Thursday, September 20, 2012

Exam Kablam Part 2!

I passed my instrument written exam! I got an 85% on it which in the flying world just means Pass!

What's next? Continuing with flight training to prepare myself for the practical and oral test and to be comfortable with flying the approaches and maneuvers. After that will be commercial license and then possibly an instructors license, then off to mechanic school. I am still planning out the way will work and I'll keep you posted on where God is leading me!

God surely provides through trusting in Him because without that I would be a train wreck! I want to be able to glorify God in everything I do and today I got to honor Him and thank Him for the ability He has given me to succeed in school, flying, and in everything I am doing. I give all the praise to HIM!
1 Chronicles 29:13:  "Now therefore, our God, we thank You, and praise Your glorious name."


Thursday, September 13, 2012

Exam: Kablam!




Well it's official! Next Thursday (the 20th) at 10 am I will be sitting behind a computer taking my instrument written exam. In lay mans terms it's like taking the driver's license test. First you have to take the test with the questions, then you have to drive with an examiner, and then you pass or fail. The exam I will be taking next week is just the question part. I have to get 70% or better for passing and there are 60 questions.

In the near future I will take the 2nd part of the exam to get my instrument rating. This includes an oral exam (where the examiner asks you questions about all aspects: weather, procedures, rules, etc.). Pretty much the written test questions but being asked by a person so that you understand what you've learned and are not just memorizing answers. The oral test is combined with the practical where I actually go fly with examiner and do maneuvers, approach procedures, etc. If I pass all 3 parts I will get my instrument rating!

Here is a brief overview of what the licenses/ tests are that I have to take just to make it clearer.
Anything that is a "rating" is tacked onto a license.


Private Pilot(40 hours)
Written- Done
Oral- Done
Practical- Done
                    Instrument Rating (40 hours plus 50 hours of cross country)
                    Written- September 20, 2012
                    Oral
                    Practical
                    50 hours of cross country flight (1 leg > 50 NM)- Done
 
                    Sea Plane Rating (~10 hours)
                    Oral
                    Practical

Commercial Pilot (~10-15 hours) (Larger/ more complex aircraft/ multi-engine… etc. Pilot/ co-pilot for hire)
Written
Oral
Practical
A&P (Airframe and Powerplant) Mechanics License (2 year degree program at a college/ university)
Written
Oral
Practical














Prayer requests:



~ Success with flying and exams


~ Rest from the stress of school/ all the things I have to get done


~ Full trust in the Lord that He will provide for my every need and that I can praise Him through my studying, work, and flying. 





More updates will come as things are happening! :)

























Sunday, September 9, 2012

Time flies when you fly (and when you don't).



 Busy, busy, busy! That’s what my life is like right now! I started my last year at UofL a couple weeks ago and have been getting into the swing of things with school work and getting used to a new schedule. This year I’m more involved with Cru (Campus Crusade for Christ- a non-denominational student group). I am Cru Team Leader which means I plan and coordinate our weekly meetings where we have worship, a speaker, and discussion groups. I am also involved in a Bible study with a few friends which just got started. Already, this semester God has been showing me His glorious creation and giving me a greater understanding of His gracious gift to us- sending His son to die on the cross for our sins! We cannot do anything to obtain salvation, no works or being good people. The only thing we can and should do is to put our faith in Christ! Galatians 2:15-16 states it 3 times in a row!

15 “We who are Jews by birth and not sinful Gentiles 16 know that a person is not justified by the works of the law, but by faith in Jesus Christ. So we, too, have put our faith in Christ Jesus that we may be justified by faith in[a] Christ and not by the works of the law, because by the works of the law no one will be justified.
A beautiful day to go flying in God's creation!

When I’m not at school, I’m at home studying or flying. I am still working on my instrument rating and have been studying hard for my written test which I will take in the next 2 weeks. This test consists of 60 questions dealing with weather, approach procedures, rules and regulations, and much more. I am almost done with my training for the flight aspect and will take the oral test and practical checkride (flight test) in the next 1-3 months. I have been trying to fly at least once a week lately and whenever the weather is subpar in order to get training in actual weather conditions. 
P51 Mustang that was on display at KJVY (Clark County)

With this year quickly on its’ way I am looking to what my future and what I will be doing. After I graduate in May (2013) I will attend an aviation mechanics school to get my Airframe and Powerplant (A&P) license. I need this for missionary flying so I can fix my plane if I crash in the middle of nowhere. I am still looking into which schools to go to and into getting scholarships to help pay for that. You can be praying for God to provide for me as he has done in the past and so that I can follow Him faithfully. Right now my top choice is Redstone College in Broomfield, Colorado (just outside of Denver). I will begin applying to schools in November or December and will find out sometime in the spring where I get in and where I will go.

Here’s a quick overview of what I will be doing in the next year:
~Complete instrument rating training.
~Get my commercial license (10-15 hours) which will allow me to fly larger/ more complex planes but not jumbo jets/ 747s.
Getting gas after a lesson.
~Possibly get a seaplane rating.
~Build up flight hours (currently I have ~130)
~Apply and get accepted into mechanic schools.

Time is sure going really fast but I praise God for giving me that ability to do everything that He has blessed me with, even if that means I'm always busy! I'll keep you posted on what else is going on!

Fly with Christ,
Helen

Friday, June 29, 2012

Why we do what we do.


Take a look at this short video about MAF and why MAFers do what they do. 
 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xWjgcgUPIfs&feature=youtu.be

I am getting more and more excited to go out into the mission field and work with MAF (Mission Aviation Fellowship) or another Christian aviation organization. I just finished reading the book Jungle Pilot by Russell T. Hitt. The book is about how MAF began and ultimately the story of how missionary pilot, Nate Saint, and four other missionaries lived their lives for the gospel and died trying to share it with a savage tribe of Indians in South America. It is such a wonderful story of how they used their gift of flying to enable the gospel to reach the unreached. 

Matthew 24:14 “And this gospel of the kingdom shall be preached in all the world for a witness unto all nations; and then shall the end come.”

I’m getting closer and closer to going out into the world wherever God leads me. I recently started my instrument rating training. This training will equip me to be able to fly in less than perfect weather conditions as well as to go to more places at night. In my training I focus on controlling the airplane as if I could not see anything outside and I just focus on the flight deck. 

The requirements to get an instrument rating are having 50 hours of cross-country flight time as pilot in command, 40 hours of actual or simulated instrument time, and a flight of 250 nautical miles along airways or by directed routing from an air traffic control facility. There are other minor requirements involved, but these are the basics.

I have also been looking at schools to go to for my aviation mechanics certificate. I will attend a mechanics school after I graduate next May for 1-2 years. My top choices as of now are Colorado and Alaska. I’m leaving it up to God to direct me in the way that He wants. 
Else and I at Redstone College (an aviation mechanics college) in Colorado.

Acts 20:24  However, I consider my life worth nothing to me; my only aim is to finish the race and complete the task the Lord Jesus has given me —the task of testifying to the good news of God’s grace...  This is why we [Christians and missionaries] do what we do.
Fly with Christ,
Helen

Monday, June 4, 2012

Mountains beyond mountains!


It’s been awhile since I’ve last posted! This past semester I was so busy with school work that I did not get many opportunities to fly. I have not taken lessons since I got my pilot’s license last June (2011) but I have been accumulating cross country hours (requirement= 50 nautical miles for one leg of the journey). 
[1 nautical mile= 1.15 miles]

After school ended, I picked up the pace with getting hours and went on several flights around Kentucky. For the past two weeks I was in Colorado visiting my sister and brother in law and enjoying the mountains! I got to run 2 races there (the Color Run 5k and Bolder Boulder 10k) and hike up a “fourteener” (mountains with summits above 14,000 ft elevation). I didn’t have too much trouble with the elevation and oxygen. While I was running and hiking it was a bit tougher.

Else (sister) and I after the Color Run in Denver, CO
Else and I after the Bolder Boulder 10k in Boulder, CO
Mount Bierstadt 14,065 feet (4,287 m)- the peak on the right

The best thing I got to do was fly in the mountains! The first day I had scheduled a flight with an instructor the winds were around 30 knots which is quite dangerous when you are in the mountains. [1 knot = 1.15 mph] We ended up rescheduling for the next Friday which was a perfect clear calm day! We went for a morning flight around 9 am and headed out to the mountains. I got to fly for part of the flight as well as take pictures while my instructor flew the airplane. It was magnificent to see how big the mountains really are and how awesome God has made the different parts of the earth! I could just sit in the mountains for hours on end looking at the beauty all around me! It was neat to fly at 12,000 ft and have mountain tops above us!
Flying over the Rockies
Valleys and mountain peaks
        
We planned on going to Leadville, CO (the highest airport in the US- ~10,000ft). However, since the winds were 11 knots crosswind and gusting at 21 knots it was safer not to land. We flew up the valley and circled around Leadville and then went back and landed at Buena Vista airport (10-15 miles down the valley). We sat in the sun for about 15 minutes and just enjoyed the scenery then flew back to Denver. I loved flying in the mountains because you get to see what everything looks like from above. 

The peaks were higher than we were!

 
Amos 4:13 He who forms the mountains, who creates the wind, and who reveals his thoughts to mankind, who turns dawn to darkness, and treads on the heights of the earth — the Lord God Almighty is his name. 
 
View from Buena Vista airport.

Fly with Christ, 
Helen