Episode 351 of the pilot the Pilot Podcast takes off now.
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Speaker AWhat's up?
Speaker AIt's Justin.
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Speaker BMy name is Arielle Johnson.
Speaker BCurrently I have my double I M I Mei.
Speaker BI'm teaching as an independent flight instructor.
Speaker BI own a Piper Cherokee 8434 whiskey.
Speaker BThat's where the Instagram Whiskey Flies come comes from.
Speaker BIs that tail number there?
Speaker BAnd I contract on the Citation CJ.
Speaker ASeries AV Nation what is going on?
Speaker AAnd welcome back to the Pilot the Pilot Podcast.
Speaker AMy name is Justin Seams and I am your host.
Speaker AToday's episode is with Ariel from Whiskey Flies on Instagram.
Speaker AShe has a crazy story.
Speaker AShe is not even 21 yet.
Speaker AShe's getting ready to go off her ATT CTP type rated in a citation.
Speaker AShe is doing so many things that I wish I did at that age.
Speaker AYou know I didn't get.
Speaker AI didn't even start flying until I was 20.
Speaker ASo she's already got more time, more type ratings, more ratings than I have before we even touch the plane at the same age, which is just crazy and is awesome.
Speaker AAnd I think it's really cool for people to see the drive someone that really loves the job and just really, really wants to be in this industry and really wants to do it and just having fun doing it.
Speaker ASo shout out Ariel.
Speaker AKeep that energy the whole time in your career and you're going to do great.
Speaker AI hope you all really enjoy this episode.
Speaker AIt was a lot of fun to talk with Ariel, especially another North Carolina native, and talk about how great our state is because we love North Carolina, North Carolinians love North Carolina.
Speaker AIt's a, it's a sickness, I promise.
Speaker ABut also it's the first in flight in birthplace aviation, but can talk about that later.
Speaker AOhio, we got some beef.
Speaker AAV Nation, I hope you enjoyed this episode.
Speaker ALike I said, it is great.
Speaker AYou know, shout out to everyone who has ordered the Pilot the Pilot magazine.
Speaker AWe are in deep for volume two right now.
Speaker ASo we are trying to get that volume out as soon as possible.
Speaker AI think the Plan date is March 15th.
Speaker AThat way we can keep the quarterly releases going.
Speaker AIt's been awesome.
Speaker AI am so thankful for everyone who has ordered a magazine.
Speaker AIt truly means the most to me, my wife and my son just to try this venture, see what we can do, see if we can become, you know, the biggest and best aviation magazine out there.
Speaker AAnd we can't do that without you.
Speaker ASo spread the word.
Speaker ALeave a review if you have bought that.
Speaker AI believe there's a way to leave a review on our website, pilothepilothq.com mag and if you haven't gotten one, what are you doing?
Speaker AIt's the most premium thing you'll ever see.
Speaker AI promise you.
Speaker AWhen you hold it in your hands, you're like, holy smokes, this thing is crazy.
Speaker AAs someone told me, it's not a magazine, it's a coffee table book.
Speaker ABecause it really is.
Speaker AIt is that impressive.
Speaker ABut AV Nation, I hope you are having a great day.
Speaker AAnd without any further ado, here's Ariel from Whiskey Flies on Instagram.
Speaker AAriel, what's going on?
Speaker AWelcome to the Pilot Pilot podcast.
Speaker BThank you.
Speaker BI'm so excited to be here.
Speaker AYeah, I'm excited to have you on as well.
Speaker ALike we talked about before we started recording, it's always great to talk to someone who flies in North Carolina, who lives in North Carolina.
Speaker AWe're probably biased, but it's one of the best states out there, especially to fly in.
Speaker AYou get all the weather you get.
Speaker AWell, mostly it's nice weather, but you can go to the beaching or the mountains.
Speaker AYou can fly the city.
Speaker AAnd there's always BQ1 for some of the best barbecue you'll ever have in your life.
Speaker BAbsolutely.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker ASo I always start every podcast out with why aviation?
Speaker AWhat was it for you that made you want to start flying?
Speaker BYeah, so growing up, my uncle always had a 172 or something of.
Speaker BOf that nature and everyone.
Speaker BI think it's like, somewhat of a misconception that I grew up in an aviation family, and that's not necessarily the case.
Speaker BI mean, I probably went flying with him like, two or three times before I started flying.
Speaker BBut my parents.
Speaker BParents are very much the kind of people that they're like, any.
Speaker BAny certification or rating or anything that you can learn while you're young, like, go for it, like, if it's your general contracting license, like, we support that fully.
Speaker BSo I was like, oh, that would be cool, you know.
Speaker BAnd I graduated high school so young that I had this gap year in between high school and college, and I thought I wanted to go to film school.
Speaker BWell, ended up in that gap year.
Speaker BRight before I graduated high school.
Speaker BI made the mistake of going to son and fun and seeing, like, the F35 and, you know, the Blue Angels and everything.
Speaker BAnd then, like, you're totally.
Speaker BYou're totally done after that.
Speaker BSo I started flying in that September, you know, sign of funds in April, started flying in September after that, just purely for fun.
Speaker BI was like, I'll just get my private.
Speaker BYou know, we already have an airplane in the family.
Speaker BI'll just fly for fun.
Speaker BAnd then somehow it turned into a career.
Speaker BI got bitten by the bug really bad.
Speaker ASo was there any kind of tie in to wanting to go back to film school or wanting to do anything else?
Speaker AOr was it just like, I'm going to be a pilot, I'm going to do this?
Speaker BI mean, I think I got hooked pretty bad.
Speaker BObviously, I love, you know, photography and film and all that, and I think I've been able to explore that more through my Instagram now.
Speaker BAnd I didn't really see that coming, but kind of just fell into place, you know, accidentally.
Speaker BSo I still get to, you know, have my creative outlet with that.
Speaker BBut it's still obviously aviation related.
Speaker AYeah, absolutely.
Speaker AAnd it's kind of cool about aviation is that you, even as you continue to progress in your career, it gives you the ability to either have Side hustles or other kind of businesses where you could still, you know, you can still create movies, you could still create photo, but you can still do what you want to do in your off time.
Speaker ASo it's one of those few jobs where when you're done flying, you don't have anything else to do.
Speaker AThis is all you can do whatever you want, literally.
Speaker BExactly.
Speaker BExactly.
Speaker BYeah, I know.
Speaker BI mean, there's so many, so many good people that, you know, create such wonderful things in aviation that they do fly.
Speaker BAnd maybe it is like they do some contract work, but like you said, they're.
Speaker BYou could always do something else, too.
Speaker AWhen you say you kind of had a gap year, you know, you're trying to figure out what you want to do.
Speaker AYou went to sun and Fun.
Speaker AYou came back, you're like, all right, flying school, I want to go fly.
Speaker AWhat's the process look like of, like, having this dream and wanting to do it, this new dream?
Speaker AAnd then was it just going straight to Google?
Speaker AWas it watching YouTube videos, looking at other people on Instagram?
Speaker AKind of.
Speaker AHow did you.
Speaker AYou probably immersed yourself in the whole community, but how did you make the choices and where you went to go fly and how you went to go fly?
Speaker BRight, Definitely.
Speaker BI mean, Stevie Triessenberg, I'm sure, you know, Stevie, she was always one of the people that I watched that I really looked up to.
Speaker BAnd I. I'm sure a lot of other female aviators can say the same.
Speaker BThe way I kind of went through is like, okay, here.
Speaker BHere's my Google search.
Speaker BObviously, having an uncle that went through the process was very beneficial.
Speaker BAnd, like, you know, I didn't really feel like I needed to take a discovery flight.
Speaker BLike, I already knew that.
Speaker BI. I liked it, obviously.
Speaker BSo just searched up, you know, here we've got three local airports in the area.
Speaker BWhat flight schools do we have?
Speaker BAnd honestly, this may sound a little bit vague, but the.
Speaker BThe way I picked the one that I.
Speaker BThat I went ended up going to for my private was the person that answered the phone was the most, you know, the nicest and the most helpful.
Speaker BAnd I was like, oh, it seems like, you know, they've got it together and they're really good at customer service, so.
Speaker BAnd he's the instructor that ended up selling me.
Speaker BSo that's.
Speaker BThat's how I picked.
Speaker BYou know, fortunately, I had a really good experience with flight instructors.
Speaker BI think a lot of people can't say that, and they kind of get.
Speaker BGet the run around and you hear these horror stories, but I'm very grateful that I had some good ones and I didn't get that experience.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AAnd there's something too about just being like a good person, like you said, and having that good customer service.
Speaker ABecause when I was going back and doing my training, when I moved back from Columbus back to Charlotte, North Carolina, I chose Monroe to do my training.
Speaker AAnd I was thinking of flight schools, and I looked at one at the Concorde, looked at ATP, looked at Fly Carolina, and there was a small little flight school in this really tiny building called Arrowwood Aviation.
Speaker AAnd the people there were just so nice.
Speaker AAnd they like, it's a bigger school now.
Speaker ABut they were incredibly nice.
Speaker AAnd I was just like, you know what?
Speaker AI don't feel comfortable going to these bigger schools.
Speaker AI'm gonna go to the small school.
Speaker AHopefully it works out.
Speaker AThere is ownership change and they almost went out of business.
Speaker AAnd Brandon came in and saved the day.
Speaker ANow he's turned into crazy cool operation.
Speaker ABut it's really something about just being around good people that can help foster your success.
Speaker BYeah, it's awesome.
Speaker BI mean, obviously being in the area.
Speaker BI know of Arrowwood now, and they have a beautiful fleet of cuses.
Speaker BAnd I've heard Brandon's name a ton.
Speaker BI haven't met him, but I do look forward to the day that I do get to meet him.
Speaker AYeah, well, Brandon doesn't answer my text or phone calls.
Speaker AHe's too busy now.
Speaker ASo Brandon ever listen, I'm gonna send this to him.
Speaker ABe like, brandon, you bum, call me back, man.
Speaker ALet me.
Speaker ALet me.
Speaker ALet me fly one of your plans.
Speaker AYeah, call us, dude.
Speaker ABut yeah, no, it was.
Speaker AWe definitely.
Speaker AHe didn't have the nicest airplanes when he started, but he has turned that place around and it is pretty awesome.
Speaker ASo shout out them.
Speaker ASo, yeah, so you made the phone calls, you reached out was.
Speaker AAnd, you know, you kind of had the idea of like, all right, cool, I'm gonna fly for fun.
Speaker AMy family has this airplane that I can fly.
Speaker AI have this cool opportunity.
Speaker ADid you understand kind of the cost of what you're getting into or kind of what it would look like to go from, you know, zero all the way to the eventual goal of airline pilot or commercial pilot or whatever it may be?
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BNo, I genuinely had no idea.
Speaker BLike, you could have told me 1500 and I would have been like, 1500 what?
Speaker BYou know, like, what does that mean?
Speaker BThe goal at the time was just to get my private.
Speaker BAnd fortunately, I was able to know, do solo in 15 hours, get my license in three, four months.
Speaker BSo it was very easy, streamlined process there.
Speaker BBut like the ratings after that, you know, I had no clue.
Speaker BObviously, throughout that process, I met people who did have a clue and were able to help me along the way and, you know, break everything down.
Speaker BAnd I think it can be a very, a very daunting process when you do, you look at it as a whole, you know, if you are someone who does, does do the research, say, I want to be an airline pilot.
Speaker BAnd you've got like eight different ratings and 1500 hours and you're like, oh my goodness, how am I going to do this?
Speaker BBut breaking it down piece by piece and like, okay, here's, here's one rating.
Speaker BIt's a, it's a written, it's a check ride.
Speaker BWhat do I have to do?
Speaker BYou know, it's going to take me three months.
Speaker BWhat do I have to do every day to get to that goal and kind of not letting it, letting it overwhelm you.
Speaker BBut I had no idea what the process is going to be like at all.
Speaker ANo, I mean, in the process, like when you're going through it too, like, you think something's going to happen, then something else happens.
Speaker AYou, you want to go, you go into it.
Speaker AWant to be an airline pilot or not wanting to be an airline pilot, and next thing you know, you're getting ready to take your ATP CTP course so you can have these cool opportunities.
Speaker BRight?
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BAnd everyone, I think everyone's, everyone's process is so different.
Speaker BWe ended up buying my airplane after private to do the rest of my ratings in.
Speaker BAnd I was like, you know, this is going to be a quick, easy process.
Speaker BAnd then 50 hours.
Speaker BAnd we decided the airplane decided it wanted a new engine, and that's four months that, you know, you're not planning.
Speaker BI always say, as a very blanket statement, most things in aviation are going to take longer and cost more than you ever thought.
Speaker BSo just be prepared.
Speaker BYou know, obviously have a positive mindset, but like, be prepared for maintenance and weather delays and all those things.
Speaker AYeah, I mean, I've always wanted to buy an airplane and I, I, I know, I understand maintenance, but I still in my mind, like, can't understand, like, budgeting for the maintenance or paying, you know, it's just like the expense that comes with actually owning an airplane outside of just flying it, Hangar fees and everything else.
Speaker BYeah, we were talking, we had this conversation the other night.
Speaker BWe're trying to figure out like a rough estimate of last year of how much it costs, you know, and I. I got a rough number, and I was talking to my dad about it.
Speaker BHe's like, there's no way.
Speaker BAnd I'm like, yeah, there's.
Speaker BI added up the invoices, and there's a way, you know, and it's just.
Speaker BIt's a tiny airplane.
Speaker BYou know, it doesn't have a.
Speaker BA constant speed prop and retractable gear.
Speaker BAnd then you get into all those things, and it can be.
Speaker BIt can be quite the nightmare, but it's still very fulfilling at the same time.
Speaker AAbsolutely.
Speaker AHas your dad wanted to be a pilot all through this process?
Speaker AEven, like, hey, if my daughter can do it, I can do it.
Speaker BIt's so funny.
Speaker BNo, not at all.
Speaker BHe.
Speaker BHe's pretty fascinated with helicopters.
Speaker BI'm like, well, let that be our next venture.
Speaker BHe says he's out of the aviation business.
Speaker BHe's one and he got one airplane, and that's all he needs.
Speaker BBut I've told him, you know, he's a.
Speaker BHe's a. Yeah, right.
Speaker BI mean, I can't either.
Speaker BHe's a pretty apprehensive flyer.
Speaker BI'm like, maybe if I.
Speaker BMaybe let me teach you how to land or teach you how to fight.
Speaker BNo interest whatsoever.
Speaker AThat's funny.
Speaker AHe's like, you got this.
Speaker AI trust you.
Speaker ALet's go.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BEven.
Speaker BEven the boys, like, you know, I have younger brothers, and I'm like, we have an airplane.
Speaker BI have my ratings.
Speaker BLike, don't you just want to do it for fun?
Speaker BThey're like, no, absolutely not.
Speaker AThat's what you do.
Speaker AI'm gonna go.
Speaker BIt's not for everybody.
Speaker AYeah, yeah.
Speaker AThat's what.
Speaker BYeah, yeah.
Speaker AUh, what's funny is, though, you never know.
Speaker AAs they get older, they might be like, you know what?
Speaker AMy sister could do it.
Speaker AWhy can't I do it?
Speaker ASo I wouldn't give up on them.
Speaker BYeah, yeah.
Speaker BThey.
Speaker BOf course, they say, like, again, like, with my dad with the helicopters, and I've dabbled in the helicopters, and they are really awesome, but they're like, well, why don't you fly helicopters?
Speaker BThat's so much cooler.
Speaker BI'm like, I'm pretty sure if I flew helicopters, you would say airplanes are cooler.
Speaker BIt's just not.
Speaker AIt's always the opposite.
Speaker ATalk to me about getting your private.
Speaker AYou know, you mentioned you kind of seem like it was like a pretty Good Accelerated timeline.
Speaker A15 hours.
Speaker AYou got your check right?
Speaker AYou did your check right.
Speaker ATwo to three months after.
Speaker ADid you think the whole process was pretty streamlined?
Speaker ADid you have some hiccups?
Speaker AAround the way.
Speaker AWas it extremely stressful?
Speaker AKind of just talk about your feelings.
Speaker BAnd how everything went, you know, I again, I feel like I had a really, really good experience.
Speaker BSome people do, you know, have these like nightmares experiences or something.
Speaker BSeems like really stressful.
Speaker BFortunately, I didn' feel like that I did have two different instructors throughout my private.
Speaker BSo the process of solo really was.
Speaker BI really enjoyed it.
Speaker BAnd I was like, okay, like, I'm ready to go.
Speaker BIt's time for you to get out of the airplane.
Speaker BYou know, like, I'm good.
Speaker BUm, yeah.
Speaker BAnd then I remember having like that frustration of learning how to land.
Speaker BI would call my uncle after every fight and I was just like, I just can't get it, you know, and he's like, no, it's just like it's going to be a light bulb one day and it's going to click on.
Speaker BSo I remember having some frustration in that part.
Speaker BAnd then, you know, you get your cross country solo done.
Speaker BI really, what I really enjoyed and I continued this for the rest of my ratings.
Speaker BBut I did glim's online ground school.
Speaker BSo I didn't do a ton of in person ground and very much like, give me something to read.
Speaker BAnd that's what GLIM is.
Speaker BIt's not videos.
Speaker BLike, give me something to read.
Speaker BI'll read it and I'll know it, but I want to do it at my pace and like, just get it done.
Speaker BSo that's what I carried out through all my ratings.
Speaker BSo I got the written done in a timely manner.
Speaker BKind of learned how I was going to go about every other rating after that.
Speaker BYou know, I made a flashcard for every, every question in the gleim, like little quizzes.
Speaker BAnd then that's just what I studied, took the written.
Speaker BThe process of getting a check ride was pretty easy, which I know that's not always the case, especially being a flight instructor now.
Speaker BI definitely know that's not always the case.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BAnd then I met, I met after my first instructor that soloed me, I had another flight instructor and he was absolutely wonderful, took me all the way through CFI and is still one of my best friends.
Speaker BUm, so it was a very, very good streamlined experience and I try to replicate that for students as much as I can now.
Speaker AYeah, absolutely.
Speaker AAnd you always want to be the, the instructor that you wanted as a student.
Speaker ASo it was awesome that you had some good instructors kind of model yourself after.
Speaker ABecause when, I mean, I'm not a CFI, but I've seen a lot of people become CFIs.
Speaker AIt's, you know, it's kind of scary.
Speaker AYou get like, what, 300, 400 hours?
Speaker AYou're like, all right, go teach this person how to fly.
Speaker ALike, I don't, I mean, I know, but like, I don't really know anything.
Speaker ABut yeah, it's just like.
Speaker AAnd, yeah, and yeah, it's just a, it's a wild world, you know, thinking about new pilots, teaching brand new pilots.
Speaker ABut it works out.
Speaker BYeah, it does, it does.
Speaker BSomehow.
Speaker BI remember I had that, like, that thought right before cfi, and I'm like, I mean, I was, I got it the day after my 19th birthday and I'm like, I'm just, I'm just a young girl.
Speaker BLike, you're telling me I'm supposed to teach these middle aged men how to fly?
Speaker BLike, oh my gosh.
Speaker BI remember that being.
Speaker BIt was more of a mental hurdle than anything, right?
Speaker BLike, you get over it.
Speaker BYou're like, oh, no, I can do this.
Speaker BLike, I'm good.
Speaker ADid you fight?
Speaker AWas it weird at all?
Speaker ALike, what?
Speaker ADid you have any issues kind of communicating with older men like that?
Speaker AOr did it seem like, were they just like good students and ready to go?
Speaker BYou know, honestly, I learned that.
Speaker BI think it's a huge advantage, especially people that maybe flew like 20, 30 years ago and they were out of some untowered airport and, you know, there wasn't gps, wasn't a thing, but they knew they had stick and rudder skills, they got their license and everything and then maybe they stopped and now they're coming back in their 60s or whatever.
Speaker BI think it's such an advantage because there is.
Speaker BIsn't that like, I mean, male ego on male ego kind of thing?
Speaker BLike, they don't feel as intimidated.
Speaker BIt's, it's like, you know, you can, you can obviously validate what they already know and then teach them what they don't know and they're a little more receptive to a girl sometimes.
Speaker BSo I think it's, I think sometimes it actually ended up being an advantage.
Speaker BAnd I thought it wasn't easy at all.
Speaker AYeah, that's good.
Speaker ALove that.
Speaker AWhen you were doing, which I guess I'll ask this, what was the hardest checkride you took?
Speaker AWas it your private, Was it instrument, commercial, cfi?
Speaker BHonestly, I feel like I really enjoyed everything.
Speaker BI was never nervous for a checkride except my cfi, I think, because it's like, it's that part where you switch from being the student to the instructor and you're like, I'm the one that's supposed to know what we're doing now.
Speaker BLike that's, that's a little bit daunting.
Speaker BAnd it's just such a long check ride, you know, that it's mainly, obviously, you know, everything you've done for commercial, it's just from the right seat.
Speaker BSo it's not the flying portion as much as is the ground portion.
Speaker BAnd I remember my GP called me.
Speaker BIt just had just switched from the PTS to the acs.
Speaker BAnd he was like, are you sure you want to take this?
Speaker BLike it was like the week after.
Speaker BAnd I was like, yeah.
Speaker BHe's like, well, I'm telling you, I've failed to three people before you, so are you sure?
Speaker BAre you sure you want to take this?
Speaker BAnd I was like, yeah.
Speaker BOkay.
Speaker BNow I'm even more nervous.
Speaker BI ended up taking it.
Speaker BI passed and everything.
Speaker BYeah, thanks.
Speaker BBut yeah, cfi I think was definitely the biggest.
Speaker BAnd then multi, maybe a little bit multi too.
Speaker BI don't think I was as nervous for that.
Speaker BBut you get, you know, in an airplane that has 180 horsepower, that's fixed prop, fixed gear, and then you get in a twin that's got two of those engines or three tracks and two constant speed props.
Speaker BAnd the plane that I did mine in was definitely not like updated avionics.
Speaker BSo now you're like twisting the CDI on top of all this stuff that I remember that just being like really task saturated I'm doing in that.
Speaker BAnd after like an hour in the airplane, you're like, I need to take a nap.
Speaker BUm, but it was still a lot of fun, I would say.
Speaker AI got this.
Speaker BYeah, yeah, yeah.
Speaker BCFI I think was definitely the hardest.
Speaker BYeah, yeah.
Speaker AI mean I didn't want to take my C5 check ride just cause I didn't want to do like a nine hour oral.
Speaker AI was like, I cannot do this right now.
Speaker AI am so over testing.
Speaker AJokes on me though, because there's so much more testing in aviation.
Speaker ANever stops.
Speaker AUm, yeah.
Speaker AWho did your check rides?
Speaker BUm, I did everything through Double I with Greg Hudson.
Speaker AOkay.
Speaker AI don't know Greg.
Speaker AI know of the two people I know, Joey Rogers and Zenda.
Speaker AI think her name was Zenda.
Speaker AI've heard a lot of stories about Zenda.
Speaker BOkay.
Speaker AOr Zelda, something like that.
Speaker BI've never.
Speaker BYeah, it's Zenda.
Speaker BShe's up out of Shiloh.
Speaker BI've never, I've met her actually when I was doing type training up in Lexington, she was in, in the room and I just walked in and introduced Myself, I've never tested with her.
Speaker BJoey Rogers, I believe, is out of South Carolina.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker AOut of Florence.
Speaker AJoeys who did all my checks.
Speaker BYeah, out of Florence.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BI actually know his son, and I've met him, but I've never tested with him either.
Speaker BIf you.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BIf you would have gone to Greg, you would know Greg for.
Speaker BHe's a bit of a local legend that.
Speaker BAnd then I did.
Speaker BHave you heard of Adam Rosenberg?
Speaker ANo.
Speaker BHe did my.
Speaker BHe did my Mei.
Speaker BAnd then obviously my type was another DP as well.
Speaker BHe's out of Concord.
Speaker BHe's a Czech airman.
Speaker BI want to say a check.
Speaker BAirman with American.
Speaker AOh, cool.
Speaker BAs well.
Speaker BHe was awesome to look out for.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AAll right, so let's talk about how you went into this with kind of no idea of making this a career.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker AYou're like, all right, well, my.
Speaker AThere's a plane in the family.
Speaker AI can just go fly for fun.
Speaker AYou know, I can satisfy pictures, filming.
Speaker AI can be like a.
Speaker AA awesome pilot, just having fun.
Speaker ABut as this progressed, you kind of transition to the fact, like, I think I want to make this my career.
Speaker BRight, Right.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BI mean, it.
Speaker BIt kind of all shifted during Private.
Speaker BI obviously didn't know exactly what that was going to look like in the timeline that it was going to take.
Speaker BObviously, you have to be 18 to get your commercial, and I was 17 when I got my private, so we had to wait on that.
Speaker BAnd now I'm, you know, still such a baby, so I'm waiting on ph and everything.
Speaker BFortunately, that's a very good problem to have that most people don't.
Speaker BBut, yeah, obviously it's a lot of anything can be fun when it's not a job.
Speaker BEven though flying is the best job, there's still days when you're like, oh, my gosh, you know, this is not great, but overall, it's just such a wonderful thing to get to do for work.
Speaker AYeah, absolutely.
Speaker AI mean, it's one of the greatest things you can do.
Speaker ATaking off, flying, seeing sunsets.
Speaker AIt's pretty cool.
Speaker ASo you're transitioning to figuring out that this is kind of the career you want to do.
Speaker AIs there corporate?
Speaker AWas airlines, Was it just kind of CFIing?
Speaker AWhat was your dream goal when you realized that you wanted to be a pilot?
Speaker BYeah, I definitely always looked forward to teaching.
Speaker BI know some people can very much not say that, but I think because I had such a good experience, I wanted to be that person that my flight instructor was to me for someone else.
Speaker BSo obviously, that, that time of teaching, I really looked forward to, but it was always corporate.
Speaker BLike, I've never, never thought airlines.
Speaker BI don't really know why.
Speaker BI think just once you do kind of get into that corporate environment and you're going to the FBOs, and it's very much a customer service, you know, face on face environment.
Speaker BAnd that's kind of what I like.
Speaker BYou know, some people, One of my friends just went to the airlines and we saw a fractional the other day, and the pilot was loading bags and he looked at me, he's like, I will never do that.
Speaker BYou know, and some people, that's just, they don't, they don't want to talk to people, they don't want to load bags, they don't want to put snacks and drinks on the airplane, and that's perfectly fine, you know, and Obviously, whether it's 91 or 135, those responsibilities are going to differ pretty, pretty greatly.
Speaker BBut yeah, it's always been corporate.
Speaker BI don't, I never really have thought, Never have thought airlines.
Speaker BAnd maybe that'll change.
Speaker BObviously, we know you're, you do change a lot as you progress through your career, but definitely corporate.
Speaker AYep.
Speaker AI used to be all corporate guy.
Speaker AAll corporate, yeah.
Speaker ANow I'm at the airline.
Speaker ASo never say never.
Speaker AThe airlines will always come.
Speaker AThey always.
Speaker ANever say never.
Speaker AI used to say never, and now I look like an idiot.
Speaker ABut it's all good.
Speaker AYou, you, you figure out what works for your life.
Speaker AAnd the great thing about aviation is you can either fly corporate or you can fly airlines.
Speaker AAnd the airlines will always be there.
Speaker AIt is best to get there as soon as you can, just based on seniority.
Speaker ABut, I mean, it's worth going the corporate route if you like that.
Speaker AWhether it's NetJets, whether it's Flexjet, whether it's the Dream 91 operator that has like the greatest job in the world, because those are out there.
Speaker AThey're hard to find, but those opportunities are.
Speaker AIt's definitely a fun.
Speaker AIt could be really fun and really rewarding.
Speaker AThere are different kind of jobs, like you said, like, you're loading bags, you're talking to the clients.
Speaker AYou're a customer service rep 247 during that flight.
Speaker AI mean, there's times we're flying in and someone's trying to talk to you while you are trying to have a stable.
Speaker AYou're 10,000ft.
Speaker AAnd you're like, all right, hang on, we'll talk about this later.
Speaker ABut you got to remember, there's no door.
Speaker AYou look, when you look back, you're looking at them either talking, eating, whatever may be.
Speaker ASo there's, there are a little bit more tasks, but it's, it's not bad.
Speaker AIt's nothing you can't handle.
Speaker BRight?
Speaker BI mean, there definitely are.
Speaker BAnd I think it differs greatly from 91 to 135 as well.
Speaker BAnd like you said, there's those dream, you know, salary, you're flying five days a month, like owner, 91 jobs that there are very few and far between.
Speaker BI think now I'm kind of looking to transition to 135 and more of that SOPs and, you know, a structured company with benefits, kind of operating more like an airline in a sense.
Speaker BObviously, I've been doing the 91 stuff.
Speaker BI remember one day we got in and I was talking to another pilot and I said, sometimes it's more like an assistant job.
Speaker BYou know, there's going to be things like, okay, here's where we're staying.
Speaker BHere's where the airport is.
Speaker BLike, figure out, you know, finding the airport with the cheapest gas and like, how long is that leg going to be?
Speaker BAnd are we like maximizing everything, you know, that you're obviously not going to do 135.
Speaker BBut I looked at it and I was like, I didn't, I didn't touch the flight controls.
Speaker BToday I was flying with an owner operator, you know, and I was like, there might be an event or something, and you're more, you're more there to assist and things like that.
Speaker BAnd if you're okay with that, wonderful.
Speaker BAnd if you're not, you're not, you know, it's, it's just whatever floats your boat.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AAnd I mean, this is my one promo I will do for my previous company, NetJets.
Speaker AIt is as much like an airline as it can possibly be in the corporate side where you try, you truly are a pilot, but there are some tasks you have to do.
Speaker ABut you don't have to worry about finding fuel.
Speaker AThey don't care.
Speaker AJust get the fuel you need to do to make sure it's safe.
Speaker AAll they care about is safety and taking care of the owners.
Speaker AThe only thing that you have to do, it's a little bit above and beyond, is catering.
Speaker ASometimes they'll call you like, hey, you're in the middle of nowhere.
Speaker AWe can't get catering.
Speaker ACan you go to the local grocery store, get a charcuterie board, some champagne, whatever.
Speaker AJust get anything, please.
Speaker ASo we have some food for.
Speaker BRight?
Speaker AWhich only happened like once or twice, right?
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BI've definitely done that.
Speaker BLike, okay, you've got a 30 minute turn.
Speaker BLike, you know, you text him like, hey, is Chick Fil a cool?
Speaker BYou know, like, let's just get whatever we can get on the airplane quickly.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BNetJets, net jets is the goal.
Speaker BSo hopefully that happens this summer.
Speaker AWell, I don't know if they like me anymore, but I'll give you, give you a shout out.
Speaker BDon't give me any more bad juju if they don't.
Speaker AYeah, I don't know, maybe I'll.
Speaker AMaybe I'll stay quiet.
Speaker AI'll.
Speaker AI'll let the.
Speaker AOver here.
Speaker BRepping the air lights.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker AHey, guys, it's me.
Speaker BI know I left you, but, yeah.
Speaker AI still love you.
Speaker AYeah, it, it was a great job.
Speaker AHighly recommend it to anyone.
Speaker AYou will just work.
Speaker AThey'll work you hard.
Speaker ABut I mean, it's all good.
Speaker AYou do, you'll have some cool opportunities.
Speaker AAnd I wouldn't trade it for anything of how I got my time, how I built kind of where I my career to get me to the airline.
Speaker ASo even if you want to stay there as a career, great.
Speaker AIf you want to go to the airlines.
Speaker AAirlines love NetJet pilots.
Speaker AThey know that they're trained well, they know that they work hard.
Speaker AThey know that they're not going to complain.
Speaker ASo, yeah, it's a great route to go, right?
Speaker BDefinitely.
Speaker BI feel like, you know, sometimes there's a time and a place for a certain thing and then maybe you grow out of that or your personal life changes and like, you need a.
Speaker BYou need a different schedule and that's okay that, you know, you serve your time and you did good, you're good at your job when you were there and that's all that matters.
Speaker AAbsolutely.
Speaker AAnd I think one of the most important kind of things to realize is you don't want to become the old grumpy pilot that everyone's like, oh, no, I'm flying with Justin.
Speaker ALike, all he does is complain about this job.
Speaker AAnd I could see myself turning into that.
Speaker AThat's how I was.
Speaker ALike, I gotta go.
Speaker AI cannot be this person.
Speaker AI have to go.
Speaker ASo, yeah, just whatever.
Speaker AThe biggest advice, be a good person and don't be the grumpy pilot that no one wants to fly with.
Speaker BYeah, exactly, exactly.
Speaker BDon't, don't.
Speaker AYeah, you kind of mentioned that you look like people you look up to Stevie with bayflight.
Speaker ABut is there anyone else like that, a true mentor that you would say you have that's helped you in this career?
Speaker BYeah, I Mean, I definitely.
Speaker BThere's a few.
Speaker BI call them.
Speaker BI call them the Grandpas.
Speaker BI don't know how much they love that nickname or not.
Speaker AThey're probably my age, too.
Speaker AThey're probably not even that old.
Speaker BNo, they're not.
Speaker BTrust me.
Speaker BThey're.
Speaker BThey're.
Speaker BWell, they have to be well above you, you know, falling out.
Speaker BNo, they, they genuinely.
Speaker BI mean, there's a ton, A ton of good people in general aviation and corporate aviation.
Speaker BYou're going to encounter a ton that are not good people, you know, But, But I have been very fortunate.
Speaker BOne, One that I think of in particular, that is.
Speaker BI mean, we probably talk every day on the phone.
Speaker BHe's like, ariel, stop calling me.
Speaker BBut he, he, he did my multi training on the airplane and then did my Mei.
Speaker BAnd he's kind of the one that got me into the citations.
Speaker BHe's a retired airline pilot, gem of a human being, and he's so wonder, like, anyone my age that I can introduce to him, I absolutely do, because he's just like a wealth of knowledge.
Speaker BYeah, there's, yeah, there's, There's a ton, A ton of people that I've met that are, that are really awesome.
Speaker AYeah, mentors are huge.
Speaker AI mean, if.
Speaker AI was gonna say, if you don't have a mentor, reach out to professional pilots of tomorrow, because they can place you with a mentor that can help you and get the goals that you want achieved.
Speaker ABut mentors can really help you out.
Speaker AYou know, they, they've seen a lot.
Speaker AYou, you kind of lean on their knowledge and be like, hey, like, I've heard of this carrier before, you know, and when you start applying for jobs, you're like, you get this one job, but you're like, you know what?
Speaker AStay away.
Speaker AThey seem great from the outside, but, like, I've seen their maintenance.
Speaker AI know people that have flown there before, and it just, it's not great.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker ASo mentors will definitely help you and will guide you down the path.
Speaker AAnd if anything, some people that are above me in my career, you know, they're like, hey, I flew aerial survey.
Speaker AReach out to this person person, Reach out to them, get the job.
Speaker AOr I flew freight next.
Speaker AAll right, cool.
Speaker ALet me reach out to them, get that job.
Speaker ASo mentors are awesome.
Speaker BExactly.
Speaker BI mean, I think aviation is such an industry of where networking matters so much.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BThat just, you know, and you don't even.
Speaker BMight even not have the intention of someone being a mentor.
Speaker BBut you walk up and I mean, I do it with netjets, pilots, all the time we might be in the same FBO and like, hey, how do you like the job?
Speaker BWhat do you not like about.
Speaker BWhat do you like about it?
Speaker BWould you have any tips of like, what.
Speaker BWhat time did you get hired?
Speaker BOn what?
Speaker BJust things like that.
Speaker BYeah, networking and communication is huge in this industry for sure.
Speaker AWhat do they say?
Speaker AI'm interested.
Speaker AWhat do they say when you ask them how to make a job?
Speaker AOr is it mixed?
Speaker AIs it like, oh, it's great, I love it.
Speaker BI haven't gotten anyone that says anything negative.
Speaker BThe other day I asked a dude, I was like, do you like it?
Speaker BHe's like, this is my second day.
Speaker BI'm an I.O.E.
Speaker BI was like, okay, so you're not.
Speaker AA very good person of the year.
Speaker BYeah, yeah.
Speaker BI had one dude, I had one dude that I didn't know this was a thing, but he said he bids his schedule.
Speaker BSchedule.
Speaker BAnd I didn't even know that.
Speaker BI thought it was like 8 and 6 or 7 and 7.
Speaker AYeah, six different schedules, I think.
Speaker AAnd you can kind of.
Speaker AIt's called a 70, 76 day, 72 day.
Speaker AI think they have like a 60 day and a 52 day.
Speaker AThen they have 7 and 7, 8 and 6.
Speaker AI think those are them.
Speaker ABut the, the other ones, you can kind of bid the days you want off.
Speaker AAnd it's kind of similar to an airline, but you'll work more than the 7 and 7 unless you're on the 60 day.
Speaker ABut yeah, lots.
Speaker AThere's.
Speaker AThere's a lot there.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AThe best thing you do is everyone's loved it, though.
Speaker AQuestions?
Speaker AYeah, no, I. I was.
Speaker AYeah, it's like I said before, it's a great place.
Speaker AGreat job.
Speaker AHighly recommend it.
Speaker AIf anyone's listening, it's great.
Speaker BI love it.
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Speaker AI've always, always wanted a plane from Textron Aviation.
Speaker AMy dream plane is a 182, maybe a 206.
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Speaker AYou're doing your training.
Speaker AYou know, you did your private.
Speaker AYou did your instrument commercial, you got your CFI and then your double I.
Speaker AAnd then you got into jets.
Speaker AHow did you get into judgment and that you had the mentor that kind of was like, hey, like, you know, let's get your rating and stuff like that.
Speaker ABut was there, you know, not everyone gets in the jets with as much time as you have.
Speaker ASo kind of talk about, about how you got into that, right?
Speaker AHow that played a role in.
Speaker AAnd you're fine.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BAgain, back, I mean, back to the networking thing.
Speaker BJust talking.
Speaker BAnd I think too, not just talking about backing that up with your skill set and people saying, like, you know, she is a good pilot.
Speaker BShe's good at what she does.
Speaker BYou're gonna work hard, you know, things like that.
Speaker BAnd so I ended up.
Speaker BThis was, oh, gosh, not this past December, but the fall, the previous one, I. I had like around 500 hours.
Speaker BI've been teaching at a flight school on the airport.
Speaker BI went and got my multi and he managed in a citation.
Speaker BAnd he was like, you know, I'll let you, you know, after.
Speaker BI'll let you write seat.
Speaker BAnd I was like, okay, cool.
Speaker BYou know, but in 91 Aviation, there's a lot of false promises.
Speaker BYou know, people say, I'm gonna send you to school on this or let's fly this.
Speaker BAnd it's like, you never.
Speaker BIt's ghost silence after that.
Speaker BAnd I was like, okay.
Speaker BYou know, I didn't think anything of it.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BTen years later, like, you're like super senior at an airline.
Speaker BAnd you're like, no, I don't need your job anymore.
Speaker BYeah, thanks.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BSo I ended up, you know, hopping and hopping in the right seat after I got my.
Speaker BWith him still teaching all throughout those five, 600 hours somewhere in there.
Speaker BAnd then the owner was like, hey, you know, it's a single pilot airplane.
Speaker BBut sometimes I like to have people with me just, you know, to work the Radios or, you know, if I'm flying my family, I would like to have someone who could get the airplane on the ground if needed.
Speaker BDo you want to fly with me?
Speaker BI was like, okay, sure.
Speaker BYou know, and even if you, I could log the time obviously, but experience is experience and the jet world as a whole, you know, 40,000ft is very different than 5,000ft and just, just the threat that you have up there versus the threat that you have down here.
Speaker BSo I was like, yeah, okay, sure.
Speaker BEnded up flying with them.
Speaker BThey said, well, do you want to go to type school?
Speaker BDo you want to get rated on the airplane again?
Speaker BI'm like, okay, back to the false promise thing.
Speaker BLike, yeah, sure, but I don't think it's going to happen.
Speaker BHe's like, no, seriously.
Speaker BSo ended up.
Speaker BAnd I mean, I think I went to type school in May, which was this past May.
Speaker BWe just did it in the airplane through executive flight training, which was a wonderful experience, just week long.
Speaker BUm, so I had around 800 hours and I was still teaching throughout all of this when I got rated on the airplane.
Speaker BAnd then another, another young guy that's even crazier than 800 hours got rated in the airplane with 300 hours.
Speaker BUm, so he had his first jet, he ice to type with like 300 and something hours.
Speaker BI know, it's crazy.
Speaker BAnd I remember like going into training and I had, I had been right seating in the airplane, but he was off in college and I was like, oh, you know, this dude's gonna slow me down.
Speaker BLike he doesn't know anything about the airplane.
Speaker BI bet he hasn't studied.
Speaker BLike the, the ground's just gonna be, be terrible.
Speaker BHe came in, he knew, he probably knew it better than I did.
Speaker BGot in the airplane, was doing V1 cuts and I'm like, oh my gosh, like you're making me look bad.
Speaker BI feel like I need to step up my game.
Speaker BYou and your 300 hours over here.
Speaker BUm, but it was a really wonderful experience.
Speaker BBut yeah, it was just kind of one of those things like, hey, I have the, I have the opportunity to help someone out in their career, you know, and let you build some, some multi time, some jet time.
Speaker BI mean, it's just like one of those needle in the haystack kind of things.
Speaker BAnd it's, it's been really, really awesome ever since.
Speaker ADid.
Speaker AWere you more nervous, would you say, for kind of like type rating?
Speaker ACause you know, like it's like the first big kind of plane you're gonna fly.
Speaker AIt's A jet, it's a little bit different, right?
Speaker ALike, it seems like it's like you could get paid.
Speaker ALike, things are moving.
Speaker AJust talk about your nerves going into the.
Speaker BThe type rating again.
Speaker BLike, I mean, I say my CFI was the thing that I was, like, kind of nervous for and everything else I was pretty chill about, and I felt like I. I was pretty.
Speaker BI'd been flying the airplane for, like, six months before, so I kind of knew, you know, how things.
Speaker BOPER instructor that we had with EFT was wonderful, and I feel like he prepared us really, really well.
Speaker BUm, I remember he was like, it's gonna be huge on performance.
Speaker BAnd I was like, oh, gosh.
Speaker BYou know, like, I've never done, like, performance charts like this.
Speaker BLike, you're whipping out this big binder that's this thick, and you're going through that.
Speaker BSo I was a little apprehensive about that.
Speaker BThey had flown on a DP to do the rating, but it was the most fun week ever.
Speaker BI mean, very rarely are you gonna get to do, like, V1 cuts in a real airplane.
Speaker BAnd I just remember having the best time.
Speaker BI told the.
Speaker BThe guy that I got typed with, I was like, wasn't that so much fun?
Speaker BLike, don't you want to go back and do that again?
Speaker BHe like, I was so stressed.
Speaker BI don't ever want to do that again.
Speaker BNo, but it really.
Speaker BIt really was the best time.
Speaker BIt was awesome.
Speaker AYou know, there.
Speaker AThere's two ways you can look back on training, right?
Speaker ALike, obviously, in the training, there is the stress, but looking back on it, you can smile, be like, all right, cool.
Speaker AWe learned a lot.
Speaker AWe grew, and we got some.
Speaker ASome good times, you know, and there's other people who.
Speaker AI mean, I've done this as well.
Speaker AYou're like, oh, my gosh, I never want to do that again.
Speaker ALike, hard pass.
Speaker AI'm gonna fly the same plane for the rest of my life.
Speaker ALife.
Speaker ASo I never have to worry about a checkout ever again.
Speaker BYeah, I mean, I'm sure, like, flight safety and cae, that's a little bit more rigorous.
Speaker BAnd, you know, maybe I'll.
Speaker BMy next type, hopefully, is with them, and I'll be like, oh, gosh, you know, I don't want to do that.
Speaker BI'm glad my recur isn't until 12 months later.
Speaker BBut, yeah, it is kind of what you make it.
Speaker BI think anything, obviously, that you go into prepared.
Speaker BLike, if you are, you know, going into a jet type or something, like, memory items, your numbers, like, limitations, all that kind of stuff, having that memorized before you go into the checkride is huge, Huge.
Speaker BSo you're just actually focusing on the new information, you know, so just being prepared as you can settle down as.
Speaker AYou, as you keep going and you go to CAE and you go to flight safety or, you know, your airline training, getting your triggers and flows down.
Speaker AIf you can memorize those, get those down before you go to training.
Speaker AIt'll make your training so much easier because like you said, you just focus on flying the airplane and you're not like, all right, What.
Speaker AAll right, 18,000ft.
Speaker AWhat button I need to push?
Speaker AWhat do I need to say?
Speaker AYou know, like, just memorize that, you know?
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BStandard.
Speaker BWhat does that mean?
Speaker BI don't know.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AHuh.
Speaker AStandard.
Speaker AWhat?
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AWhat was the coolest part about flying the jet for the first time?
Speaker ALike, the very first time you got in, you know, you're sitting right seat, you're probably so excited.
Speaker AWas it, was it takeoff?
Speaker AYou know, like actually feeling a little bit of power, you know, you.
Speaker AYou push back a little bit in your seat.
Speaker AIt's not the, the Warrior anymore.
Speaker AIt's not the Cherokee anymore.
Speaker ARight?
Speaker BYeah, I remember, I like distinctly remember my first flight in the jet and we had, we had taken off, we were taken off and we had gone north.
Speaker BThey gave us Charlotte, gave us a turn through the south.
Speaker BAnd again I was with the guy who did my multi, who I trusted a lot.
Speaker BAnd I remember thinking, why is it so quiet?
Speaker BLike, oh my gosh, you know, and there was this, there was this kind of like overcast layer.
Speaker BThen above, it was kind of like somewhat of a scattered layer.
Speaker BAnd the sun was setting and we got that, you know, you're turning and as you're turning, you're coming through the tops.
Speaker BAnd it was just beautiful and so quiet.
Speaker BAnd I was like, like, this is awesome, you know, like, this is definitely what I want to be in, you know, so, yeah, I definitely, I do remember it and just being like in awe.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AWhen, when I was doing my training.
Speaker AI mean, like when I was.
Speaker AI remember distinctly, I was doing my commercial training at Airwood.
Speaker AI was pre flighting the Arrow and I saw a jet, I think it was a Challenger, taxi by.
Speaker AAnd I just remember like looking be like, I cannot wait to fly that plane.
Speaker AAnd now I look back, be like, man, I wish I could still fly the Arrow.
Speaker ADid you ever find yourself, like, wishing for the future?
Speaker ALike, currently, are you just like, man, I can't wait to fly these jets.
Speaker AI can't wait to go to NetJets or you able to enjoy where you are and kind of enjoy the process?
Speaker BYeah, I mean, I think it's.
Speaker BIt's.
Speaker BPilots are typically very type A people that are always chasing the next best thing.
Speaker BLike, give me something new to learn.
Speaker BI want the next thing.
Speaker BUm, and I definitely do feel like that about NetJets right now.
Speaker BI'm like, oh, my gosh.
Speaker BLike, it's such a struggle, too.
Speaker BI know.
Speaker BLike, I say you can always make a better grade or you can get more flight time, but you can't get any older any quicker.
Speaker BAnd all Grandpa's line are like, trust me, you don't want to get any older any quicker.
Speaker BBut, yeah, so, yeah, I.
Speaker BYou know, I think it's just an active thing of being appreciating where you are when you're there, because it's gonna go away.
Speaker BYou know the saying, this too shall pass.
Speaker BLike, if it's really bad, it's gonna go away.
Speaker BAnd if it's really good, soak it up while it is really good.
Speaker BAnd there are definitely times when I was instructing a ton or and I was contracting a ton, that my airplane would sit and then I'd go get back in it, and I'm like, oh, my gosh.
Speaker BLike, yes, I do love what I do for work, but at the same time, like, just getting to fly to the beach for lunch and in your own airplane is so much fun.
Speaker BAnd you're kind of reminded of, why do I love this so much?
Speaker BOr, like, maybe it's fine with a person that you really like that you haven't filmed with in a while, and you're like, this is what makes this really awesome.
Speaker BSo appreciate where you are.
Speaker AI'm sorry.
Speaker AYeah, absolutely.
Speaker AIt's hard to do.
Speaker AEasier said than done, right?
Speaker AWay easier said than done.
Speaker B100.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker AYeah, yeah, yeah.
Speaker AIt's easy to say on the podcast, right?
Speaker BYeah, yeah.
Speaker BNow I have to go practice what I preached.
Speaker AI'm like, oh, gosh, same, same.
Speaker AHas there been any moment in this process where you're like, you know what?
Speaker AI don't want to do this anymore.
Speaker AI'm gonna go back to film school.
Speaker AI'm gonna do something else.
Speaker ALike, this is getting too hard.
Speaker BNo.
Speaker AGood.
Speaker BLike, genuinely not at all.
Speaker BLike, it's.
Speaker BIt's what I'm gonna do.
Speaker BAnd if it's hard, like, that just means you're probably doing something right.
Speaker BYou know, if something's difficult, obviously you're gonna fly with people that you don't like.
Speaker BOr fly for, maybe don't like.
Speaker BAnd that's okay.
Speaker BBut, you know, you're gonna meet those people that you do, and you'll learn the positive things from that.
Speaker BAnd maybe you learn, okay, that's not what I want to be like as a pilot or, you know, as a person or whatever.
Speaker BBut genuinely, I can't imagine doing anything else, and I've never doubted it.
Speaker AGood.
Speaker AThat's awesome.
Speaker AWas there so mentioned that you wanted or thought about going to film school before all this?
Speaker ADid you go to college?
Speaker ADid you get your degree?
Speaker AIs that something you're doing right now or you kind of just focused on flying?
Speaker BYeah, so I, again, I was like.
Speaker BI went and started touring college campuses, and I was like, there's no way I could live here for four years.
Speaker BLike, this isn't for me.
Speaker BAnd that's when I kind of switched to that.
Speaker BYeah, I was like, I. I'm not.
Speaker BI can't do this.
Speaker BThat's when I kind of switched over to flying.
Speaker BAnd I thought I was like, you know, I don't.
Speaker BI don't need a degree to be a pilot.
Speaker BAnd then I was like, okay, when I'm 50 years old, I want to look back on the past 50 years of my life and say that there's.
Speaker BThere's nothing that I've regretted.
Speaker BAnd not going to college is very much going to be something that I have that I will regret.
Speaker BSo I did high school, my last three years of high school through Liberty University, which is.
Speaker BHas a very big aeronautics department in high school and college.
Speaker BSo I ended up figuring out that all your flight credits count as credits, like your certificates and your ratings count as credits if it's an aviation focused degree.
Speaker BSo this past year, I transferred.
Speaker BI had taken some, like, college classes at high school as well.
Speaker BSo I had like three or four classes, and then all my ratings counted as credit.
Speaker BSo I transferred everything out, and I was like, pretty much halfway done with my degree with just on my transfer credit.
Speaker BSo, yes, I have gone back to school.
Speaker BI'm getting my bachelor's of science in aviation.
Speaker BI'll be done in July.
Speaker AOh, nice.
Speaker ASick.
Speaker AThat's awesome.
Speaker AYou know, you are young in this career.
Speaker AYou have more time, more ratings probably than most people your age have had.
Speaker APeople are listening to, like, dang.
Speaker AI mean, they're gonna be like, 25.
Speaker AThey're like, oh, my gosh, she has way more than I have.
Speaker AYou know, like, I'm just.
Speaker AI'm in this engineering job.
Speaker AI want to get out of it.
Speaker ALike, I like, I want to be a pilot.
Speaker AWhat do you say to people either your age, a little bit older than you, or younger than you that are just getting to this?
Speaker ALike, how can they get to where you are as fast as you did, as well as you did and have the outlook that you have?
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BI mean, obviously I've been very fortunate to be in a family that does have an airplane, two airplanes, so that helps a ton with it.
Speaker BAnd I know everyone's going to have that same opportunity, but if you can do that, I would recommend kind of going that 61, like real experience route.
Speaker BBut really just okay saying here's what I want to accomplish.
Speaker BLooking around at your flight schools like ATP maybe be, you know, it might be great for some people and I know people that have excelled through that program and they've done it quickly and taken out a loan and obviously everyone's, if you're, I have a student that's later in his 20s and has a really well paying job and it's been able to do it the 60 one way and just pay as you go and has still done it very quickly.
Speaker BSo kind of just assessing that, like how financially is it going to work?
Speaker BAnd maybe a certain flight school facilitates that a little bit better and that's what you're going to go through.
Speaker BBut just breaking it down like, okay, each, each rating has a check ride.
Speaker BThat check ride is composed of an oral and a flying portion.
Speaker BAnd then there's a written what do I need to do to get to that written portion?
Speaker BAnd just working as hard as you can to make the, you know, people say, well a 70 is a pass is a pass.
Speaker BLike I couldn't argue that more like do the best that you can.
Speaker BAnd yeah, absolutely, absolutely everything that you're going to do because it reflects that person that, that.
Speaker BI remember the way I got the job at the flight school that I taught at was it was a testing center and I had taken all my written there and I had done well on them and the owner knew that because she was the one that was giving me my paper when I got finished.
Speaker BSo when I went to interview with them, they were like, well, you know, it's not really a question of are you smart or not, you know, so those little things matter, but just breaking it down, okay, here's what I need to do for this.
Speaker BHere's what I need to do for this.
Speaker BAnd then doing the best that you absolutely can do to achieve that goal and don't, don't let yourself be, you know, Your own biggest enemy.
Speaker BI see so many people that, that come to me and, you know, they're like, well, finances are tough right now.
Speaker BI don't think I'm going to be able to fly.
Speaker BI'm like, okay, why?
Speaker BHave you taken the written?
Speaker BNo.
Speaker BWhat are you studying for the.
Speaker BThe written?
Speaker BNo.
Speaker BCould you pass the oral right now?
Speaker BNo.
Speaker BHave you bought the book?
Speaker BNo.
Speaker BAnd it's like, okay, so you're not actively doing everything that you can to be the best that you can, Right?
Speaker BSo just study hard, work hard, put your head down and get through it.
Speaker AI love it.
Speaker AWhat's your best.
Speaker AWhat's the best advice you've gotten in your, your career so far?
Speaker BOh, gosh, that's such a tough question.
Speaker BUm, I remember in the beginning, my first instructor, I remember being frustrated that I couldn't land or whatever.
Speaker BAnd he said, not every flight is going to be a good flight.
Speaker BAnd that's okay.
Speaker BJust expect that for the rest of your career.
Speaker BYou know, not every flight you're going to have some that are.
Speaker BYou're like, this is incredible.
Speaker BAnd then you're going to shoot like three back to back approaches, the minimums in the ice, and you're going to be like, this absolutely sucks.
Speaker BYou know, not everyone's going to be a good one.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BUm, and then I remember one of my other flight instructors that I'm still really good friends with now.
Speaker BHe, he told me, he's like, there, if anything that you want to accomplish, you will accomplish if you just work hard enough and break it down.
Speaker BYou know, we build a wall one brick at a time.
Speaker BSo if, if you want to be the CEO of Delta, he's like, I don't doubt that you'll be able to accomplish it, but you're going to be the only person that gets in your own way.
Speaker BSo nothing's that hard when you break it down.
Speaker BAnd I think that's really, really good advice.
Speaker AAbsolutely, absolutely.
Speaker AWhat's been your favorite flight so far?
Speaker BMy favorite flight, one day we got this great idea that we were gonna fly to Oshkosh.
Speaker BSo it was like, it was like 5 o' clock in the morning.
Speaker BMe and one of my girlfriends that are a pilot, you know, loaded the Cherokee up.
Speaker BThe baggage compartment was full, the back seat was full to the brim.
Speaker BWe had our tent and everything and we took off to Oshkosh and we did it all.
Speaker BIt was like eight hours.
Speaker BWe did it all in a day.
Speaker BBroke it up into a few different legs.
Speaker BThe last leg we met up with some of our friends and they were in a veto bonanza, so they were f. Faster than us.
Speaker BThey were doing the faster, higher arrival.
Speaker BSo we kind of tried to time it because we wanted to park beside one another.
Speaker BUm, and then you go fly the Fisk, you know.
Speaker BThat's awesome.
Speaker BThose, those air show flights are awesome because you're looking forward to something so much that, like, the whole flight is just awesome because of that.
Speaker BI think any flight that that's like that or like where you're flying to see one of your friends or somebody that you love is just awesome because that, like, that energy and anticipation just carries throughout the flight.
Speaker AYeah, absolutely.
Speaker AAnd he mentioned flying to the beach in North Carolina.
Speaker AWhich beach would you fly to?
Speaker BI'm a big fan of Wilmington, which technically isn't the beach.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AMost people don't know that, though.
Speaker ASo we're teaching people today.
Speaker AWilmington's not.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BHonestly, maybe cut out the part about Wilmington because I'm trying to gatekeep it.
Speaker BIt's not that great.
Speaker BYou don't want to go there.
Speaker BNo, it's not cool at all.
Speaker BPlease don't go there.
Speaker BI went the other day and the ramp was full.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BCharlotte sucks.
Speaker BRaleigh sucks.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker BBeach wise, Ocean Isle is really pretty awesome.
Speaker BObviously the Outer Banks have their.
Speaker BTheir own thing, but that's like, you know, two, three hours if you just want to click down and back.
Speaker BThat's a tough ocean isle, Oak Island.
Speaker BYeah, it isn't.
Speaker BIt's always.
Speaker AI'm a big Oak island guy.
Speaker AI went to okay my whole life.
Speaker ASo flying to Oak island was awesome.
Speaker AYou get the crew car and you go to the barbecue place on Island Island.
Speaker AHighly recommend.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BHave you ever gotten the.
Speaker BThe big, like, white crew car van out there?
Speaker AYes.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BYou know what I'm talking about.
Speaker BIsn't it terrible?
Speaker BYou're like, God, I feel like I'm gonna, like, kidnap somebody in this thing.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AIt's like, am I being kidnapped, like.
Speaker AOr am I the kidnapper?
Speaker AThis is wild.
Speaker ABut that's.
Speaker AThat's Oak Island.
Speaker AI feel like that just encompasses all of Oak island, that van.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BI mean, they're all great.
Speaker AWhat would you say has been.
Speaker ASo we talked about your favorite flight, but what has been the most challenging flight you've had so far?
Speaker BMost challenging flight.
Speaker BI don't.
Speaker BI remember, like, in the beginning, you know, everything is new and so things seem so much more difficult.
Speaker BLike, when there's wind, I would, like, land and I'd call my flight instructor, be like, I almost died, you know, and he's like, no, you didn't.
Speaker BYou're just being dramatic.
Speaker BOr like, I just shot my first approach.
Speaker BLike, I just got my instrument rating.
Speaker BI'm single engine, like.
Speaker BAnd I just shot my first approach like, oh, my, my gosh.
Speaker BYou know, and your adrenaline's just like through the roof.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker BI remember we had a day contracting and we had like a ton of legs and I was like, okay, I'm gonna take the first six and you'll take the last three or four or whatever.
Speaker BMy co caption and it was like the first four approaches were the minimums.
Speaker BWe were in the ice, it was dark.
Speaker BLike, that's, that's, you know, and you're turning so quickly that you're like, okay, you get the passengers, you get out.
Speaker BWe're shut down the left and right.
Speaker BAnd I'm going to reload, rebrief, you know, make sure we've got our clearance because we're all at untoward airports.
Speaker BLike, things like that.
Speaker BI. I mean, they're challenging because you're so task saturated, obviously.
Speaker BUm, so that's one that kind of.
Speaker BThat kind of sticks out in my mind.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker AYep.
Speaker AGiving a lot of flashbacks in that jets when you're talking about all the legs and ice.
Speaker AAnd I was like, oh, man.
Speaker AYeah, that does happen.
Speaker ATalk a little bit about social media and how, how, you know, there's different outlooks on social media based on, you know, you mentioned the grandpas you mentioned.
Speaker AOr we've.
Speaker AI've talked about before about how some airline, one of my life just went out.
Speaker ASome airlines don't love social media, but some do, you know, like, there's a lot of kind of.
Speaker ASome people look at it bad, some people look at it great because one, you can make friends, one you can get jobs out of it, you can network, you can do a lot of cool things.
Speaker ABut talk about how you have used social media and what you wanted to get out of it.
Speaker BYeah, definitely.
Speaker BSo I think it was kind of accidental for my following to be as big as it is now.
Speaker BI just posted a video and it just happened to.
Speaker BTo go viral.
Speaker BBut I've always said whatever I'm doing, I'm doing because I love it.
Speaker BAnd then if there just happens to be a camera or a picture taken, you know, that reflects what I'm doing, wonderful.
Speaker BBut I'll never do something.
Speaker BI'm not going to go do a flight just so I can film it.
Speaker BMaybe that's why I'm kind of a bad influencer.
Speaker BAnd not super consistent.
Speaker BBut like, like, you know, safety is our biggest thing and we don't need cameras in our face all the time.
Speaker BLike, I don't.
Speaker BI don't.
Speaker BI kind of hate the word, like, content creator because it's just like, this is my life and, and anything that is captured is just, you know, a reflection of.
Speaker BA small curated reflection of whatever is going on.
Speaker BSo that's kind of the way I view it.
Speaker BBut yeah, it is really wonderful networking tool.
Speaker BSome of my, like, my best friends I've met, you know, being an ambassador for Signer Fund, you meet some awesome people and then they know people and, um, it's really, really awesome way to make.
Speaker BTo make friends.
Speaker BI haven't necessarily used it as much for the business side of things of like, getting a job or anything.
Speaker BI actually kind of try to keep, like, you know, I just want my little blue and white airplane on there and I've posted some things of work, you know, but like, you can't.
Speaker BYeah, you can't find, like, you can't find any tail numbers or anything.
Speaker BAnd even, like, if I do get on with net depth, I don't.
Speaker BI don't see myself being one of those influencers that comes like the day in the life or here's my tour, anything like that, because that's just not personal, like, what I want to reflect, and some people do, and some companies are great with that.
Speaker BSome companies don't want you posting.
Speaker BSo I think it's just respecting everyone's boundaries and what they want or what they don't want.
Speaker AAbsolutely, 100% agree.
Speaker AI was trying to think of the first video that I saw of yours on Instagram pop up and I, I want.
Speaker AI think I'm right about this, but was it going when you went to jqf, did you have the crazy auctioneer, what's his name?
Speaker AI can't remember his name now, but the crazy control.
Speaker BAdam was Adam.
Speaker AAdam, yes.
Speaker AYeah, I think.
Speaker AI don't remember his name, but I remember when I was flying and like, I remember going, doing my 10 stop and goes or whatever you need to do for commercial at JQF at night.
Speaker AAnd he was doing the pattern with me and I was just like, this guy's awesome.
Speaker AI love this guy.
Speaker ASo when I got to hear his voice again, it was just like so many members came back and I was just like, this is so fun.
Speaker ALike, I remember my.
Speaker AMy time doing that.
Speaker AI was like, this is so cool.
Speaker ASo, yeah, if his name's Adam, shout out Adam you're awesome.
Speaker BYeah, they.
Speaker BAll those guys.
Speaker BI think Adam has since retired, but I've met all the controllers up at Concord now, and, you know, they're like, they tell.
Speaker BThey.
Speaker BThey hired someone the other day and they're like, you know, be on your best behavior if you hear three, four, whiskey, because she might be filming you.
Speaker BBut they're wonderful.
Speaker BYeah, I think that flight, that flight.
Speaker BI think I was actually going.
Speaker BI was flying up there to interview for my flight school job.
Speaker AOh, no.
Speaker BJust happened to throw the camera up.
Speaker BYeah, yeah.
Speaker AAnd then Adam's up there just making you feel good because Adam's the man.
Speaker ASo shout out whatever you're doing.
Speaker BYeah, Yeah, I love that.
Speaker BI love getting the meat.
Speaker BLike, that's another great thing about social media too, is like, you'll hear there's someone with Raleigh approach.
Speaker BThey're like, hey, are you filming?
Speaker BAnd I'm like, no, I'm not.
Speaker BI'm so sorry.
Speaker BBut I put it up real quick if you want.
Speaker BThey're awesome.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker AYeah, that is cool.
Speaker AWell, Ariel, I appreciate you coming on.
Speaker AIt's.
Speaker AIt's really cool to talk to someone who, you know, is coming up.
Speaker AAnd I just interview through Luke, who's also in the CFI route.
Speaker ALike, he is grinding right now.
Speaker AAnd it's really cool to see kind of be reminded of what it's like and have the enthusiasm, have like the want to.
Speaker ABecause I've talked to so many other pilots, you know, and some people just get down on the job or.
Speaker AI mean, I haven't had too many people like that, but it is out there.
Speaker ASo continue to hold on to that spark that you have because it'll take you a lot of places.
Speaker AAnd remember when you called for the first flight school and why you chose that flight school is because there was.
Speaker AWere nice.
Speaker AAnd they're good because reputation goes a very long way in this career.
Speaker ASo if you can just hold onto that, you're gonna do great, right?
Speaker BA hundred percent.
Speaker BWell, I'm happy.
Speaker BThank you so much for.
Speaker BFor having me on.
Speaker BI. I'm such a fan and I look forward to listening to this one and hopefully we'll get to fly together since we're.
Speaker BWe're so close.
Speaker ASo close.
Speaker AWe'll make it happen.
Speaker AYeah, that'd be awesome.
Speaker ADeliver some magazines.
Speaker BYes.
Speaker BYeah, I haven't got my shipment yet, but I'm.
Speaker AI'm gonna distribute the box.
Speaker AThe box is sitting over there.
Speaker AI have to.
Speaker AI have to ship it out.
Speaker BOh, that's why I haven't gotten it.
Speaker ABut yeah, I'll try to do it today.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker BYeah, Try not try.
Speaker BYou won't.
Speaker AI will.
Speaker AI will do it.
Speaker AThat's a wrap on today's podcast.
Speaker AThank you so much for listening to the podcast.
Speaker AEverything that you all have done for the magazine, for the podcast, I'm truly thankful for.
Speaker AIf you haven't got a magazine yet, pilot the pilot hq.com mag and if you're not, subscribe the podcast.
Speaker AYou know, if your dad's not, your mom's not, take their phone, subscribe, just download them.
Speaker AJust let me know.
Speaker AMaybe they'll become a pilot, too.
Speaker AAV Nation.
Speaker AHope you're having a great day.
Speaker AAnd as always, happy flying.