Since we're now on the west coast and our families are on the east coast,
Deanie needed to travel to New York
to visit her mother, and then Florida
to help clean up her mother's apartment. We had exhaustively researched
flights out of all the Los Angeles
area airports, as well as
Bakersfield, and although the
Bakersfield flights are a lot
more convenient from a driving standpoint, they're also a lot more expensive.
It turns out that there are direct flights from
Las Vegas, NV to
New York, and that a COZY can get
us from Tehachapi to
Las Vegas (going south around
R-2515) in about 1:20.
So, yesterday, I drove to work in the morning, worked for a couple hours,
checked the weather, and then drove back up to Tehachapi. 5 minutes from
the house to the airport, and 15 minutes to fuel up, add oil, and preflight.
We were off the ground at about 11:05 AM, into a 25 kt headwind. After
circling south around the Edwards AFB
restricted area, we headed east northeast past
Barstow.
Boy, there's an awful lot of nothing between
Barstow and
Las Vegas - if I wasn't flying
an airplane that needed air to stay up, so that I knew there was an atmosphere,
I could have easily been convinced that we had been transported to the
moon. I realized
after getting halfway to Las Vegas
that it might have been a mistake to take the direct route - maybe I should have
followed Interstate 15, for safety's sake. But, I will say, it's
absolutely beautiful - mountains, desert, dry lake beds, small outposts of
civilization - very different from what I'm used to.
Deanie has gotten very comfortable in the plane, and really appreciated
not having to drive 4 hours to Las
Vegas, plus the scenery is a lot better from 6500 - 9500 ft :-).
We called in to the Las Vegas
Class B from about 30 miles out. Even though I lived in the
Boston area, I had always avoided the
Boston and
New York City (not to mention the DC)
Class B's like the plague - they're exceedingly unfriendly to VFR traffic.
Over, under, or around - that's been my motto. However, to get to
McCarran Airport in
Las Vegas obviously the only
way there is through their Class B. Anyway, the controllers were VERY
friendly, explaining WHY they were vectoring me all over the place, and
explaining their VFR arrival procedures. Couldn't have added 5 minutes to
the arrival time, and it's cool flying over all the airliners and bizjets.
They landed us on 19R, which is essentially GA row (if you consider anything
smaller than a Gulfstream V to be GA :-) ). Dead calm winds. A 2 minute
taxi, and Atlantic
Aviation rolled out the red carpet. First, a "follow-me" car, then a
couple of folks in a golf-cart, then a 15 person van to take Deanie and
her 2 pieces of luggage to the FBO office. We said goodbye, and off she
went. From the FBO office, they shuttled her over to the main terminal in
more than enough time to catch her flight.
I switched ballast back to the front, set myself up with my sandwich in the
front seat, and called clearance delivery. A 5 minute taxi and wait on the
ground, and then I was back in the air on the way back to
Mojave to get
back to work. The tower controller said the plane looked like a lot of
fun, and asked me (as I was starting my takeoff roll) if I had seen the article
on the COZYJET
in the latest Sport
Aviation. I said that I hadn't yet, but I knew the plane and the
owner. These planes are great conversation starters with everyone :-).
Again, the controllers were very friendly, and I got
Flight Following
all the way back to
Mojave.
Dead calm winds at
Mojave, too. A couple more hours of work, and then the commute
flight back to Tehachapi
with my car-pool coworker. Dead calm there, too. Winds are funny out
here.
So, we get a great flight, see some scenery, and save a few hundred $$$ and a
couple of hours. Not too tacky.
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