Contract trip side gig today to aid with
,
&
. Four legs filed - 7 hours in the cockpit minimum. Happy for the occasional SIC side work.
Woke up 0330 for an hour drive to the plane and scheduled 0600 departure.
At 0430 I pulled into Whataburgerās drive thru to get a taquito. āCould I also have one packet of salt?ā Sure thing! āHave a nice day!ā Made eye contact with the cheerful lady. We established two way communication and fulfilled the challenge and response requirement.
When I got to the plane this was what was in the bottom of the bag.
14 peppers. 0 salt.

Ice, papers, coffee, ATIS, clearance, ground, radar, storms off the end of the runway, departure change, takeoff. Letās go to work. Ended up returning to the point of origin after being in cruise for 1.5 hours due to a issue that would require us to avoid all icing. Non-emergency but couldnāt land where we wanted due to increased runway requirements and forecast weather. Texts between the captain and home base resulted in the decision to return (we were empty and they found another plane to go get the client). At least the storms were still hanging around DFW, so yay!
Back home seven hours after I left.
Neither Embraer or Whataburger could pull it off today with the equipment at hand.
Pilot life, baby. ;^)
Letās hear your storiesā¦

Addendum:
The whole point of this post, I guess, is to let those thinking that his work is glamorous realize that a LOT of the time itās pretty much 180* the opposite <grin>. If youāre low time and itās your goal, itās absolutely doable, but Iām guessing it wonāt end up being what you think.
The saving grace of the day? For a few glorious minutes, westbound before sunrise, this was the view over my right shoulder. We were carrying the mail 500mph over the ground trying to outrun a sunrise terminator coming at us at 1,000mph. For a bit it was the best office view on earth.
It made up for the lack of salt, and reminded me again that I worked pretty much that same Whataburger job as a teenager, with thoughts of the sky. It took nearly four decades, but here we are. Seven miles above the surface and grateful.

The bright star on the left is Vega, in the constellation Lyra. Sulafat and Sheliak are also visible if you click on the image (the Ring Nebula M57 is in between those two stars).
The goal next week is to put another hour on the RV.
Woke up 0330 for an hour drive to the plane and scheduled 0600 departure.
At 0430 I pulled into Whataburgerās drive thru to get a taquito. āCould I also have one packet of salt?ā Sure thing! āHave a nice day!ā Made eye contact with the cheerful lady. We established two way communication and fulfilled the challenge and response requirement.
When I got to the plane this was what was in the bottom of the bag.
14 peppers. 0 salt.

Ice, papers, coffee, ATIS, clearance, ground, radar, storms off the end of the runway, departure change, takeoff. Letās go to work. Ended up returning to the point of origin after being in cruise for 1.5 hours due to a issue that would require us to avoid all icing. Non-emergency but couldnāt land where we wanted due to increased runway requirements and forecast weather. Texts between the captain and home base resulted in the decision to return (we were empty and they found another plane to go get the client). At least the storms were still hanging around DFW, so yay!
Back home seven hours after I left.
Neither Embraer or Whataburger could pull it off today with the equipment at hand.
Pilot life, baby. ;^)
Letās hear your storiesā¦

Addendum:
The whole point of this post, I guess, is to let those thinking that his work is glamorous realize that a LOT of the time itās pretty much 180* the opposite <grin>. If youāre low time and itās your goal, itās absolutely doable, but Iām guessing it wonāt end up being what you think.
The saving grace of the day? For a few glorious minutes, westbound before sunrise, this was the view over my right shoulder. We were carrying the mail 500mph over the ground trying to outrun a sunrise terminator coming at us at 1,000mph. For a bit it was the best office view on earth.
It made up for the lack of salt, and reminded me again that I worked pretty much that same Whataburger job as a teenager, with thoughts of the sky. It took nearly four decades, but here we are. Seven miles above the surface and grateful.

The bright star on the left is Vega, in the constellation Lyra. Sulafat and Sheliak are also visible if you click on the image (the Ring Nebula M57 is in between those two stars).
The goal next week is to put another hour on the RV.
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