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Fuselages made of composite are like plastic - I'm the Plastic Pilot who flies the plastic planes
This is my website, and it's about modern general aviation, glass-cockpits, FADECs, but also aviation in general

When to stop flying ?

Deciding to take your first flying lesson is not always an easy decision to make. It’s often made of a mix of curiosity, apprehension, fear, and questions regarding one’s own abilities. Then comes the training phase, and the active phase of a flying life. But what about the decision to stop flying ?

One of the many things that differentiate flying light aircraft from other hobbies is the possibly high impact of an accident, for both oneself and the others. Not many pilots can afford two accidents. Deciding to quit flying is not an easy decision to make. Here are some personal thoughts on this topic.

Age limit ?
The aviation regulations define maximal age for airline pilots, but not for private pilots. If you think that UFO is Unidentified Flying Object, you should visit the site of the Unified Flying Octogenarians… As long as body and brain are up to the task, I don’t see any reason to stop.

Depending the kind of license held, pilots have to go through periodical medical checks, which go beyond a simple “reflex check”, or not. Unfortunately, things can change quickly, and it’s also a question of self-responsibility. Something I personally disapprove is the decision some pilots make to change aircraft / license category after their medical certificate got suspended. In my humble opinion, when the doc says stop, it’s time to stop.

Lack of time and experience ?
In that domain as well, regulations are quite clear. Minimal flight time is required to keep a license active. If the criteria are not met, privileges extension goes through a flight with an examiner, and probably training before that. The experience validation takes place every year, or two years, depending of the ratings held, but other recency rules impose shorter regulations.

Most pilot’s go through phases where they have less time / money / envy to fly. There can be many reasons for that, and even if it is possible to “maintain” ratings with a minimal activity, it is frustrating. Serious re-training shall be envisaged before restarting complex flying activities. Here again, personal responsibility is the golden rule.

The Big Fear
I don’t like pilots who never got afraid in flight. A pilot knowing no fear is either not able to recogize dangerous situations, or only fly in optimal situation. Both cases seems risky to me.

There were a couple of flights after which I asked myself if it would not be better to stop. Some resulted from my own mistakes, other from challenging weather, but I never gave up.

I understand that someone surviving something like a crash, an emergency landing, or other extreme cases can decide to stop. Hopefully I never had major accidents, so may be my personal big fear is still to come - touch wood !

Responsible pilot
Shall I change the name of this blog from PlasticPilot to ResponsiblePilot ? I realized that well after I started to fly, but the high responsibilities associated with that activity are also what makes it so attractive.

Making the final landing is not an easy decision, and pilots have to make it mostly on their own. I hope I won’t have to report it soon for myself. If you already made this decision yourself, or thought about it, feel free to share your thoughts via comments.

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“Au parking pour quitter” - Thoughts on my ultimate flight

Yesterday at 17:05 UTC, I landed a DA40 TDI on runway 17 in Cannes, after what was my ultimate flight, at least for a while. I knew this moment would come since changes started in my life, which will require to put my flying activities in brackets.

I flew much less than usual during the last months, and I already went through a couple of “last flights”: last DA 40 flight in the Alps, and my IFR renewal flight was nothing less than my last PA32 Saratoga flight and last flight in my Geneva homebase as well as last view of the Alps from a plane as PIC. These were steps towards yesterday…

flying-away.jpg

Years ago, after I started flying, I already thought on what could make me stop. I imagined my flying times coming to an end for medical or financial reasons, or because I would feel unsafe at a level instruction could not correct. The possibility of stopping IFR was in the air after I had an ear-lockage problem, but the effects finally disappeared. I know many private pilots who stopped when they got kids, but this was not my case - I even took our baby on a flight when she was 9 months old. (more…)

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Category: Pilots Talk
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