After the Johnson Space Center personal tour, Ironflight left us at
Space Center Houston where we enjoyed the rest of the day.
It was then back to the Dye-Hose houseold for brisket that Ironflight had on the BBQ all day. That meal took us into the evening with much hangar flying.
In the morning, we flew over to Liberty Municipal for fuel with Dave & Avril Forster who then led us into Pecan Plantation for a nice 3-ship overhead approach. We visited my many RVers including, of course, Scott & Tanya Card who hosted us in their home a few nights before (thank you both
VERY much!)
Martin & Claudia Sutter and Tom & Bonnie Lewis took us in for the night since we were unable to fly north due to weather (I was going to the Tulsa area for the night and the Zilik's were heading to Colorado).
We took a group picture before departing Sunday morning for Terry County airport (BFE) in Brownfield for fuel then we said our goodbyes and went our separate ways.
The Ziliks flew towards Front Range near Denver, and we continued on to St. Johns (AZ) for fuel then Payson (AZ) for dinner. We departed Payson just after sunset ~2000 (PDT) for a smooth 2.5 hour flight home at 10.5K (with flight following and oxygen ;-) There was no moon for most of the flight so TruTrak was my friend!
Tanya & Scott Card, Gary Zilik and Tuppergal.
Tom Lewis, the Ziliks, Martin Sutter, Bonnie Lewis, Tuppergal, Claudia Sutter and me ;-)
Looking north up the mighty Rio Grande with Albuquerque at the base of the mountains.
Ran out of pics since it was dark when we left Payson!
As I write this, I see that we just passed 13,000 view on this thread, and that makes me feel that I was 'taking' many of you along with us!
This trip had us flying ~6720nm, and we put exactly 51.0 hours on the hobbs meter. The engine used 4 quarts of oil, and our fuel burn averaged 7.2 gallons/hour. The lowest we paid for fuel (per gallon) was $2.90 at Pecan and the highest was $5.26 on Cayman Brac.
Many have asked if I'm concerned about "flying over the water". I always share this because it's
very relevant: In my lifetime, I've been very fortunate to have survived being hit by
two drunk drivers and also survive a freeway shooting (remember those in the new in the early 1990s?)
I'm just fine with flying (over water, at night, cross-country), and I believe the most dangerous part of the trip is the drive to the airport ;-) And with proper maintenance, plenty of fuel, and staying away from the bad weather, we are probably going to get to where we are going.
This all said as I approach my 30th year as a pilot come this July 16th. Of course, each pilot has to determine their own 'comfort level'. Gary Sobek's mantra always rings in my head on every cross-country flight: "I'd rather be a live chicken than a dead duck". You can find this and other musings
here.
Now if you've enjoyed reading this entire thread, and I've got your attention since you are still reading this, you can be one of the first to know that I'm planning another RV flying adventure in 2011 to Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands. Axel Alvarez and Mike "Kahuna" Stewart have family in PR and St. John respectively, and "Turbo" Ed Darcy has a place on Virgin Gorda. Please
e-mail me directly (don't post to this thread please), and I will add your name to this "
list" of potential fliers ;-) The list always starts out big then shrinks as we approach our TBD departure date ;-)
Thank you again for following our trip across the USA to the Cayman Islands and back! And if you ever find yourself in Southern California, please stop in (and/or stay) at our home on the Rosamond Skypark (L00 :-)
Rosie & Tuppergal