Annie said:
What suggestions do you have for a beginning student/pilot to make extra certain they have checked for all WX possibilities in that area? I know about the winds aloft maps, and the basic charts, but are there other sources, that provide more current info, before take off?
Thank you,
My thoughts and prayers for his family...I've flown and driven in that part of the world...
The weather in the Puget Sound area is rough on VFR
pilots. You can make bank that the first time it clouds
up on a sunday afternoon in september or october some
one is going to try to scud run somewhere they ought
not. I flew out of the now gone-the-way-of-all-good-
things Martha Lake Airport. Lots of Stratogranitius...
Icing? The Brits brought the Concord there to do the
tests on the anti-icing equipment.
Know the local area. Learn it. Fly around low on
a nice day and pretend you can only see two miles
with a safety pilot and scare yourself into learning
to not do it for real.
Get access to a NOAA weather radio and listen to
the weather on bad days-learn the trouble spots.
OLY, PAE, SEA and Bummertown (Bremerton) can be on
their butts in drizzle-fog but BFI in all probablility
will be MVFR (unless the whole thing is fogged in),
and they can get you vectors to an approach if
it comes to that.
Lots of times visibility seems less when flying low
over water. Then there are the times that it really
is!
How to avoid trouble flying up there?
1) Have an escape plan
2) Learn to understand the forcasts, then look
out your own damm window and see if it makes
sense, and
3) have an escape plan.
ps-escape plans include hotels, rental cars
and a few cold ones at the Vault Room when
you get stuck in Prosser cause the passes
fogged in. Be careful, and you may avoid
some of my grey hairs...
"stuck at...where?"
hehehe...'course I liked getting stuck in
Reno myself...