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    Kiera Grange is a PPL!

    She’s beauty, she’s grace, but more importantly, she’s aced her private pilot checkride today! That’s right everyone, the scholarship queen, blondie supreme, and fabulous Kiera Grange is a certified private pilot (oh god help us)! While Kiera Grange seems gentle on the exterior, this woman is secretly a beast (but like in the good way). From being a recipient of many scholarships including the highly esteemed Reno Air Race Association scholarship, working… I don’t know how many jobs anymore, keeping active by casually racing triathlons…, and flying to her hearts content, Kiera Grange is one miracle of a human. You may be thinking to yourself, “Hey, I’ve seen that other fella in the picture before.” Kiera, being the busy body she is, had to run swiftly off to work this morning and opted for a picture with local DPE extraordinaire, Dave Tranquilla. Look at those smiles! Turns out examiners don’t have fangs like we thought (Just kidding 😉). Let’s give the illustrious Kiera Grange a huge round of applause on this incredible accomplishment! And we can’t forget Kiera’s lifeline and flight instructor, Nathan Morin, for guiding her along the way towards success! Great work you two! Keep up the amazing work!
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    From Trails to Tails: Seth Ruff Takes Flight as a Private Pilot!

    ​Seth Ruff is officially a Private Pilot!!  The sky isn’t the limit—it’s just the beginning for Seth! Known for his love of the great outdoors, Seth is now taking that adventurous spirit to new heights—literally. Whether he’s running for fun, exploring rugged trails, or now flying above the very mountains he once hiked, Seth’s passion for the outdoors knows no bounds. After being displaced with the recent Davis Fire, Seth didn’t let the setbacks stop him. His determination and grit only grew stronger, making today’s achievement even sweeter. Now, he’s not just conquering the ground but the skies, too. For someone who thrives on running for the sheer joy of it (people actually do that??), flying is just the next level of freedom. His journey is a reminder that with perseverance, no challenge is too great. A big shoutout as well to his CFI, Alex Spencer, for helping Seth reach this incredible milestone. Seth, you’re proof that whether it’s on the ground or in the sky, adventure is always just a step—or a flight—away. Congrats, Seth! The best views are now yours to enjoy from up above. 
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    Jared Garrido is officially a Private Pilot!!

    ​Jared Garrido is officially a pilot! This young overachiever is now free to soar the friendly skies (just below 18,000 feet for now). Jared’s been on an incredible journey—he graduated high school early, eats, sleeps, and breathes aviation, and even landed the prestigious Reno Air Race scholarship! But let’s not forget the real struggle: the sunshade (see picture). While Jared’s already nailing his landings, putting that sunshade in the plane? Let’s just say, he’s still working on it… We’ll blame it on the excitement of becoming a private pilot! Jared’s not just a standout because of his technical skills, though. His attitude and dedication are second to none. When you ask him to do something, he’s already on it, with that signature smile on his face. His supportive family has been behind him every step of the way, too. His dad is always hanging out at the airport, camera in hand, proudly sharing stories about his newly minted pilot son. It’s heartwarming to see such strong support. A big shoutout to Jared’s CFI, Alex Spencer, who’s been there to guide him through the ups and downs (pun intended). To accomplish this at such a young age sets Jared on a path for great things in aviation, and we couldn’t be prouder.
    Congratulations, Jared! We can’t wait to see where you fly next. And don’t worry, you’ll get the hang of that sunshade eventually.
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    Ryan Kwan: The Mountain Man is a PPL!!

    Guys… I’m scared. I was hiking the other day out in the mountains and there was this hermit of a man just staring at me with unblinking eyes from his porch... All I can say is that I’m thoroughly disturbed. But you know? Now that I’m thinking about it, he looked a lot like pilot extraordinaire and gym addict Ryan Kwan! (Ryan wants to be a hermit in the mountains when he grows up and this is what he gets for telling us 😉). This mountain man aviator decided to shave his beard and trade in his flannel for a clean pair of clothes. But why? To pass his checkride of course! To no one’s surprise, this diligent aviator crushed his checkride and became a private pilot today! You may be thinking to yourself, “Other than being freaked out by this guy in the woods, I feel like I’ve seen him somewhere else?” And you’d be right! Ryan has earned the coveted GBA pilot of the month award, and it’s safe to say that it was obviously well-deserved. Huge congratulations to Ryan and his CFI, Andrew Spanier, on this incredible accomplishment! We’re sure you’ll be seeing more of Ryan in the future, but until then, great work and keep it up, Ryan!
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    Follow Up From Instructor Meeting

    To follow up from the instructor meeting on Monday, I want to emphasize a few points. First, is to thank you for the work you keep doing! We are producing some good pilots out there and at a consistent and healthy pace. While we received some criticism that doesn’t imply we are doing things badly. If we were, students would not be passing. They are!

    To follow up on the “teardrop” issue. I agree with much of what Dave said on this. I have mentioned it often in conversation, too. I don’t honestly know where the term came from but it doesn’t really matter, to me. It’s how it is executed that matters. Truthfully if you want to call it a teardrop or a turtle doesn’t matter - it’s irrelevant. What is relevant is standard phraseology and safe piloting. The term “teardrop entry” doesn’t appear in the literature. What is more of issue, though, is how folks are reversing course and entering on the 45 to downwind. Dave is correct. I see it too. Too often people feel locked into crossing exactly 500 feet above TPA then execute the turn way too close to the pattern and often turn into traffic. The recommendation is to go at least two miles from the runway. Use the tool in ForeFlight that draws the pattern as a guide as it provides a great template to follow. Yes, ForeFlight calls that a teardrop but shame on them. The short story on this is that it is wise to practice all pattern entries and show their strengths and weaknesses. I’m not a big fan of “never” or “always” in any context with flying except in terms of gravity or running out of money. Each scenario has several respectable executions that work at that moment. It’s being dynamic that counts.

    On the cross country topic, efficiency is important in our instruction. Let’s face it, Lovelock is a great destination for us! Bob made a great point that it also is one of the few accessible routes that has great opportunities for VOR navigation - a skill I’d argue most of our PPL candidates are lacking at some level. From a risk perspective, it’s a lot less risky than destinations over the Sierra. I am not a fan of sending the average PPL student into eastern California. That’s an average, though. While Lovelock (and its long xc iterations) may seem redundant for the instructor, I still think it is one of our best choices for a solo cross country.  That said, there is no reason you and your student cannot fly to another airport for the cross country training - especially if there is an intrinsic motivator on behalf of the student (family lives there, favorite vacation spot, etc.). There is no requirement that the airport they fly to on the solo cross country is the one you trained them to for your dual. There is also no reason a student must go to Lovelock. If there’s a good reason to train them to another airport, that’s part of what aviation is all about. Embrace it! So, the short on this, we want all cross country flights to be with purpose, safe, meeting the regs and requirements for instruction. I encourage you to stir it up a bit but not too much. If you have an idea for a cross country for a student that you think would work great, run it by me. In the meantime, Lovelock can still be our fall-back standard destination. I want to encourage folks to branch out but only when they are ready.

    Regarding follow up to authentic assessments, we’re about 50/50. I’d like to see that ratio increase. We’re doing good with getting things posted but we need to do better with making the assessments mean something usable. Remember we need have specific, quantifiable “look-fors” with the tasks we are marking students on. Saying, “That’s a pretty good landing” versus “Good landing. You were on the ground within 200 feet of the aiming point, airspeed on final was right at 60, maintained centerline, and smooth control during braking.” Those are two different bits of feedback. Most of that can be in the oral debrief of the lesson but the written narrative should reflect that in an abbreviated way, also. Again, some of you do great with that but some of you need to beef it up a bit.

    Emergencies continue to be just so-so as a whole. Pilots need to get bold items on the emergency checklists committed to memory! Yes, checklists should be used IF THERE IS TIME but the emphasis should be on saving lives first, not pulling the checklist first. It’s a judgement call but I can guarantee that a lot of the simulated emergencies I introduce on mock checkrides would end in people getting hurt or killed if they were real. They’re not that crazy, either. Emergencies are probably the finest example of thinking outside the box. Personally, I have never had an actual emergency introduce itself like the worst case scenarios we typically teach in flight training. They are usually somewhere in-between. Also, for emergency landing spots, I often see people ignore great landing areas in favor of dangerous spots, for example. We’ll get to where we run out of altitude, recover, then I’ll ask what was wrong with the dry lakebed they ignored four miles back. You get the point.

    Last thing, I know several of you have been eyeballing other professional flying gigs as your hours build. Would you please keep me in the loop as you are looking? I need to keep a good eye on the future and predict needs for instructor staffing and knowing when you are looking will be helpful in that process! Also, it’s easy to develop ‘short timers disease’ as your horizons change. I know this is a tough gig and commend everyone for the hard work you put in creating safe and competent pilots that may very well fly you or your family to far off lands one day. If you do get a case of STD… wait… (just seeing if you read this far), please keep in mind the big picture of what you are doing as an instructor. It’s a huge responsibility and, in my biased opinion, one of the most important jobs in aviation - bar none. Thanks for all you do! Feel free to reach out with any questions.
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    Josh Defeated his Private Pilot Checkride!!

    Once upon a time, in a land not too far away, there was a human who dawned the name, Joshua Gilmore and he had a trial ahead of him. However, it may not be the kind of trial you’re thinking of. It wasn’t one with dwarfs, wizards, and magic, oh no, this was a trial of wits, flight, and an insurmountable amount of courage… Okay okay I’ll stop there… Josh may or may not like Dungeons and Dragons and we decided to abuse that 😉. In all seriousness, today we’re here to celebrate the astounding Joshua Gilmore who defeated his checkride with his elfish instincts and gnome-like intelligence and became a private pilot today!! Josh took his tonics and geared up for battle ready to face the checkride-beast head on, and to no one’s surprise, Josh was successful in his adventurous pursuits! If you’re saying to yourself, “Wow, that mug looks pretty familiar?” You may have seen Josh flexing his ogre muscles on the ramp as one of our weekend line techs! Josh has been working hard on the line and in his flight training and we’re incredibly excited to celebrate this other-worldly accomplishment with him! Let’s give Josh a huge “Hip Hip, Hoorah!” and his Bard and CFI, Nathan Morin, on this incredible accomplishment! Awesome work you two! But another victory for the wondrous storybooks!
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