mastering landings, and about flying by myself…”

READ THE WHOLE STORY in this month’s Flying Carpet column, “PEP RALLY.” (Please allow a moment for the article to load.)

Photo: Members of Greg’s “Student Pilot Pep Talk” Facebook Group rendezvous at Lake Havasu City Airport, Arizona. L-R: Mike Hardison, Ken Meyer, Bijan Maleki and Miranda Rydstrom, Brian and Theresa Farley, Paul and Victoria Coleman, Paul Meehl, and Shari Meyer. SEE MORE PHOTOS HERE.

(This column first appeared in the May, 2014 AOPA Flight Training magazine.)

©2014 Gregory N.Brown

“Fickle Snow,” Greg’s April, 2014 Flying Carpet column

SedonaSnowshowersAloft_0743PS_v2-Edit-2eSmw1200Little room for error

Dark clouds fringed the western sky when I departed Prescott. With appointments to make, I’d monitored the weather all day. Our home airport of Flagstaff expected gradually lowering ceilings after 6pm, and snow beginning after 8. I picked up Jean in Scottsdale at 4:30, later than I’d hoped, but a tailwind promised to hurry us home in under an hour.

Our destination still reported clear skies when we took off, as did all stations along our route, but those ominous clouds approached relentlessly from the west. Williams, 40 miles west of Flagstaff, reported visual conditions in light snow. In any case, we carried plenty of fuel to land at Sedona, Cottonwood, or Winslow, or return to Scottsdale.

Halfway home over the Verde Valley, I noted shades of green threatening Flagstaff on the datalink weather display. Little precipitation was likely reaching the ground, but this was unexpectedly early. Then the tint changed to pink. Snow! I told Jean we might be driving a rental car home from Sedona tonight.

“But we’ll arrive well before 6,” said Jean, taking the forecast literally. “Surely, we’ll beat the weather.” Maybe she was right. Flagstaff’s Pulliam Airport still reported good visual flying conditions: clouds at 2,400 broken, 6,000 overcast, and 9 miles visibility in light snow.

Nearing Sedona, we heard Albuquerque Center clear an aircraft for Flagstaff’s instrument landing system (ILS). That’s a popular training approach, so I asked the controller whether he’d issued it for practice or for ‘real weather.’

“Flagstaff is still reporting VFR,” he replied, “but the last two pilots landing there thought a visual approach would be sketchy, so both shot the ILS.” These were turbine aircraft descending from the flight levels, however, so they’d need to penetrate the overcast while we approached from underneath. Sedona soon sparkled delightfully beneath us, crowned with a solitary snow flurry illuminated by the setting sun. Ahead the distant horizon bisected an inviting if faraway sliver of sky beyond the overcast.

It’s always a bit discomforting flying under a cloud ceiling onto the plateau. Here you are cruising comfortably under a high overcast, and the ground suddenly rises up to squeeze you. Confirming as we approached that the ceiling indeed floated a healthy 2,500 feet above the plateau, I took momentary leave from Center and radioed Flagstaff tower that I was 7 minutes south and requesting the trend.

“The weather’s definitely deteriorating,” replied the tower controller, “but we’re still decent VFR, especially to the south where you’re coming from. If it’s a matter of just 7 minutes you should be in good shape.” Retrieving instrument charts for backup, I advised Albuquerque that we’d proceed visually to Flagstaff with Sedona as our alternate. Topping the plateau, we intercepted Interstate 17, which would lead us directly to the airport and ensure terrain clearance. Flight conditions remained excellent, so I said goodbye to Center. “Be safe!” said the controller as we cruised blithely homeward.

“Shouldn’t we see the runway by now?” asked Jean a few moments later…

READ THE WHOLE STORY in this month’s Flying Carpet column, “FICKLE SNOW.” (Please allow a moment for the article to load.) Mobile version.

Photo: Snow showers over Sedona, Arizona, on our flight home. (Our destination of Flagstaff lies on the Coconino Plateau, beyond.)

(This column first appeared in the April, 2014 AOPA Flight Training magazine.)

©2014, 2022 Gregory N.Brown

“Picnicking Pilots,” Greg’s March, 2014 Flying Carpet column

TontoNaturalBridgeAZ_0587eSmw1200Fun is closer than you think

How far must you fly to have fun? At AOPA Summit last fall, Jean and I dined with Barry Knuttila of King Schools, and his wife Susanne. Over dinner we learned the two fly often from their San Diego home to vacation in Sedona, Arizona.

“We’re going there later this month,” said Susanne. Knowing we live in nearby Flagstaff, she quizzed us about lesser-known regional sights. I suggested Tonto Natural Bridge State Park near Payson, which we’ve always found fascinating. Our friends hadn’t heard of it, so I detailed driving routes. It’s two hours over mountain roads from Flagstaff; I estimated 90 minutes each way from Sedona.

BarrySusanneKnuttilaPiperAztec-PaysonAirportPAN_0507eSmw1200“We’re staying right at Sedona Airport, and I see Payson’s not far as the crow flies,” said Barry, consulting his smartphone. “Would you consider joining us if we flew there? Susanne and I could fly directly to Payson coming from California, and you and Jean could hop down to meet us in the Flying Carpet.” It had never occurred to me to fly to Tonto Bridge given its rather remote location, but Barry later took the initiative to phone around. With no weekend rental cars available at Payson Airport, he arranged a limo* to deliver us to the park…

Tonto Natural Bridge is reportedly the largest natural travertine bridge in the nation, and possibly the world. Unlike more common aboveground stone arches, Tonto Bridge was sculpted from underneath by Pine Creek. Trees and vegetation carpet its ground-level top, and spring and rainwater percolate through limestone to trickle and shower 180 feet to the underlying creek. Not only does this stunning watery oasis mark an otherwise parched area, but visitors can actually observe the continuum of living vegetation accumulating calcium carbonate and turning to stone… It’s amazing how little-known this treasure is both within and outside Arizona.

READ THE WHOLE STORY in this month’s Flying Carpet column, Picknicking Pilots. (Please allow a moment for the article to load.)

Photos: Top left, Tonto Natural Bridge, Arizona.  Above right, Barry and Susanne Knuttila arrive at Payson Airport, Arizona.  SEE MORE PHOTOS.

(This column first appeared in the March, 2014 AOPA Flight Training magazine.)

*Car service provided by Dennis Jeffers of Gekko Transportation, ph: (928) 951-1159

©2014 Gregory N.Brown

Derek Ellis “Flying Carpet” video wins Student Emmy

DerekEllisVideographerFLG_7203eSm1200Please join me in congratulating my friend videographer Derek Ellis for winning two student Emmy Awards Friday night!

I am honored to report that one of Derek’s Emmys is for the View from the Flying Carpet video short* he shot last spring about my flying and aerial photography. (His other win is for a group project entitled The Mutable Life of Oscar Clark.)

Derek Ellis 2013 Student EmmysDerek is a recent video production graduate of Northern Arizona University, now working freelance.

Needless to say, he comes highly recommended to anyone who might need filmmaking services. (See more wonderful work at Derek’s website.)

Good goin’, Derek, and thanks for taking me along for the ride!

Greg

©2013 Gregory N. Brown

*See Derek’s full 7-minute Views from the Flying Carpet video here.

Download Greg’s “You Can Fly!” ebook for free!

YCF ebook image-ASA ecrHi Folks,

Get my You Can Fly! eBook for FREE by downloading the new ASA Reader iPhone/iPad App!

Authors Greg Brown and Laurel Lippert write to those who are considering flight training, specifically to answer frequently asked questions about it, and at the same time entice more people into exploring general aviation.”

There are no strings attached. My coauthor Laurel and I, along with the good folks at our publisher, ASA, felt that offering this book for free would be a worthy contribution to get more people into the air to experience the joys of flight we so treasure.

You aviators out there, please share this with your friends who have always dreamed about becoming pilots but didn’t know where or how to start — now they can take that long-awaited first step with some guidance.

Spread the word!

Greg

©2013 Gregory N. Brown

Announcing “The Turbine Pilot’s Flight Manual Third Edition”

TURB-PLT3_HiResI’m pleased to announce the new 3rd Edition of my book The Turbine Pilot’s Flight Manual, coauthored with my good buddy Mark Holt.

When the first edition of this book came out in 1995, it was the first publication to cover all the essentials of turbine aircraft in one book. It remains very popular to this day; I’m guessing that by now the vast majority of aspiring, personal, and professional corporate and airline pilots have copies on their bookshelves.

Along with updated contents reflecting the latest in turbine aircraft and cockpit technology, this edition for the first time includes selected color illustrations, and is newly available in ebook formats as well as print. The previously-included Aircraft Systems CD-ROM has been replaced with an included online resource page containing the same animations.

Finally, I hold a good deal of personal fondness for this book because it started me on my writing career, and has thus led to innumerable wonderful professional opportunities.

Many thanks to my coauthor Mark, and to the fine folks at our publisher ASA. Thanks especially to you readers for your lasting support and patronage of my books over all these years!

Greg

©2012 Gregory N. Brown

How the “Flying Carpet” got its name

Reader Sergio Schaar wrote to ask, “What inspired you to call [your airplane] the Flying Carpet?”

Years have passed since I last explained it, so I thought it appropriate to share my very first Flying Carpet column that tells the story behind the name.

“Magic! The whining of the gyros gave way to mystical drums and rhythmic chanting, crazily mixing images of flight with those of ancient and sacred ceremonies. Chills traveled up and down our spines-we could scarcely have been more astonished if we had arrived by flying carpet.

“Adventurer Richard Halliburton would have appreciated our situation. After hitching ’round the world by freighter and camel in the 1920s, he became obsessed with visiting remote Timbuktu, a legendary mid-Sahara caravan stop. The way to get there, he decided, was by The Flying Carpet, a black-and-crimson Stearman that he bought and shipped to England in 1931.

“With pilot Moye Stephens guiding the Stearman, Halliburton traveled the ancient world to exotic places such as Baghdad, the Dead Sea, headhunter country in Borneo, and, yes, Timbuktu. During the course of his journey he enthralled princes and paupers alike as he took them on their first airplane rides.

“It’s tempting to look back at those times and think we missed the real adventure of flying. Well, we didn’t. Flying was out of reach for all but the wealthiest people in Halliburton’s day, so most people could enjoy flying only vicariously through his writing.

“Today we live exploits that Halliburton’s readers could only dream of — piloting our own flying machines on our own adventures.

“On this particular day, our flying carpet had taken us to a mystical and exotic place in the New World — Window Rock, Arizona, capital of the Navajo Nation, where Jean and I had invited friends to spend the day exploring the annual Navajo Nation Fair…”

Continue reading my first Flying Carpet column, “Ninety Minutes to Another World,” here. (This column first appeared in AOPA Flight Training magazine.)

Read my book, Flying Carpet: The Soul of an Airplane for more on how Halliburton’s flying adventures inspired the naming of my column and steed.

Top photo: LeRoy Peterson’s black and crimson Stearman biplane, similar in appearance to Richard Halliburton’s Flying Carpet. Lower photo: Miss Navajo Nation at the Navajo Nation Fair, Arizona, as detailed in the column.

Richard Halliburton was a renowned travel writer in the 1920s-30s. Among his most popular works are Richard Halliburton’s Book(s) of Marvels, and The Royal Road to Romance. His lesser-known 1932 book, The Flying Carpet, tells the story of his adventures flying North Africa, Europe, and Asia in a 1929 Stearman biplane.

For more about Richard Halliburton and his “original” Flying Carpet, see “Richard Halliburton and Moye Stephens: Traveling Around the World in the ‘Flying Carpet’” and “Moye Stephens: Aviation Pioneer and Adventurer” at Aviation History magazine.

©2012 Gregory N. Brown


If you enjoyed this story, you’ll love Greg’s book, Flying Carpet: The Soul of an Airplane. Autographed copies available!

Beware! possible smartphone interference with panel-mounted GPS!

Your iPhone may interfere with your GPS!

It has come to my attention that a significant number of pilots may be experiencing smartphone interference with their GPS avionics equipment. The iPhone in particular may cause loss of GPS signal reception for 10-15 seconds at a time or longer. At least one club airplane I’m aware of has experienced repeated instances of signal loss reported by various members carrying iPhones, “but the problem goes away when pilots leave their iPhones on the ground.” The pros at my avionics shop (at the opposite end of the country) have also heard numerous such reports.

According to my CFI friend and Apple technology guru, Patrick, the issue can arise whenever your smartphone is left on in flight; although you might not be texting or calling, the phone continually transmits cellular queries to sustain ongoing signal access. Patrick says that these transmissions become stronger the farther you are from a cell tower. The IMPORTANT bottom line is that if you experience loss of GPS navigational signal aloft, the first thing to check is that your smartphone is off.

This growing concern explains why it is truly important to:

  1. Turn off portable electronic devices prior to flight, particularly those like smartphones that continually transmit, especially when flying under difficult navigational conditions like IFR, over water, and at night.
  2. When using an iPad or other tablet for in-flight charts and navigation, turn off cellular and wifi data services to minimize the possibility of interference. (Be aware that iPad’s “Airplane mode” turns off location services, too, disabling the device’s internal GPS. However Bad Elf claims their external GPS continues to work in “Airplane Mode.”)

If you need to access your smartphone in flight for chart backup, backup GPS navigation, or passenger music or games:

  • Set your iPhone to “airplane mode” in flight. The internal GPS may not work, but reportedly some external GPSs like Bad-Elf will, or
  • For AT&T iPhones only, Patrick recommends enabling the “SIM PIN” ID in your iPhone’s settings. (Settings > Phone > SIM PIN) This isn’t your general “passcode lock,” but rather an additional code you must enter to enable your phone’s sim card for cellular activity. Yes, you’ll need to enter an additional code to enable phoning and texting when first turning on your phone, but by not enabling it during flight Patrick says you can leave your phone on to access charts, GPS, music, and other non-communication uses, without risking cellular interference to your avionics.

As Patrick observes, most of the nifty new electronics devices and features we enjoy in the cockpit (smartphones, Bluetooth, and WiFi hotspots in particular since they actively transmit RF), appeared on the scene long after most of our cockpit avionics were designed and installed. Therefore the manufacturers and installers of our panel equipment could not have foreseen or protected against interference from many of the devices we now carry. That’s why it’s so important to turn them off, especially when the stakes are high as in instrument flight.

Disclaimer: I’m no avionics expert, nor have I collected statistically-relevant data, so it is entirely possible these concerns may be incorrect in fact or scope. (For example, if the problem exists is it just with iPhones? Or Android and other smartphones too?) However, I’m hearing enough anecdotal reports from trusted sources that it seemed important to alert fellow pilots to the possibility, especially since the problem (if true) is insidious, potentially dangerous, nonintuitive, and yet potentially easy to avoid or rectify. Also, I have not personally tested most of the above tips, so try them yourselves, and do not take them as proven techniques. Rather, as another CFI observes, “It’s important to remember that none of these devices are TSO’d or even tested to that standard so it’s very much use at your own discretion.”

I will add to this post as new information comes to light. In the meantime, fellow pilots, turn off your smart phones (or at least disable their cellular service) prior to flight!

©2011 Gregory N. Brown

Greg’s featured past column: “Festival Flying”

Fly in to the Route 66 Fun Run!

Just got an email from my buddy Mark Harris. “Let’s take the girls to Seligman Saturday morning to see the start of the Route 66 Fun Run!” he wrote.

Hey, that’s one of my favorite auto events! I even wrote a column about it.

Read “Festival Flying” HERE. (Mobile version HERE.)

And it happens one weekend every May, on the longest existing original stretch of legendary Route 66.

The organized events are Friday night and Saturday morning at Seligman, Arizona; Saturday night and Sunday morning at Kingman. I always attend Saturday morning because you can fly into Seligman’s fine airport (P23), walk a few blocks into town, scope out all the incredible cars, and then dine at Lilo’s Westside Cafe or the Roadkill Cafe before flying home. (Kingman requires a ride into town.)

Are you within flying range of Northern Arizona? Then check out the Route 66 Fun Run!

Photo: Mr. Dwarf Car Ernie Adams at the Route 66 Fun Run in Seligman, with his miniature ’39 Chevy. See more of Greg’s Fun Run photos here.

©2011, 2022 Gregory N. Brown


If you enjoyed this story, you’ll love Greg’s book, Flying Carpet: The Soul of an Airplane. Autographed copies available!