Private pilot's license

There are three flight schools with multiple instructors at the local airport. Scheduling a couple discovery flights in the next two weeks. I live about 15 minute drive away in town. Local airspace is very busy thru the summer due to charter flights, fire fighting, and private pilots. I don't think there is permanent ATC, but they do temporary for the summer at least. And the Spokane international airport is only 40 miles away.
Get ATCLive or some other app and listen to controllers and pilots talk to each other.
And when flying alone, don't be afraid of saying "Spokane approach, Skyhawk N1234, STUDENT PILOT request..." They'll slow down with their instructions.
 
If you get your license, you should fly into the Baum Shelter in Warren for a pretty good burger.

Or, better yet, you could fly me there and I will buy the burgers!

I remember my dad talking the $100 burgers from when he had his plane. I think it will be $200 burgers now. Lets put it on the calendar for summer of 2027!
 
My brother was a commercial airline pilot (he just retired) and owns his own plane outright and still has a hard time justifying bothering to fly his personal plane much if at all. He has it hangered with a friend who flies it regularly (I think commercially) and does the annuals on it for free as long as my brother lets him fly it pretty much whenever he wants. His is a twin engine turbo prop and still doesn't seem like you can make the time and expense work vs. just driving somewhere for the most part. Especially if you need to haul any kind of stuff.

I have looked into buying a bush plane and have looked at the gyrocopters recently but short of living in Alaska it just doesn't seem to work out math wise. I can drive the 110 miles to my hunting property here in Texas in an hour and 45 minutes with whatever I want to take with me or I could fly in an hour and 15 minutes and need to have a complete setup of everything there waiting on me when I land.

Flying to my property in Colorado wouldn't really be an option either. The airport is 30 minutes from my land and I could maybe save 2 hours flying vs. driving. Same limitations, I would need to have a complete setup with a vehicle and everything at the Trinidad airport and not sure it would really save enough time to justify it.

Throw in the uncertainty of weather and it just seems like about the only reason to have a private pilots license is living somewhere with very limited roads or just for the fun of flying around. The new gyrocopters look pretty cool but the ones that are the coolest are pretty expensive. There is a new one that will do a jump start without a runway. Pretty cool.
 
That is a personal thing. For me I decided that if the weather was IFR I just would not wanting to be flying that day anyway, nor would the wife. The added costs and constant time involved in keeping current wasn't worth it for me. I did plenty of time flying under the hood with my buddy that was a CFI to keep the "just in case" skill so I would not do a JFK Jr. Never got into anything other than special VFR in real time needs.
@westbranch lives in Idaho - Mountain Country. Crappy as Wisonsin weather can be, this is a more demanding and changeable weather environment generally speaking... it just makes sense to have that added skill. Not necessary as you point out, and for sure a personal thing, but smart to have never the less.
 
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