by Bryan Cotton » Sat Aug 02, 2014 10:44 am
One funny left/right seat story:
Years ago, back when cars had carbs, I had about 100 hours tailwheel time, a helicopter rating, and an even smaller amount of Cessna nosedragger time. One of my buddies was also a new pilot, but he only flew nosewheel. We were both curious about flying right seat. Since we were both checked out renters at MMK we piled into the mighty 152 for a short x-c to Block Island, RI. He flew down there in the right seat. I played safety pilot on the left. The approach was hairy, I kept finding my hands wandering to the controls, then retracting them as I judged it to be intermittently survivable. The touchdown was the worst I had experienced (at that point in my flying career) but due to the forgiveness of the mighty 152 and its robustness, all worked out ok. My buddy was dejected. As he taxied up to the FBO, he suddenly brightened. "You know what the best part of that landing was? They are going to think YOU did it."
Now we are flying back, and I am in the right seat. I have the controls in my right hand, throttle in the left hand, all as God intended it to be. It was the best I ever felt in the 152, as I had not really made peace with the airplane in general. Back at home base, I did the best 152 landing I ever had done! Could not feel the ground, just a long squeal as the tires slowly spun up, angels were singing, I think I saw some butterflies and a unicorn, etc. We are pulling up to the pumps and my buddy says "know what the best part of that landing was - they are all going to think I did it!"
Apologies if I have told this story here before. I lose track. But I like the story!
Bryan Cotton
Poplar Grove, IL C77
Waiex 191 N191YX
Taildragger, Aerovee, acro ailerons
dual sticks with sport trainer controls
Prebuilt spars and machined angle kit
Year 2 flying and approaching 200 hours December 23