First off, thank you everyone for your congratulations and encouragement. It's nice to share an interest and hobby with so many positive and enthusiastic people!
TSC mentioned a 'trial flight', and I wonder if that meant a 'real' flight where a pilot takes you up and lets you put your hands on the controls for a bit. If such is the case, I did have the opportunity to do just that once when I was in high school. Some of the best 5-10 minutes of my life ever (and I stayed within 50 feet of my target altitude!).
As for further flight opportunities, I may have that as well. My father's long-time friend owns and operates a Cessna 170 (did I mention this already? mind must be slipping . . .). When then go on flights together, my father's friend teaches my father different piloting skills and lets my father fly the plane quite a bit. My father said that his friend would be more than willing to talk to me about flying. Big challenge there is distance. I live in Japan for another year, and then when I move back to the States, I will be living in North Dakota while my father and his friend live in south-eastern Washington (only two hops for a 170!). Still . . . a great dream . . .
and maybe an occasional possibility.
I'm rambling. Where was I?
How long did it take you to complete them? I know you said you did some more than once, but a rough guess of the hours spent is fine.
Well, I probably took about an hour or so for each lesson. Maybe two hours if there was a lot to read. Actually, it was the reading that took the most time. I am not a fast reader. I understand what I read easily enough, I just read slowly . . . at my own pace if you will. That, and I often re-read the same thing over and over again until I can remember the details easily. So, I maybe spent an hour reading and 15 - 20 minutes flying. I flew each lesson at least twice. And, I spaced the lessons out over a couple of weeks. I didn't let so much time go between lessons that I forgot what I was learning, but I wasn't rushing through them either. Of course, the first set of lessons are the easiest, so I have no idea how long the next set will take.
When I get done with those, I am sure I will be crowing about that, too! ;D
