Airport Stories: Tailwheel on Ice

Well, here I am, middle of December, 2 months and 1 day since I last flew. Why that long? Weather, the flu, mechanical problems, more unsuitable weather…

A number of things have changed. It’s a lot colder. About 50 degrees F colder (about 27 C colder). I have scheduled my lesson time 1 hour later than I was doing this summer, and even so, I still have to leave my home before dawn to arrive on time. There is the necessity of scraping ice and frost off the windows of my car, in the dark, prior to leaving. And it’s cold. Wait, I think I mentioned that.

Yeah, it’s cold: 12F/-11C. Brrr.

It’s definitely necessary to dress for the weather - at the very least there’s the pre-flight to get through, but also, in my experience, the heaters in small airplanes are never spectacular. I also remember how drafty the Citabria was in the summer time. Granted, some of that was from air vents that are, no doubt, blocked off this time of year but hey, I’ve been doing this awhile. Old airplanes leak air. They are not hermetically sealed objects. Then there are worries about maybe getting stuck somewhere you didn’t plan to be.

Here’s how this little pilot dressed for the weather on this particular day, feet to hair:

First, wool socks. Real wool socks. There is no substitute for real wool, except maybe Gortex, and I don’t own any Gortex socks. I’ve had frostbite. I don’t want it ever again. Wool socks, because they retain warmth even when your feet sweat or, worse yet, get wet. Not that anyone intends to get their feet wet in winter but how do you think I got that frostbite?

Sneakers/running shoes/whatever we’re calling them these days. OK, after the big deal about the socks, why those? Because my boots, although great for tromping around in deep snow and on ice, are too clunky to allow adept use of the rudder pedals. Since use of the rudder is vital to safety, sneakers it is. Judging by the footwear I see on other pilots I am not the only person with this issue. And another reason to wear wool socks, as it will be them doing most of the work of keeping my feet warm, not my shoes. The shoes, being leather, are somewhat resistant to wet, at least, and on this day I am unlikely to encounter unfrozen water in any case.

Long underwear and blue jeans over those. T-shirt, turtleneck, and sweatshirt. Coat, gloves, scarf, hat, and sunglasses. Because the sun reflecting off the snow is brutal.

Spare clothes: yes, I do carry spare clothes. A full set, including shoes and underwear. I carry TWO “spare” pairs of gloves, because they do occassionally get wet, particuarly when checking airplane fluids prior to departure. I carry at least one pair of spare glasses, too. And my boots, although clunkers, are coming with me. I am driving 70 miles each way in a Midwestern winter. Although the car was serviced just this week, there is always the possibility of either breakdown, accident, or some unforeseen delay. The car emergency kit contains an old down comforter and some chemical handwarmers, among other things which I hope I never really need to use. I can’t use the boots for flying, but I might need them on the road. I suppose it says something about how I evaluate the risks that I come equipped more for a breakdown on the road than in the air.

This, by the way, is not my Ultimate Cold Wardrobe - I have wool sweaters, too, and wool hat and scarves, and even an alpaca wool poncho that in extreme cold I’ll throw over my down coat - that’s good down to 40 below (which, if you didn’t know already, is the same temperature in either Fareinheit or Celcius. The fact I know this might tell you something about serious I am about cold weather activities).

Anyhow, I “gear up” and step outside. The sky is clear and purple, shading to cobalt blue near the east with a hint of salmon pink and some peach. Still air and very, very quiet, almost true silence. Full moon out this morning. Snow and ice crunchy underfoot from the last thaw and freeze cycle. I tromp over to the car feeling quite comfortable, in fact - all snug and comfortable in my clothes, feeling the cold on the tip of my nose and on my cheekbones. I start the car, letting it warm up with the heater and defroster going while I dump my flight bag and spare-clothes duffle and boots in the trunk, then get the cleaning tools out and scrape and brush the night’s accumulation of frost and snow off the windows. Keeping my footing wasn’t too bad - there was some ice underfoot but it was rough enough to provide some traction. I got in, got settled, and drove off into a slow-motion winter dawn, the only stop a pause to fill up the gas tank. Just in case.

A surprisingly high number of people are on the road with me this morning - early morning Christmas shoppers? They did seem clustered around the malls. Had to turn the heater down - I was dressed for outside, after all, not inside and almost started sweating before I dialed it down.

One interesting weather phenomena was observed along the way. While approaching the Des Plaines river I noticed what appeared to be either very low clouds or fog. Oh, no!… but as I got closer, then went over the bridge to cross the river, I saw that while this was, indeed, fog and mist it was a highly localized effect. The river, which was still unfrozen and flowing, was apparently warmer than the air above it. As a result, relatively warm (and trust me, it would have only been relative warmth, to bare human skin it would have still been perceived as cold) air rose off the river and met the colder air above it, which then lowered the temperature of the rising air enough that mist/fog formed. This formed towering walls of the stuff, about 200-300 feet above the river that showed a tendency to stay between the banks. It was like a giant mist fence running across the landscape. Back in ground school, while studying weather, I was told such effects and things like freezing fog were very rare and usually found only in the artic. I see them every winter around here, which makes me wonder if those groundschool materials were written by someone living in Flordia or Texas or the like. Anyhow, I only saw it over open waters that day - the DuPage river, which was frozen over where I crossed it, displayed no such thing.

I made good time out to Morris anyway, which was fortunate, as I had started a little later than I intended. I rolled into the parking lot 10 minutes ahead of lesson time.

I walked into the office trailer and the first thing I noticed was half the furniture was gone. Instead of everybody sitting around tables everyone was standing around empty floor space. Oh. And they were stuffing their faces with free donuts and coffee (provided on cold Saturday mornings). My instructor looks over at me, says hi, and then “We were just talking about you.”

“Oh?” The possibilities running through my mind range from Good to Bad to Funny Annecdote.

“We were trying to remember how long it had been since you were last here.”

“Two months.” Which I must have said with a long-suffering sigh, because sympathy was offered between the chuckles. I said I’d be ready in 10 minutes and hit the Little Pilot’s Room.

I came back into the main room, J handed me the clipboard, then casually mentioned being careful about walking out there and, oh yes, there was about two inches of snow in front of the hangar. I thought about that, and about how my back was feeling about all the snow shoveling I’d had to do this last week just to get in and out of my driveway, and all the boxes and stuff I’d had to move at work this week, and how much the airplane weighed… “You’ll help me with that?”

“Oh, sure - you wouldn’t be able to do it yourself. I’ll be there in 10 minutes or so.”

OK. I went out, dug my headset and a second pair of gloves out of my car, and one other item in bright paper and ribbons which I hid behind the paperwork clipboard while strolling out to the hangar. I then proceeded to pick my way along the ramp and through the hangars. I not only had to watch for moving machinery, as usual, but I also had to pay some attention to where I put my feet. There were slick spots. Oh, this was going to be interesting… but I needed to learn to handle a tailwheel on snow and ice at some point, right? Bush pilots do it all the time, right? Well, except for the ones who put their airplanes on skis in the winter…

Got to the hangar and went inside. Whoa, from blinding sunlight bouncing off snow to dark interior. There’s a light switch around here somewhere, off to the left, if I remember… >click< That’s better. And it’s a darn lucky thing I didn’t trip over that extension cord leading from the wall to under the engine cowling. It’s a built in heater for the engine, or at least the engine oil. The hangar isn’t heated, but the airplane is. I’ve never managed to get an airplane started under 20 degrees without some sort of pre-heating and it’s colder than that this morning. It’s also very hard on the engine. There are a variety of ways of getting the machine warm, and here we had the built in heater that only required a wall outlet.

Then it’s off to the usual preflight. Check the interior, check the paperwork, check the airplane, check the fuel, and so on. Checking the fuel with gloves on is a trick. The fuel sampling method works pretty well, except that it’s quite easy to get fuel on you. In summer, that’s annoying. In winter, you discover that evaporating/cooling gasoline will chill your hands even faster than getting them wet with water will. I’ve seen the effect not only produce colorful swearing, but also bring tears to the eyes of grown men. And gloves tend to absorb fuel, which then dries so that later, when your nose runs from the cold (mine invariably does) and you go to wipe it off so you don’t develop snot icicles you then get a whiff of avgas with its chemical aromas. Yuck. Which is why I carry multiple pairs of gloves. One set for preflighting, one set for actual flying so when I am attending to facial drips I don’t inadvertantly become victim to chemical self-assault.

I left a small box on J’s seat. Very annoying, as the bow came off and didn’t want to stick back on. I finally figured out it’s cold enough that the adhesive no longer wants to be sticky. Phooey. So I set the bow on top so it looked stuck on, what the heck, it’s the thought that counts, right?

I got the door opened but left the airplane plugged in - they cool down pretty quick otherwise. Snow and ice lumps plopped onto the ground as the door opened. Yes, indeed, there was about 2 inches of snow drifted up against the door, a private minature snowbank. I spotted J coming across the ramp. Looked like he was having as much fun as I was - not so long a stride today, and little itty bitty steps on the slick spots.

J walked into the hangar, asking a couple questions to be sure I hadn’t forgotten anything, double-checking the fuel, and so on. He was being single-minded about it, enough so he walked by the box in the back seat several times without noticing it. Well, I noticed it. He couldn’t see that? See it heck - despite the cold I could still smell the contents, even through the wrapping. What ever happened to situational awareness? J was over in the corner, picking up the towbar, looking at the snow, looking at the towbar, then setting it down. It wasn’t going to be much help today. He finished his puttering around. asked if I was ready, then we each took a strut and on a count of three started pushing.

One of the things about airplanes on the ground is that they do roll pretty well. We just needed to get enough speed to give us the momentum to punch through that little ridge of snow. Roll, roll, ~crunch~ r-o-l-l… Important not to stop - if you stop you are stuck and that will be a problem, perhaps one requiring powered tugs or something. Good luck getting anything like that quickly on a cold Saturday morning - folks were forming up posses to look for the absent-without-leave fuel truck guy at all the warm air/hot coffee locations, forget any other services. We got through the snowy hump and then we were out into the slick alley between hangars where the footing got treacherous. Not that it was a continous ice sheet - there were large patches of bare pavement and snow-with-traction, enough to get your walking confidence up just in time to put your foot down on ice. Whooo-eee! Don’t get cocky.

I said something about my concern regarding tailwheels, my lack of experience with said landing gear in winter, and airplanes on slick surfaces in general. J reassured me that he’d show me how it was done, it wasn’t too different than what I’d been doing, and not to worry, he didn’t think I’d have a problem.

Then it was everybody inside. I got in first and was getting settled, strapped in, and switched to my flying gloves (the fingers only go partway, leaving my fingertips bare which helps with manipulating switches while still keeping my hands warm), and so on. Then J got in, or rather started to get in.

“What’s this? - Oh, you didn’t have to do that…”

“Merry Christmas.”

Appreciative thank you noises were followed by the usual sounds and shakings of J getting in the back. Got the master switched on, the magnetos, mix in, crack the throttle – “J, how many primes today?”

“Give it five.”

So I did, then hit the starter. The prop went around one and half turns and then backed up about 1/8.

Huh. “That’s not right.”

“No, it’s not.”

(We both have a talent for stating the obvious)

What most likely happened was that the battery was feeling the effects of the cold, had enough juice to get the prop around that time and a half, but not enough to get past the next compression cycle. When the battery stopped pushing, it was the compressed air in one of the cylinders pushing back that gave us that 1/8 of a circle reverse. It doesn’t do that in summer because in summer enough turning to get just one cylinder through a compression-and-spark cycle is usually sufficient to start the engine, maybe two. As it gets colder the fuel gets less flammable, vaporizes more reluctantly, and the starter may need to crank much more than in warmer weather before the engine “catches” and starts running under its own power. With airplanes - as opposed to, say, your car - there is the additional complication that the batteries are small and the starter is expected to rotate a 35-40 lb/16-18 kg piece of steel.

“Hit the starter again.” came the Voice From Behind Me.

We got half turn out of that one. I started doing the mental checklist thing, in the slightly frantic mental voice master, mags, mix, prime, throttle - did I just come out here for noth-?SHUT UP! - master, mags, mix…

“I suppose we get out and have a look?” I said, starting to unbuckle.

“You stay put, I’ll get out.”

“OK.” I looked up at the electrical switches. “How about I turn this stuff off if you’re going to be around the prop?”

“Good idea.”

I reached up and flipped off the switches. J got out. I checked the switches. He asked me if they’re off. I looked again, yep, off. He asked for some more prime, which I supplied. He grabbed the prop and pulled it around. The sound effects were different than normal. Louder and… well, sort of a clankity-grinding thing going on.

"J, does that thing have any oil on it?

“It’s been awhile since it was flown, and with the cold…” Oh, yeah, in this weather the oil wants to turn to jelly. What was near the engine heater was warm enough, but out where the prop turns it was stiff. J pulled the prop around a couple more times, each time getting easier. He stepped back and looked down, shuffling his feet a little. Oh, I think I know where this is going… he’s looking for good footing…

“Get on the brakes.”

“Brakes on.”

“You’re sure?”

“Hard as I can.”

“Give it some prime.” he said. So I did. “Master on.” >click< “Mags on.” >click, click< I had my hand on the throttle and mix, watching J as he checked his footing one more time. J put one hand on a prop blade, pulled down and stepped back at the same time. The prop went rrrrrrRRRRRRR! just like it was supposed to do. J took a couple more steps away from it and circled around to get back into the airplane.

Well, that’s more like it.

At that point we needed to let the engine warm up anyway (and sure enough, the ammeter said the battery was busy recharging), so we both settled in and start checking the gauges and stuff, then the radios and intercom. I could hear me fine, and J fine, but J couldn’t hear me. This resulted in considerable switch flipping, unplugging and replugging stuff, and even an exchange of headsets. I suspected mine might be a problem, being a relatively inexpensive unit and showing some signs of wear, but it turned out to be J’s headset. I offered to shout for the next hour, but he declined the offer and after the smallest of whines (“That headset has always worked really well…”) J says to shut down the airplane to save fuel (and my dollars), got out, and picked his way across the ramp in search of another headset.

So there I sit, on a typical Midwestern winter day. I noticed that the airplane windows are starting to fog and frost. Grumble. The only thing to do is open the door and equalize inside and outside temperatures. Now I am sitting on a snow and ice covered landscape inside an airplane with zero insulation with the door open. Am I uncomfortable?

No - actually I’m quite comfy. God bless my warm wooly socks and long underwear. There’s no reason to be cold doing this, you just have to dress appropriately. I spent the time leaning back in my seat while mentally reviewing how to fly the Citrabria. J came back in due course and climbed in again. As soon he got settled I started the airplane up again - one push on the starter and the prop swung around immediately. They work sooooo much better when warm, really they do… and a little warm oil over everything helps, too. And some charge in the battery.

J did the first part of the taxi, showing how it reacted going over the slick spots. The key here being not to slam on the brakes when you start to slide. For one thing, the brakes on these airplanes aren’t great even at the best of times, on slick they’re useless. Just keep it aimed properly, go slow, and don’t panic. He advised not doing the runup over snow, so we found a bare patch of pavement for that (probably where others had done runups, or a jet had been idling. Jet exhaust is thousands of degrees hot, so they tend to leave the areas behind them free of ice and snow). Running up over snow has several negative side effects. For one thing, the prop, being a big fan, can loft lots of powdery snow over the airplane which can mess up your visibility if it sticks. If it sticks it also messes up your aerodynamics, which can seriously mess up your flying. Snow particles, at the speeds the prop moves, are abrasive and cause wear on the prop. It can also suck up small lumps of ice which can actually nick the metal/wood of the prop or do worse - bad enough if you notice when it happens, worse if you don’t and later lose a part of a prop blade while in flight. And, oh yes, chunks of stuff flung out of a prop can cause damage, too. With all that loose snow and ice in the air it can get sucked up into your air fliter then freeze there, depriving the engine of needed oxygen. In theory, this can cause your engine to overheat, but under conditions such as we had that was not a concern - the engine would quit entirely from oxygen starvation long before the temperatures rose to dangerous levels. Many years ago, when I was less experienced and flying with a less experienced instructor, I was on board when an air filter/inlet froze up shortly after take off. NOT a good feeling, with the rpm’s dropping, not very high off the ground, the guy next to me nursing the engine trying to pull more power out of it, and at the most power it could generate we couldn’t maintain altitude even in cold, dense air and were therefore in a slow but very real descent we couldn’t reverse. Safe landing on that occasion, but very nerve-wracking.

J also made sure I knew where the cabin heat was. He asked me if I could feel it. Feel what? Said I should be able to feel a little heat on my left foot. Upon reflection yes, my left foot was marginally warmer than the rest of me, and I felt that qualified as a little heat. I pointed out that I was dressed for the outside weather in any case and not uncomfortable. I also knew there would be more heat in a minute. Small airplane cabin heaters use the heat of the engine exhaust for a source of warmth, and at present the engine wasn’t producing a lot of “excess” heat. Once we went to full power there would be more warmth. Relatively speaking.

Anyhow, we got the last of the routine stuff out of the way, everything checked out fine, and it was off to the runway. I was sensing the occasional slick/ice patch under the wheels, but none of them were large, there was no wind to wrestle with this morning, and I didn’t have a problem maintaining directional control. I was also happy to note they had spent considerably more effort in cleaning off the runway than they had the rest of the airport.

Remember, I told myself it’s a lot colder than last time you did this - the tail is going to lift quicker, you’re going to lift off much sooner, so be ready for it. And about a beat later J said more or less the same thing. Full throttle, we roll forward, and I remember to move my feet like a good little taildragger pilot (J didn’t say a word, but I could still hear his voice in my head saying Move your feet, move your feet… A surprising amount of flying is conditioning and trained reflexes.) So far so good - up goes the tail, up goes the airplane in about half the distance we were using this summer, and climbing half again as fast. Once you get the engine woke up and warm the airplanes do like the cold weather. Sort of like me, come to think of it.

The landscape and sky look different on a cold winter day. I mean a really cold day, not what southerners think of as cold. A lot of landscape detail is lost under the smooth, white snow. This being rural country, most of that snow would remain untouched until the spring thaw. Ditches, fences, different types of vegetaion that lend distinction to various parts of the landscape are buried. There was a light haze layer near the ground which softened the sunlight beating down - a small mercy, as even with my best sunglasses I was still experiencing some glare problems. That same haze layer also blued out the horizon much more than usual. It was different from the usual blue effect you get with distance, on that morning the blue gave a sense of being opaque. It reminded me of the appearnce of liquid oxygen, which is a sky blue color if you can get a glimpse of it past the mist and fog that hangs out above an open container of it. Or maybe that was just my association of the landscape with cold affecting my adjetives. You could see clearly a fair distance away, but the blue mistiness erased much of the distinction between snow - reflecting the sky to some degree, so it, too, was pale blue - and the sky. The horizon was indistinct or, sometimes, not even there. The fact the ground was clearly visible for miles around was enough to keep me oriented, so I wasn’t concerned about visibility issues or safety of flight. It was eriee and beautiful and I spent about a half a minute enjoying the view between monitoring the engine instruments, looking for other traffic, and getting reaquainted with major landmarks.

We exited the immediate region of the airport and carefully scanned for other people - a white or metallic skinned airplane could easily fade into the mist, which is one reason I’ve come to prefer colors like orange, red, and yellow for airplanes. J was giving some of the other traffic position reports so they knew where we were. The plan for the day was to first of all review some turns, slow flight, climbs, and descents both because I hadn’t flown for a couple months but also because I hadn’t handled the airplane in such cold conditions, which would affect performance significantly, after which we’d go back to landings.

We climbed up to 2,000 feet/610 m, which turned out to be above the haze layer. We emerged into a blue sky, but a darker “sky blue” that you’d ever see in summer because the upper level air was much drier, thus with less white water vapor to moderate the color. Brilliant sunlight - I was beginning to wish I had a second pair of sunglasses over the first (on long winter cross countries in extreme cold and sun I have actually done that). There was a sharp demarcation out in the distance that looked very much like a horizon… but wasn’t.

In fact, I said “That’s not a true horizon.”

J agreed with me. It was the top of the haze layer, which may or may not have been parallel to the actual horizon. If it wasn’t, and you used it as a horizon reference, you could wind up flying at strange angles without realizing it.

Now, looking down, we could still clearly see the ground. J was pointing out the major landmarks, to make sure I could see them and locate them in the transformed landscape. Familar watertowers, rivers (some with those “mist walls” above them, some not and only identifiable by the trees lining their banks), freeways, and, of course, the airport. Truthfully, with the snow-covered parking lots, patchy ramp areas, and snow on the building roofs the airport sort of blended into the landscape. Except for the runway. The runway was a thick, black stripe in the middle of the white landscape, very visible, more visible than it was in the summer.

At the same time, however, the top of the haze, as it ran out towards the horizon we couldn’t see, started to look more and more like the ground, like a layer of snow covered ground. Or the ice on a stream, where you could look down through the surface and indistinctly see what lay beneath. If you looked too far away from where you were you might mistake the top of the haze for the ground and think your altimeter was wrong. Or that you were lost over a landscape without features.

“OK,” said J “Let’s see a 30 degree left turn. Use whatever reference points work for you.”

Now that was an interesting problem - can’t trust the horizon you see, and there’s no artificial horizon in this airplane. But I can take a reference off the ground below, which is clearly visible for a good 10 miles/16 km or more before the atmospheric effects get to be a problem. You can also use the turn-and-bank indicator, your altimeter, airspeed, vertical speed indicator, eyes, ears, and your brains. The first left turn was a touch sloppy, but the next as near perfect as they get. Then a right turn - because almost all landing approaches are made with left turns, most pilots have much better left turns than right, and I’m no exception. After I demonstrated this little fact, it was decreed that all further turns that day would be to the right unless otherwise requested by J or required by landing rules. I did a number of right turns, until I could maintain altitude, airspeed, and bank. J is a stickler for precision. Which is OK - it’s one of the things I like about his teaching style. You can’t be too precise in flying.

J also spent part of his time looking out the side of the airplane, and down. I could tell that was happening even without seeing him because of the way the airplane responded to him shifting his weight. The issue today was geese. Specifically, Canada geese. Except some of them are no longer Canadian by birth, and no longer migrate. Why fly Alberta to Florida and back every year if you can hang out in the Chicago area and find enough food to live on? Especially since hunting them is forbidden in this area and there aren’t a lot of large goose-eating predators about. I think their biggest fatality rate is due to getting hit by semi-trailer trucks when flying low over freeways. And, of course, getting hit by airplanes.

This morning there are V’s of geese flying at low altitude back and forth over the landscape. The geese kept landing and taking off again, swirling around. J thought that with the snow cover and the cold they might be having trouble finding food and liquid water. Lots of geese, and they’re hanging out at the same altitude that we are. Canada geese can weigh up to 20 lbs/9 kg and fly up to 50 mph/80 kph. A head on collision between us and a goose would be a relative speed of around 150 mph/240 kph. 20 lbs/9 kg impacting the Citabria at 150 mph/240 kph would be a Bad Thing indeed - it would take out the windshield, or punch through the skin of the airplane with no trouble at all. Nevermind that it would kill the goose - a direct hit on a pilot could kill the human being. Usually, I just have to worry about other aircraft - today I have to worry about birds, which are smaller and therefore harder to see, more manuverable, and much more unpredictable in behavior. J was seriously suggesting that in the event of an inevitable collision I duck down as much as I could behind the panel, which would be the only protection available to me. His protection? Ducking down behind me. Maybe this is where the game Duck, Duck, Goose comes from: “Duck! Duck! It’s a Goose - aieEEEE!” THUD! Although, as he pointed out, it would probably be the goose we didn’t see that would kill us.

Once we’re reasonably sure we’re at a different altitude than most of the geese, it’s time get busy. First, a review of how to make the airplane go up and down. To some degree, this is to get used to how quickly it goes up and down, but there are also some Stupid Airplane Tricks involved. For instance, the uninitiated typically think that you make the airplane go up by pulling back on the stick to make the nose go up. And while that can (and frequently does) work, it’s not the only way to do it. If you’re at a steady airspeed, with the airplane set to fly hands-off, you can make it go up and down using just the throttle. More throttle, it goes up. Less throttle, it goes down. One advantage to doing it this way is that the airspeed doesn’t alter. If it’s trimmed for 100 adding more power makes it go up at 100, it doesn’t make the airplane go faster. Likewise, reduce power and it descends at the same speed. It’s like the machine is on an invisible string that lowers it up and down.

Then J throws slow flight at me. Climb up to 2500 feet/760 m, reduce speed to 60 mph/100 kp, maintain heading due north. Now, I’ve mentioned it before, but the slower you fly the less responsive the controls are. Up to a point, that point being where the airplane stops flying, which is called a “stall” (and is a gross over-simplification of what a stall is and how you wind up in one). As the airspeed goes down the nose goes up, which directs a higher portion of your available flying energy to holding you up rather than pushing you forward. The less responsive controls - well, that’s a lot like driving a car on an icy road which, come to think of it, I had my fill of on the drive to the airport. Quite easy to get a “fishtail” going, and whatever you tell the airplane to do, it will do it with more reluctance. You can actually move the stick or rudders a noticable distance before you get any reaction at all from the airplane, which can also be a little unsettling. Imagine turning the wheel of your car a quarter turn to the right but have the car continue going in a straight line forward - at slow speeds you need a much larger input to get the effect you want than you would need at cruise speed.

So, there I am, 30 degree right bank at 2500 feet/760 m and 60 mph/100 kph, trying to keep everything steady, the turn coordinated, and reminding myself not to trust the horizon I see too much, and I ask if that’s enough of a turn, should I roll out on a heading of 90 (that is, due east). No, says J, keep going - between the sun and the haze rolling out on 120 would be much harder. Oh, I get it, I said - this is all about being hard to do, which got me a laugh from the back. Well, I’ll show him, keeping everything rock steady, squinching my eyes down against the glare (while still trying to keep outside the cockpit in view and inside the cockpit in view) and rolling out heading directly towards the sun. Which must have gotten a passing grade because we then move into a gradual descent and head back towards the airport with a brief review of proper cold weather engine management along the way and, oh yes, a few minutes time in which to admire the artic scenery once again. It was pretty, and in some ways I wish I had brought a camera along although I never quite seem to capture atmospheric effects through a lens.

Back to work. J wanted to do the first landing, to show up the different handling characteristics at these temperatures and air densities (for you techno geeks, the density altitude was around 2,600 feet/795 m below sea level). With the air cold and dense the airplane was more reluctant to descend (although, of course, gravity was still in full operation, as usual) and tended to “float” more once in ground effect. Less power was required to get the job done, which, if you were used to hotter, thinner air could throw off your calculations for landing approach. Usually, this miscalculating isn’t to a serious degree but some re-adjustment is called for. A good pilot does the re-adjusting so smoothly it might not be noticable to a passenger, but it still occurs. I have experienced temperatures in this area ranging from -30 F to +105 F, which a significant spread in both weather and airplane performance.

Once the wheels were on the ground and we rolled for a bit J turned the airplane back over to me and told me to take off. Sure was nice to climb rapidly! We were both on birdwatch. Like airplanes, they can come at you from any direction. Unlike airplanes, they don’t carry radios, don’t give traffic position reports, and don’t follow standard FAA rules about traffic patterns and who has right of way.

Up and around, glance at the engine instruments (oil temp was still staying low, not surprising), and level off while still turning crosswind so I don’t blow my altitude. Reduce power midway along the downwind. Reduce power again, because I didn’t reduce it enough the first time. Slow the plane down… we’re still not descending. OK, power all the way back to idle (of course, then the engine cools down and you have to worry about that) and… OK, we’re starting our descent. Extend the downwind a little bit so I don’t have to dive for the field (which would cool the engine down even more), use distance to do the job of getting us down to where we want to be. Repress urge to get out of airplane, climb on top, and start jumping up and down on it to get it to go down a little faster. Spared just a moment to reflect upon the irony of the usual passenger fear of falling out of the sky contrasted with the current problem of having some difficulty getting down.

Turn final. OK, altitude not too bad - slip it a little to get back on track. Airspeed 60 mph/100 kph. We’re lined up - just a small drift to our left, the wind has finally woke up and gotten out of bed to join us this fine, icy morning. The drift is corrected easily. Lots of time, be patient. We’re over the end of the runway, over the numbers… we’re floating… we’re floating… we’re floating…

… we’re floating…

We’re running out of runway and we’re still not down on the ground. We’ve just levitated nearly a mile with the engine at idle and no significant loss of altitude. Wow, ground effect has been turned up this morning. Not a problem. Full power and go around. J had already suggested that a low pass was as good as a landing, maybe even better, and it was more important that I get a good feel of how the Citabria was handling than get the wheels on the ground.

Up we go. For the first time that morning I actually felt some heat coming out of the heater. Felt kind of good from the knees down. From the knees up I didn’t feel it at all. Presumably J was missing out on the heat entirely, sitting in the back as he was. As long as I didn’t hear teeth chattering over the intercom I wasn’t going to worry. I reduced the power even earlier, and more so than before (which also reduced the cabin heat, but it wasn’t like that was doing much for us anyway). The gauges and what I was seeing through the windows both looked better this time. I turned onto final at the altitude I wanted, at the speed I wanted, and it took only a moment to put in the wind correction.

Once again we’re over the runway. And floating… floating… but I’d adjusted the speed downward so we were actually in a descent this time. J said to go ahead and let the right wheel touch down. Which it did, just kissing the pavement, gentle as a butterfly landing on a flower. I held it there, rolling along on just one wheel, keeping everything steady, technically on the ground (well, one wheel anyway) but really still entirely flying, at ground level instead of up in the air, flying in very close formation with a planet.

“OK, you’ve got the right idea.” said J in an amused tone of voice. “Don’t get cocky, full power, do it again.”

And that’s just what I did - I did it again. Well, a little less showing off, I did let all three wheels down onto the ground for an actual landing, although this one was brief, just another gentle touch and then right back up. I wasn’t detecting any slick spots and the crosswind wasn’t a chore. I was doing better than I expected after a two month dry spell.

Third time around I didn’t quite have my airspeed where it should be and bounced. It wasn’t much of a bounce, sort of an authoritative bump, but it was then followed by a larger bump, then we started to — I went to full power, my somewhat sensitive “go-around” impulse having been triggered.

As we went up and around J said that while there was nothing inherently wrong with the go-around, he felt that I could have made that landing, especially with the air being so cold and supportive. Just add enough power to get it off the ground, back into ground effect, then lower it down again. Given where the bounce occured we still had plenty of runway to work with and just a fence to clear on the far end - this wasn’t a short field with 50 foot trees to worry about.

So that lead to a practice landing incorporating a touchdown, liftoff, and second touchdown delibrately. Control, precision, control - make the airplane do exactly what you want it to, make everything that happens a result of your concious decisions.

Then it was time for a full stop landing. Brought it around and down, striving for my Very Best Landing Ever. Yep, that crosswind was just a little bit stronger each time around but nothing I couldn’t handle. Bub-b-bump and we were down and rolling out. I’d touched down early enough to let most of the speed just bleed off, not wanting to jump on the brakes because sometimes there’s a slick spot you can’t see in winter although, again, I didn’t notice any. Also, while your indicated airspeed remains the same in winter, your actual airspeed (and groundspeed, after touchdown) in the dense air is actually less than indicated. If the gauge read “50”, my actual speed was slower so it took less distance to stop than in summer. (As you might have figured out from that previous sentence, when the air is exceptionally hot and/or thin your actual speed is higher than indicated, requiring more room to come to a halt)

I turned off the runway onto the taxiway, keeping an eye out for ice. The taxiway was not as clear as the runway, which is typical. One odd feature at Morris is that, while the runway and the ground immediately to either side are just about perfectly flat, for some reason the taxiway goes downward, so for awhile it runs below the level of the runway, then back up again. Why, no one knows. Surely somewhere in north east Illinois sufficient dirt or other suitable fill could be found to bring the taxiway up to runway level but it just never happened. Going down, of course, was no problem except for possible concerns about gaining too much speed. Going up wasn’t much of a problem, because the slope wasn’t that bad. However, there are two choices for leaving the taxiway to get to the ramp. I often take the first one, but on this particular morning one look and I elected not to - someone had definitely skimped on plowing that turn-off. I had had concerns about hitting a patch of ice and suddenly being just along for the ride as the tailwheel airplane surrended to the effects of slickness and wind. It occured to me that something worse than wind-skating in an airplane might be finding myself sliding backwards, downhill, under such circumstances. I took the far turn off, which had less stuff on it, a more gentle slope, and would not require me to drive uphill and upwind at the same time.

On the level ramp, out where there wasn’t anything to hit, J made a point to make sure I ran over some slick spots. Very interesting - if I watched one of the wheels, when they hit a spot like that the wheel would stop turning but the airplane would keep going. Unlike a car, an airplane doesn’t have to have a grip on the ground to retain steering control although at slow taxi speeds the flights controls aren’t very effective. Nonetheless, judicious use of those controls, along with proper throttle managment, can keep you in control and going the direction you want, rather than the direction the wind or ground slope would prefer. Keep it slow and be careful where you aim the airplane.

J had me taxi all the way back to the hangar, snow and ice and all, and get it parked in the usual position. While I was shutting everything down and doing the usual paperwork he got the hangar doors open. It took two of us to get the airplane back inside again. For the most part our feet had traction although there was that one spot where, when my foot came down, I went from pushing on the airplane strut to more or less hanging from it, along for the ride. A second or two later I’d been dragged past that icy patch and regained my footing. Pretty normal sub-freezing day at the airport.

J said he’d meet me back up in the office, leaving me to finish up. That meant making sure the airplane was completely shut down, the heater was plugged in again, and the hangar door secured. There are metal hooks on each side of the big door to make sure the door panels are pulled in tight against the building and won’t rip loose in a high wind. Even in summer you should double-check them, but in winter, with the potential for ice and snow to get into the works, you really do need to make sure on that. All done, I switched off the lights and went out the little people-sized door. I pulled it shut firmly, to make sure it locked, and that’s when a big ol’ pile of snow plopped onto my head.

Oh, I’m sure the look on my face was most indignant. You’d think with the big doors opening and closing and all the banging around that goes with it all the snow would have been knocked off, but noooooooo… And of course, my hands are full of headset and clipboard and keys. I’m sure I was standing there with a sizable pyramid of snow perched on top of my head. Grrr. I brushed off and picked my way across the ramp to the office.

I go in, and there’s still a whole bunch of people standing around eating donuts and cookies and drinking coffee and yakking, still no chairs and no tables. I wind my way through the crowd to put the clipboard away. With everyone bundled up in winter clothing, and therefore wider than usual, it’s almost claustrophobic. Somewhere in this herd of flight fanatics is J, and I’m supposed to find him. Of course, being at least a head shorter than most of these folks is not helping me search.

Well, if he isn’t in one end of this trailer he must be in the other, right? I squeeze past the main feeding trough, past the line waiting for the Little Pilot’s Room, past the next room which is also full of people standing around, then finally into the last room in line which is the only one with a table today. There are at least two briefings going on, and yes, there’s J. He’s talking with D, who is another instructor, a competitive aerobatic pilot (took first place in her category in the region this summer), and another one of J’s students. And, apparently, they’ve been discussing me.

It seems that I am truly nearing the end of this marathon. However, it is often the case that before you complete a training program you fly with someone other than your regular instructor. This keeps folks honest, makes sure no one is forgetting to teach vital stuff, proves the student can perform properly in front of other people, and so forth. J starts to introduce us to each other, at which point D and I make eye contact and we both come out with “I know her - we’ve flown together before.” J’s eyebrows go up in mild surprise, after which he gets to hear simultaneous girl-giggles.

“Earlier this summer.” said D.

“Back in May.” I said, then pointed at J “Before I started flying with you.”

J regained his verbal footing, said he wasn’t going to be around Morris on Christmas weekend, briefly referred to the whole flying with another instructor bit, and nodded towards D as he said she was available, how did I feel about that?

I felt fine about that, it was awful nice of D to be willing to come out on Christmas Eve, and I said as much. After which we started discussing convenient times. D also has to drive two hours to get to Morris, although she’s coming from an entirely different direction than I do. We exchanged cell phone numbers, then launched into a discussion of filling out weather requests in triplicate with the Big Guy in the Sky (“But I never know how to send the forms in! FedEx doesn’t deliver there. How do you get them submitted? Mine keep getting lost in transit”).

I guess any worries J might have had about me being reluctant to fly with someone else or perhaps not getting along with D were rather quickly laid to rest. After arrangements were made I said goodbye to everyone, wished them merry Christmas, and headed for home.

Most enjoyable read on a Christmas day…

Reminds me of my early days with a tail dragger.

First flyable airplane I ever owned. This was back in 1968.

A 1946, 85 HP Globe Swift, retractable gear, Beech Roby propeller ( the pitch could be adjusted from inside with a small window crank )

We want to know how yesterday went also. Limber up those typing fingers…