Well, we are on the cusp of another year being over, and what better way to spend the morning of New Year’s Eve than going for a flight lesson?
Today we started with some classroom time to go over ground reference maneuvers. Up until now, all of my flight training has been focused on how to actually fly the airplane — turning, climbing, descending, etc… While doing these lessons in the practice area, I’ve been able to sort of meander around without really worrying about where I was (with my CFI making sure we stayed where he wanted us to be). Today I had to start learning to fly a prescribed path…as my instructor put it, this is the first time I’ve been told where to fly the airplane instead of how to fly the airplane.
We went over two types of ground reference maneuvers: A rectangular pattern, where you pick out a rectangular field or other reference on the ground and practice flying along its boundaries, and turns around a point, where you pick an object on the ground and turn 360° around it, keeping your lateral distance from the object constant. These sound like simple exercises, but when you factor in the effect of wind on your flight path, they can become an exercise in frustration.
We preflighted the plane and I got us in the air (my takeoffs are becoming better, although I still have some room for improvement). My CFI directed me to a field he likes to use for the rectangular patterns and we started working on those first. I felt like I was behind the airplane the entire time. I’m still having trouble getting my sight pictures correct, so my CFI was constantly on me to correct my pitch attitude. Also, I didn’t have a good sense of how the wind would impact my turns — when the wind is blowing the plane, you have to crab the plane into the wind a bit if you want to maintain a straight track over the ground. You also need to alter how steeply you bank your turns, depending on which direction the wind is coming from relative to your turn. I wasn’t doing a great job of this so my rectangular pattern was a bit misshapen!
The purpose of teaching the rectangular pattern is to get you used to the concept of the airport traffic pattern, where you need to fly a rectangle around the runway you want to land on. It is really important to be able to fly the pattern accurately, since getting it wrong in the traffic pattern can disrupt the traffic flow of the airport and potentially put you in a collision path with another aircraft. I’ll definitely need to work on this some more.

We then flew to another area and did some turns around a point. Again, the wind caused me some trouble and I also had a bit of difficulty picking out good references on the ground to help keep me on track. Something else I struggled with was keeping my altitude constant while doing my turns, which is a requirement to pass the checkride. I wasn’t doing too badly, but I was starting to get a little frustrated.

We finished up and I headed back to DXR where my CFI got us back on the ground. I left the airport feeling a bit down on myself and thinking I might never get the hang of this. After some reflection, however, I remembered that this was the first time I was doing any flight while trying to keep reference to the ground and this would all feel like second nature by the time I was ready for my checkride. I compared it to driving a car — how I could effortlessly keep the car centered in my lane and knew exactly how much to accelerate or brake during turns to keep the car where I wanted. This didn’t happen after my first driving lesson, but gradually as I gained more experience.
Frustration aside, it was a fun lesson. It was the first lesson where I really got to focus on the view of the ground from the plane, and it reminded me of how lucky I am to be able to pursue this dream and why I love flying in the first place.
Flight time today: 1.2 hours
Total flight time to date: 9.1 hours
Total takeoffs to date: 3

