Well, I got my turn in the C182.... I loved it

!!! It's harder to control and there are more things to remember than in the C172, but I love that power! You climb at 500fpm in the C172 at 80mph, then in the C182, you climb at around 100mph, landing the 172 went quite well, landing the C182, took lots of power in my arms, yikes those bloody elevators can get really heavy, trust me, you need big strong arms if you want to fly it!! The funny thing is that I'm always having bloody crosswinds at my local airport where I'm training, which ever runway we take off or land on. You should have seen the bloody crosswind I had today on takeoff, in the C172 at lunch time! As I left the ground the wind took us off the side of the runway, had to add lots of rudder! Lucky I had left the ground, otherwise I would have snagged a few of the runway lights! One thing I can say about crosswinds: in the flight sim, you are forever having to turn the plane back onto the runway while rolling, whereas in real life, it doesn't make a hell of a difference, only really when you are at higher speeds.
My instructor did stalls and the 360 degree turn today. I loved the stalls! LoL

Especially when you get to the part when you're literally falling out of the sky, it was easy to recover in the C172, when you hit full throttle, it pulls you right out of the stall in matter of seconds! Cause it's nice and light. The turn wasn't bad either, the cool thing was when you pull back on the yoke while in a 60 degree bank, your head feels really heavy! As if you had a hangover, but worse! Very different to a flight sim!!! It's also cool when you suddenly just drop out of the sky a few feet, in turbulence and wind! It's a great feeling, leaving you stomach hanging about 10 feet above you!
One other thing that I noticed is that in real life it feels so much higher than in the flightsim, at 500 feet it's amazing how much you can see. My favourite is watching cars driving on roads way down beneath you! But near this airfield there's only 1 main road, and lots of bush, and farms. So if anything went wrong, you could really land anywhere. As long as you avoid the trees! And especially when you're coming into land and you're just getting lower and lower, over buildings and trees, then touchdown.
I reckon the hardest part of flying, is definately the ground school! For those of you wanting to get you're PPL, You get a textbook about an inch and a half thick, that you have to study, thoroughly! The hardest is the bloody Air Law, like for instance, learning all the different types of airspaces, the resticted ones, the danger zones, the prohibited airspaces, all the different types of ATC units, an basically that type of stuff. Then meteorology and weather, different weather and stuff. Then you have radio, which is slightly more difficult, especially when, here in Zim, the bloody Air Traffic Controller is listening to music! Or something when we are trying to hear what he's trying to say. They also talk bloody fast in a horrible accent and in a low tone, so you have to listen so carefully! Lucky that the airport isn't that busy. That's why you need good eye sight, so you can look around for other airplanes and all sorts.
I was scared I was going to fail my medical cause the colour blind test was quite difficult, cause they give you different pictures, with circles of different sizes, and you have to read letters or numbers off the page, the letters are made using the circles, in a different colour, very close to the background colour, so it can get confusing, I couldn't see about 3 of them, out of about 10, all you really need to be able to do is distinguish between greens and reds. That was the first time in my entire life when I thought that I could have been colour blind, I guess it's cause I sought of panicked cause I thought he was gonna fail me, I got really scared, cause that's probably "the" major thing, that you have to pass! Ah well, I only have to take that bloody medical again in 2 years time. Ah well, sorry about going on and on, but I got carried away. Now, this has to be one of the longest posts I've typed out, and my fingers are tired so I'm stopping now, even thought I could go on for a good 1000 more lines!
Happy flying,
Greg