Long time
no see as usual.
During the
last month we have continued to study instrument flying which means to fly with
the help of radio beacons, GPS and instructions from air traffic control, see
previous post.
Also, all
students have been to the small city of Bardufoss close to Tromsö in northern
Norway. My class stayed there for 6 days and flew among steep mountains, deep
valleys and fjords. It was really awesome, and though we only flew about 6
hours per person it was a really valuable experience. This post is mainly for
showing a bunch of photos from that week.
All flying
was visual and the weather varied a lot so our ability to make important
decisions when the weather deteriorates was also tested. We also flew two
students together every time so that we can practice to cooperate which of
course is a highly necessary skill when flying commercially.
While I'm present at each location of all photos, this time most of them are not my own, so I've put letters in front of all pictures taken with cameras belonging to classmates. R marked photos are Rickard's and G marked photos are Gustav's. Thank you, Rickard and Gustav!
Photos:
Photos:
Me and three classmates flew to Norway in this nice PA-31 Navajo that two teachers
piloted. It took two refueling stops and about 5 hours flying time to get to
Bardufoss. After a while we were pretty tired...
Soon after departure from fuel stop Borlänge we passed over Falun! Nice to see from above!
The coastal
fjord scenery was just stunning.
Lunch break in Kiruna. The ramp personnell was so kind that they gave us a ride to central town to get food since the only restaurant at the airport was already closed. This was the local recommendation and they had really good hamburgers!
R
Cleared to
land runway 10 ("one zero"), Bardufoss.
R
School
aircraft parking at Bardufoss. There was regular flights of Norwegian to Oslo
from here, nice to watch their take-offs.
G
One of the
days we flew to Sweden, landed on Kiruna and Gällivare airports and flew around
the mountain range where Kebnekajse,
Sweden's highest mountain, is. The clouds were however too low for us to see
the top of Kebnekajse but flying beside it under the clouds was fantastic.
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