
Every time I flare for landing, the runway disappears and I say, "Here goes!"
PS I haven't seen a picture of the lawnmower, but I'm guessing John Deere.
I really doubt you know Dan better than I do. He is not that kind of guy.I can’t help but wonder if this was a close pass that went very wrong.
Check your six, dude. I spent an hour lane-splitting in some heavy traffic yesterday - whichI have always disliked the phrase “head on a swivel”
Colonel wrote: Wed Jul 07, 2021 2:21 pm
I really doubt you know Dan better than I do. He is not that kind of guy.
I’ll remind you you’re speaking to a member of the brotherhood of two wheels. I get it. Shit last week I spotted a guy whom cut me off on the approach, who wasn’t on frequency, and tower didn’t know they were there. But that’s because I know where it’s important to be looking. I run into a lot of guys who take the head on a swivel thing too literally and have the look out pattern of a bobble head. They miss things in front of them because they’re checking spots that aren’t likely to have traffic in them. I knew one guy who obsessed with the idea someone might be flying below him, as if someone would somehow form up on his six o’clock low and stay there for two hundred miles. Well that did happen to someone I know, but those were specific circumstances. The point is, a lot of pilots don’t spend a lot of time looking in front of them - the stuff they’re going to run into. You see it a lot on YouTube. Guys make a big deal looking left and right when their procedures dictate they need to look out, but don’t spend a lot of time eyes forward. When I spent more time instructing and people asked how they needed to improve it was always “you need to pay more attention to where you’re going (ie looking ahead) than where other people are going (ie talking on the radio and trying to spot someone whom isn’t conflicting with them)”.
Check your six, dude. I spent an hour lane-splitting in some heavy traffic yesterday - which
I suspect would blow your mind - and I cannot emphasize the importance of situational awareness,
even if the concept is unimportant to some. Head down reading a lengthy checklist on
downwind makes my skin crawl.
Down here, everyone has ADS-B so that's never supposed to happen.a guy whom cut me off on the approach, who wasn’t on frequency, and tower didn’t know they were there