Episode 338 of the pilot to Pilot Podcast takes off Now.
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Speaker BMy name is Charlie Gastmire, I'm a commercially licensed pilot and aircraft owner here in Dallas, Texas and I host a YouTube channel called Airplane Academy where I share the lessons I've learned along the way.
Speaker AAV 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 Charlie from Airplane Academy.
Speaker AWhat a great domain.
Speaker AWe talk about how he just randomly googled is like what's available and he found this one and here we are.
Speaker ACharlie who I have been following for a little bit now, he has some great content.
Speaker AHe talks about mistakes, he talks about things that he wished he would have done differently so you have the opportunity to learn from them.
Speaker AWe have great talk about entrepreneurship, we have a great talk about businesses, we have a great talk about 182 is buying airplanes, aviation, all the things.
Speaker AI think this is a great episode and very impactful.
Speaker ACharlie makes some really cool flashcards.
Speaker AIf you are in training or if you just want some aviation flashcards to help study for, pick them up, read them, learn some more.
Speaker AGo check out his website, we'll have links down below so you can go check those out.
Speaker AIf you enjoy this podcast.
Speaker ALike I said the last couple of days, really, really, really pushing for a thousand comments on Spotify and on itunes.
Speaker ASo if you haven't left a review, please go do so.
Speaker ALet me know what you like about the podcast.
Speaker ALeave five stars if you want to you don't have to, but it would be great to see 1000 reviews on each episod different platforms.
Speaker AWe're also pushing for 4,000 total subscribers.
Speaker AI know it's a little bit of different goals there as well, but just starting to get into the YouTube game and would love to get more people listening on YouTube and watching on YouTube.
Speaker ASo if you're a YouTube podcaster, then go ahead, check out Pilot to Pilot on a podcast and on YouTube and just hit subscribe.
Speaker AAV Nation.
Speaker AI hope you're having a great day and I really hope you're going to enjoy this podcast and I know you will.
Speaker AWithout any further ado, here is Charlie from Airplane Academy.
Speaker ACharlie, what's going on, man?
Speaker AWelcome to the Pilot, the Pilot podcast.
Speaker BSo good to be here, Justin.
Speaker BI'm a fan of your show, so it's great to join.
Speaker BThanks.
Speaker AYeah, dude, it's awesome to have you on.
Speaker AI do want to tell you that just looking at you, the very first thing I see is Chris Palmer.
Speaker AHas anyone ever told you that before?
Speaker AHave you gotten that?
Speaker AAre you the lower 48 Chris Palmer?
Speaker BI've had several people have full email conversations with me that then they realize at the end, oh, you're not Chris.
Speaker BI'm so sorry to let you down, but I'm a big fan of his too, so it's an honor to be mixed up with.
Speaker AYeah, it must be the beard.
Speaker AI think it's a beard.
Speaker AYou know, Chris is growing out his beard.
Speaker AYou know, maybe he's trying to look like you, if anything.
Speaker AAnd you guys had a meetup together, right?
Speaker BWe did.
Speaker BI thought maybe like, for the.
Speaker BFor the people that came.
Speaker BI thought if you can just see a side by side, you'll see like the subtle differences, you know, and those people, you know, won't be confused anymore.
Speaker AHow'd that go?
Speaker ADid that play out well for you or like identical twins?
Speaker BYeah, yeah.
Speaker BI don't.
Speaker BI don't know if we resolved it for everyone, but if you look closely enough, you can tell us apart.
Speaker AI love it, dude.
Speaker AWell, like we talked earlier before, also, huge fan of your content.
Speaker AIt's.
Speaker AIt's really cool to see one.
Speaker AIt's like super hard to grow on YouTube and you have managed to do that.
Speaker ASo I look forward to talking about kind of the business side of what you've been doing, what you've been doing to be successful, how long you've been going after it.
Speaker AWe can get into that a little bit later because at the beginning, I really kind of want to focus on you and your, your just overall reason of why you're a pilot.
Speaker ASo why don't you go ahead and tell me why did you want to become a pilot in the first place?
Speaker BYeah, so I am lucky to be a third generation pilot.
Speaker BSo my dad's dad was a pilot just recreationally, you know, logistically, kind of for fun.
Speaker BAnd then my dad was and is a pilot.
Speaker BAnd so I grew up just with aviation being normal.
Speaker BMy dad was taking a little bit of time off of aviation while I was real young.
Speaker BBut I grew up just listening to his stories.
Speaker BLike my bedtime stories were him talking about when he got stranded in a Cherokee in this random town he'd never heard of and stuff.
Speaker BAnd I always just thought like that is the American dream to hop in your airplane with your kids in the back and just end up somewhere and navigate weather and you don't know where you're going to be for the night.
Speaker BLike I just thought there was something, I mean even when I was little, I just thought there was something so adventurous and romantic about that.
Speaker BI knew I wanted to do it.
Speaker BAnd when I was like 14, I got to start taking flight lessons.
Speaker BAnd my dad was a good friend with a guy high up in Southwest who got us into the training simulators in the 737.
Speaker BAnd that absolutely blew my mind.
Speaker BSo much so that like in middle school when you get your first locker, you know, most, most kids are, you know, putting bikini models and stuff like pictures of that in their lockers or whatever.
Speaker BI vividly Remember back in 2004 printing out any picture I could find on Google or whatever it was.
Speaker BAsk Jeeves at the time.
Speaker BI've like pictures of 737 cockpits and I would print them out on our, on our printer and then I'd like taped them up in my locker.
Speaker BEveryone thought I was so weird, but I was like, I'm going to be a pilot one day and if I just, I've just always been just so in love did flight sim as I was, you know, when I little, when I was little and as so many pilots I know on your show can, can attest to like flight simming, just like really help them get bit by the bug and stuff.
Speaker BSo I've always just been enamored with it.
Speaker BAnd I got to start when I was 14 years old, which I was really grateful that my parents were supportive of that and enabled that.
Speaker BAnd I've been flying ever since.
Speaker AYeah, similar ish kind of story.
Speaker AI never knew I wanted to be a pilot.
Speaker ABut I'm also a third generation pilot.
Speaker AMy grandpa was an airline pilot.
Speaker AMy dad was an airline pilot.
Speaker AExcuse me, My dad was an airline pilot and one day he called me up, I think I was 18, getting ready to go to college, getting ready to play football.
Speaker AAnd he called me up, he's like, hey, I had the late Sims.
Speaker AThey finished up.
Speaker ACan you come tomorrow at like 1am and you can come fly the 737?
Speaker AAnd I was like, cool.
Speaker AI mean, why not?
Speaker ALike, yeah, I got nothing else to do.
Speaker AAnd I did it.
Speaker AAnd I was like, oh, wow, I could actually do this.
Speaker AAnd I was like, I mean, they, you know how they always like, oh, you can fly better than the person that we train, blah, blah, blah, blah, all that kind of stuff.
Speaker AAnd it's like, I believed it.
Speaker AI was like, oh man, maybe, maybe this is an opportunity.
Speaker AAnd then a couple years later, when I finally realized, hey, football, maybe not might not be my thing anymore, I was like, I remember flying and I was okay at it, so let me go do it.
Speaker ATook a flight and I was like, all right, cool.
Speaker AThis is my career now.
Speaker AI'm doing this.
Speaker BYeah, I mean, I feel like if you, if you have the bug, you have the bug.
Speaker BAnd I meet so many people all the time.
Speaker BThey're like, they're in their 60s and they say, hey, I've wanted to do this since I was 12 and just now doing it.
Speaker BBut you can tell how pumped they are to like finally go for it.
Speaker BIt's like if you know, you know.
Speaker AAbsolutely.
Speaker AAnd with this dream of yours, was this a I want to be a 737 pilot for Southwest or was it just I want to be a pilot in general?
Speaker BYeah, it was a little bit of both.
Speaker BI mean, in my, you know, as best as I could tell, when I was 14, I thought I wanted to be a Southwest pilot.
Speaker BBut as I got older and went through high school and went to college, like, I really also fell in love with business.
Speaker BLike, I've always just, I was starting lemonade stands and had a little shoe shining business that was pretty lucrative for like an 8 year old.
Speaker AOh really?
Speaker BWhich is fun.
Speaker BSo that' that's a good one for real young listeners.
Speaker BBut I've always loved business and so I studied that in college and like, I just, I didn't, I didn't want to go full airlines.
Speaker BLike, I loved business a ton and started starting businesses in college and stuff.
Speaker BAnd so, yeah, like, there's definitely a part of me that still would love to go to the airlines.
Speaker BLike, I'd love to fly a jet.
Speaker BOf course I'd love to fly a jet.
Speaker BBut I have a lot of interest, other interests too, namely like business and startups and Internet marketing and stuff.
Speaker BAnd so I feel like it's been a really cool thing.
Speaker BI think God has enabled me to just a really cool opportunity to combine a lot of the things I'm passionate about between aviation and encouraging other people and Internet marketing and entrepreneurship.
Speaker BLike, I'm getting to do all of that at Airplane Academy.
Speaker BSo I'm super grateful to do that.
Speaker AYeah, absolutely.
Speaker AI mean, there's, as I've talked about in all the episodes I've done, there is just a path for anyone in aviation.
Speaker AWhether you're doing it recreationally, whether you're doing it for fun, whether you're doing it for career.
Speaker AAnd a career could mean what you're doing.
Speaker AA career can mean being a CFI.
Speaker AA career could mean going to a 121 or 135 and flying your whole career.
Speaker AThere is, is a very much encompassing factor of aviation jobs that you can do.
Speaker AAnd it doesn't have to be flying for Southwest, doesn't have to be flying the airline.
Speaker ASo it's really cool to talk with people that have an interest.
Speaker ALike we all have the same interest, right?
Speaker AWe're all interested in aviation, but we may be able to make money off it or make a living off it.
Speaker AA little bit different.
Speaker BYeah, I mean, it's a big world and it's the American dream, you know, and it's broader than just the American dream.
Speaker BBut you know, we're here in America, so like to celebrate that.
Speaker BBut yeah, there's tons of ways to do it.
Speaker BAnd if you love flying, there's.
Speaker BThere's always a way to find a way to, to do that.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker ASo tell me about 14 year old, you know, you're hanging up pictures of a 737 in your locker.
Speaker AYou're walking around telling people, I want to be a pilot.
Speaker ANow there needs to be actionable steps rather than just saying, because as you talked about, someone in their 60s like, Man, I've always wanted to be a pilot, but they've never taken the steps to do it.
Speaker ASo what steps did you take to go do that?
Speaker BYeah, so about that time, my dad bought a Super Cub and I started training in that.
Speaker BThey had some land that they were developing down in the Texas hill country.
Speaker BAnd so whenever we would go down there for the summer or during holidays and stuff, we met a really good flying community down there.
Speaker BAnd I had such a great mentor, guy named Bob Snowden, and he's one of my favorite people in the whole world.
Speaker BAnd he taught me to fly.
Speaker BAnd he would come, you know, fly down the Runway at the ranch and stuff and my dad would wake me up and say, hey, your ride's here.
Speaker BYou're gonna go for an hour lesson.
Speaker BAnd I would take lessons with Bob in the Super Cub.
Speaker BAnd I was so, so bad at it.
Speaker BLike I was so bad at flying a Super Cub, but it was, it was a lot of airplane to handle, you know, for anybody who's new, but particularly 14 year old Charlie, like, I had no clue what I was doing but like lesson by lesson, you know, started getting better and stuff.
Speaker BAnd so I was learning in the Super Cub and then, and then my parents were just so generous towards me and allowed me to take lessons at Addison Airport.
Speaker BI'm based here in Dallas, so I was learning under the class B, which is stressful place to learn, but so glad I did because then, you know, you're really not afraid to fly anywhere because you've been in the thick of it.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker BAnd so I was learning in a 172 there at American Flyers.
Speaker BAnd so I was kind of doing like 172 lessons here and there.
Speaker BAnd then whenever we were down in the hill country, I was flying the Super Cub.
Speaker BSo I was real confused, like, am I a nose dragger or a tail dragger?
Speaker BBut it was great training and did all that and ended up soloing on my 16th birthday.
Speaker BAnd it was really funny the way that it worked out because my birthday fell on a Sunday and so the DMV wasn't open to get my driver's license that day.
Speaker BSo my parents drove me to the airport and I soloed the 172.
Speaker BAnd then the next day they drove me to the DMV and I got my driver's license.
Speaker BSo technically I legally flew by myself before I legally drove by myself, which is a funny way that it worked out.
Speaker BAnd then I got my, my, my private certificate a little bit after I turned 17.
Speaker AGot it.
Speaker AAnd then what was the plan after that?
Speaker AWas it kind of I'm going to go to college, I'm going to see what I want to do, I'm going to go to aviation college.
Speaker AMe through your next thought process there.
Speaker BYeah, like I mentioned, I really fell in love with entrepreneurship.
Speaker BMy dad's been a long time healthcare entrepreneur and so I was watching him start and run businesses and I started a barbecue sauce business.
Speaker BWhen I was 18 or 19 and it failed spectacularly.
Speaker BSauce, Big bear barbecue sauce.
Speaker BBut I learned a ton.
Speaker BAnd I was just so enamored with, like, how do you take an idea and bring it to life and make money doing it?
Speaker BMy mind just felt equally blown by entrepreneurship as it was with aviation.
Speaker BAnd I loved both of them.
Speaker BAnd so I really wanted to go to college and study business.
Speaker BAnd so the plan for, you know, for flying, I didn't fly a ton during that.
Speaker BDuring that time, I rented 172s a little bit whenever I had money.
Speaker BBut then mainly whenever I was, you know, home from college in the summers, I'd fly the Super Cub.
Speaker BAnd I was always really nervous at first because I hadn't flown it in a little while and stuff, but that's kind of how I.
Speaker BHow I stayed active while I was at school and things.
Speaker BAnd then.
Speaker BAnd then after school, once I had a job and I started making more sustainable money and stuff, I ended up buying the 182 in 2016.
Speaker BBut we can get to that.
Speaker BBut, yeah, I mean, it's not a.
Speaker BIt wasn't like a perfect path to, hey, I learned.
Speaker BAnd then I was always current and it was always easy, and it was always affordable.
Speaker BIt's like, no, I went through all these ups and downs of I didn't fly for six months or a year or whatever because I couldn't afford it, or I didn't have access to an airplane or whatever.
Speaker BAnd you just do the best you can to try to, you know, try to stay involved in it and stuff.
Speaker BAnd then once I bought my own airplane, you know, that's when I had a lot more, obviously consistent access to be able to fly whenever I wanted.
Speaker BBut up until that point, I mean, it was definitely bumpy.
Speaker BPardon the.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AWhat school did you end up going to?
Speaker BWent to Baylor.
Speaker AOkay, nice.
Speaker AAnd Baylor has an aviation department, don't they?
Speaker AA pretty big aviation school.
Speaker BThey do, yeah.
Speaker BIt's.
Speaker BIt's grown a ton.
Speaker BAnd I.
Speaker BFor whatever reason, I don't know, maybe I was just naive or something, like I should have had some sort of aviation minor at least or something, or been involved in the aviation club.
Speaker BAnd I was just so involved in other things and in the business school, and I was starting businesses and staying up most of the night trying to start businesses, and I was just so in love and, like, just kind of captivated by that.
Speaker BThat's what I was spending most of my time on.
Speaker BBut little did I know I could have been pretty involved in aviation at that point.
Speaker BAnd.
Speaker BAnd I wasn't.
Speaker ACould have been a Southwest captain by now.
Speaker AYou never know.
Speaker BRight?
Speaker BI could have been your whole life.
Speaker BYeah, I could have.
Speaker BCould have got that cockpit I was always in.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker ASo you've mentioned a lot about.
Speaker AYou love business.
Speaker AI've started a ton of.
Speaker ATon of businesses.
Speaker AHow many businesses would you say you've had your hand in or try to start?
Speaker BYeah, I mean, probably like 10 or 12.
Speaker BI mean, and some of those have just been pure, pure experiments.
Speaker BLike, hey, let's, let's do this thing and see if we can get it to a couple thousand dollars in revenue or something.
Speaker BSome things we started and then just never could find customers for.
Speaker BAnd then others have done a lot better than that and stuff.
Speaker BSo it's all kind of varying degrees.
Speaker BBut I would say, like, in terms of businesses that really started and actually got traction and stuff, I've been involved in three ones that like, actually kind of went somewhere.
Speaker BAnd the others have been.
Speaker BHave been experiments.
Speaker BThey're all experiments at the end of the day.
Speaker BBut yeah, it's good fun.
Speaker AWhat would you say is.
Speaker ASo I'm gonna ask you a question, and you obviously ask your question at the podcast.
Speaker ARight, but what would you say?
Speaker AYou have to answer it.
Speaker AIt is one business that maybe has been either the best for you or profitable wise, whatever you kind of would label as the best.
Speaker AAnd the other one that's been like the one you learned the most from and that didn't work out.
Speaker BYeah, start with the one that didn't work out is probably.
Speaker BWell, I could choose several that didn't work out.
Speaker BI'll choose a more entertaining one.
Speaker BIn college, I took a class where we got a few thousand dollars to start a business and try to make it profitable in a semester.
Speaker BAnd my friends and I teamed up and we thought, we thought we could drive leads in the wedding industry.
Speaker BWe thought, hey, a bride.
Speaker BAnd all of us are single dudes.
Speaker BIn college, like, well, brides need, you know, a cake and flowers and a deejay.
Speaker BI was like, if we can just help pair together brides, and all these people will make a ton of money.
Speaker BSo my friends and I, we started this business called my Wedding Connector.
Speaker BAnd I can't believe I'm even talking about this on this podcast, but the short version is we went to these wedding conventions and we were trying to sign up these vendors and we threw a launch party and it, like, at this wine bar and invited all these people and, like, two people showed up and like, the business Just never went anywhere because we were three single dudes in college that.
Speaker BThat knew nothing about.
Speaker BAbout weddings.
Speaker BAnd so that was a great example of just like, not knowing your customer, not understanding, like, the pain point you were trying to solve.
Speaker BBut we tried.
Speaker BI think I still got an A in the class, but it failed spectacularly.
Speaker AYeah, an A for effort.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BBut I'd say, like, the best one.
Speaker BJust.
Speaker BJust in terms of.
Speaker BOf.
Speaker BOf.
Speaker BI mean, kind of what I'm doing now is Airplane Academy.
Speaker BI think Airplane Academy is the first business, and it started as a YouTube channel and a blog, and now I sell my own flashcards and I'm working on some other products and things.
Speaker BBut I'd say Airplane Academy is the first business where I have been my own customer.
Speaker BLike, you hear a lot of these stories on Shark Tank or whatever, and it's people that are solving their own problems.
Speaker BI got tired of mowing the lawn this way or my hose wouldn't connect the right way.
Speaker BSo I just built something that fixed it and I found out my neighbor needed it too.
Speaker BAnd here we are in Shark Tank.
Speaker BAnd that's kind of like, not that I'm going to be on Shark Tank or something, but like, oh, you have.
Speaker ATo now, but we're speaking.
Speaker BBut that's kind of been the path with Airplane Academy.
Speaker BIt's like, okay, let me try to build things that solve my own problem.
Speaker BSo it started with content of like, hey, I don't see people writing articles.
Speaker BThis is years ago, but I didn't see people writing articles to address really basic questions of pilot training.
Speaker BSo I spent a long time writing like, dozens and dozens of articles to see if I could rank them to try to help people.
Speaker BAnd then I.
Speaker BThen I started making videos of like, hey, a lot of people are doing the fly with me stuff, which is great.
Speaker BI'm a big fan of all that.
Speaker BBut I don't really hear a lot of people just kind of sitting there sharing all the mistakes they've made.
Speaker BAnd I'm like, well, I've made a lot of mistakes, so why don't I sit here and share my mistakes and maybe it can help somebody, because that's what I need.
Speaker BAnd then, same thing with the flashcards of, like, well, like, keeping all of this stuff in your mind for years and decades is really hard.
Speaker BYou have to be fluent in a new language.
Speaker BAnd, you know, it's been really difficult to do that.
Speaker BAnd so I was like, well, what if I take a while to build my own flashcards the way that I Want to use them and make them really high quality.
Speaker BMaybe it can help other people.
Speaker BSo I think, like, I didn't start Airplane Academy to try to become someone or be an influencer, although I think the channel and the brand have grown now to have influence.
Speaker BBut I'm not trying to be somebody.
Speaker BI'm literally just trying to, like, help more people get interested in aviation and solve the problems either through content or through products, like, the problems that I myself have experienced or are experiencing.
Speaker BSo that's been a really, really fun, you know, business and thing to work on, just because I'm.
Speaker BI'm.
Speaker BI am my own customer.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AWhen would you say, you know, like, everyone kind of has the moment where they realize, like, you know, whether they made it, we can talk about doing content.
Speaker AYou know, all of a sudden you're like, oh, wow, I have 100,000 subscribers on YouTube or as a pilot.
Speaker AYou're like, wow, I finally made it to the regionals.
Speaker AI finally made it to the majors.
Speaker ALike, I finally made it.
Speaker AAnd what was your kind of, like, moment where you realized you were building something?
Speaker AThat, one, I mean, maybe not the most important thing you talked about, but, like, I can profit off of, and two, I can actually have the influence and help people the way that, like, you said that I would want when I was going through that.
Speaker BIt's a good question.
Speaker BI. I don't think I've ever really had a moment of arrival.
Speaker BThere's been little moments that feel really validating, like, even getting to talk to you on your podcast, and you have a great show, and I feel very humbled to be here.
Speaker BLike, it.
Speaker AIt.
Speaker BI just thought for a moment before we started recording, I was like, this is.
Speaker BThis is.
Speaker BThis is very rewarding for me, and I'm grateful for it.
Speaker BAppreciate it.
Speaker BBut, like, to me, I've always been the same person, just sitting in my office or sitting my airplane flying.
Speaker BLike, I haven't really changed, but the brand has grown, the channel has grown and stuff.
Speaker BAnd so, like, if I'm being totally honest, like, I don't really believe it.
Speaker BLike, I look down, I'm like, oh, you know, it says you got 126,000 subscribers on YouTube or something.
Speaker BLike, well, I'm the same dude.
Speaker BJust talking about lessons I've learned.
Speaker BLike, I haven't changed here, but, like, the stats have changed or the.
Speaker BThe growth, you know, the.
Speaker BThe reach has changed and things like that.
Speaker BSo there's little moments of feeling like, you know, you know, you're making progress, or little mini moments of arrival.
Speaker BBut I really think that.
Speaker BAnd I don't do a good job of this.
Speaker BI think you, whether it's in business or in your aviation career or whatever, I think you kind of have to force yourself to stop and create that moment for yourself and enjoy it.
Speaker BBe like, hey, if it's your first flight in the regionals or you're getting to go get.
Speaker BGet typed in the jet, you're learning, like it's the first day of ground school, like that can be a moment of arrival.
Speaker BLike, maybe you haven't, you know, flown your first, you know, real jet yet, but like, you're at training and you're sitting there like, pinch yourself and say, man, like, it would be easy to miss this moment.
Speaker BLike, I'm just starting.
Speaker BI'm just starting the, you know, the type training.
Speaker BBut like, that's a really cool moment of arrival if you'll pinch yourself and try to enjoy it.
Speaker BSo for me, I've had to.
Speaker BI've had to kind of try to pause and reflect and realize those moments and be grateful them for them, just like I've done before we started recording.
Speaker AYeah, I think it's important because sometimes you're going to look back and you're going to miss the moment you were in.
Speaker ABut in that moment, you might have been thinking about, you know, I'm going to fly a jet one day.
Speaker AYou know, you could be.
Speaker AI remember having this moment specifically flying an arrow, and I was doing my commercial training, and all of a sudden I see a Challenger taxi by, and I'm just like staring at the Challenger.
Speaker ALike, man, I want to get paid to fly.
Speaker ALike, when is this going to happen?
Speaker ALike, it just seems so far away.
Speaker ABut in that moment, I kind of had this, like, I looked at my arrow and I was like, you know, I'm actually having a lot of fun flying this airplane.
Speaker AI'm doing something that a lot of people can't do.
Speaker AAnd I was like, I don't know if I'm ever going to fly ga again.
Speaker AYou know, you talk to captains, you talk to pilots and at airlines, not everyone is going to come back to general aviation.
Speaker ASo I kind of had this moment where I was like, I don't know if I'm ever going to fly an arrow again.
Speaker ASo I should probably smile and have a good flight today and enjoy it.
Speaker AAnd I went up and did like Shondell's and 120° in North Carolina and was just burn, no air conditioning, you know.
Speaker ABut I have.
Speaker AI try to have as much fun as I can.
Speaker ASo I think it's really cool that you have that perspective.
Speaker AAnd I think it's really cool for everyone to kind of understand that.
Speaker ATry to enjoy what's going on right now.
Speaker ATry to enjoy the cool things that you're doing in your life because you're going to look back at them and you're probably going to wish you enjoyed it a little bit more than you did lately.
Speaker BIf I've ever felt frustrated with even like making flashcards or studying flashcards or, you know, different things that can be challenging in becoming and staying a pilot.
Speaker BI really have tried to pinch myself.
Speaker BI'm not perfect at this, but I've tried to pinch myself and say, just for a second, like, reflect on the fact that we live in a really unique 100 or so year span of human history where this is even possible.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BLike for hundreds and thousands of years, people have looked up at the birds and said, I want to do that.
Speaker BAnd they would never come anywhere close to living to the year where that's possible.
Speaker BAnd now it's possible.
Speaker BAnd so like, yeah, now I feel like we've kind of like our perspective is too small.
Speaker BLike, oh man, I got to memorize weather theory.
Speaker BIt's like, well, you didn't have to invent it.
Speaker BSomeone else did the hard work of discovering it and now you just have to memorize it.
Speaker BAnd now you get to go fly your Cessna later today.
Speaker BLike, I think it's all perspective thing, you know, like to your point, it's like, well, you can be upset that you're flying the Arrow and not the Challenger, or you can be like, oh my gosh, like, I live in a free country where I get to do this and the skies are mine.
Speaker BI can go fly the Arrow Even though it's 120 degrees and I'm bouncing my brains out like anyone in human history would trade places for me in an instant.
Speaker BAnd so I try not to lose that perspective, even though it's easy to in today's age.
Speaker BBut I think it's important.
Speaker AWhat other ratings do you have right now?
Speaker ADid you stop at Private or are you still working on some.
Speaker BYeah, I've got my private commercial instrument, multi commercial.
Speaker BI've got my private seaplane rating, just my single engine C and then my tail wheel high performance.
Speaker BSo I fly my182 our family super Cub.
Speaker BAnd then our family also has a Kodiak 100 that I got checked out in a couple years ago and have 100 and something hours in it that's been my first turboprop experience, but it really is just like a big super cub.
Speaker BIt's amazing.
Speaker AWhat do you use a Kodiak for?
Speaker BWhat's that?
Speaker AWhat do you guys use the Kodiak for?
Speaker BSo my dad really wanted kind of a unicorn airplane.
Speaker BHis average mission is like a couple hundred nautical miles, but he wanted to fly 160 plus knots.
Speaker BHe also wanted to be able to carry like eight or 10 people if he wanted to.
Speaker BHe wanted to fly a turboprop.
Speaker BHe wanted me to be able to get checked out in it and they wanted to be able to land on their property.
Speaker BIt's like, well, that's a pretty narrow bullseye and the Kodiak is probably one of the only airplanes in the world that'll do that.
Speaker BAnd so it's just, it's one airplane that fits pretty much every mission that, that I have and my family has.
Speaker BAnd it's just a ball to fly.
Speaker BAnd honestly, it's a lot easier than the Cessna 182 to fly.
Speaker BIt's just a, it's a really well made airplane.
Speaker BIt's really simple and it'll do just about anything.
Speaker AYeah, I, I've got, I should probably look it up.
Speaker AI probably have like 1200 hours in a caravan.
Speaker ASo similar platform, similar style airplane.
Speaker AI think the Kodiak 100, it's like their, that's their smallest one, right?
Speaker AAm I right?
Speaker BYeah, they've got the 100 and the 900 and the 100 is, is real comparable to a caravan.
Speaker BThey're just, they're built for different missions.
Speaker BThe Kodiak is basically the more bush cousin of a caravan.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker AWhich is awesome.
Speaker ABush planes are awesome right now.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker ALike, I feel like everyone and their mom wants a bush plane and moving out to Utah to be Trent Palmer or to be Carson to do what they're doing.
Speaker ASo why not?
Speaker BThat's right.
Speaker BYeah, it's.
Speaker BI mean, it's been a dream to fly.
Speaker BI feel very fortunate to get to be in one and I just can't say enough good things about it.
Speaker BIt's amazing.
Speaker AYeah, no, that's cool.
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Speaker AWhen did this fall in the timeline of like private instrument commercial seaplane rating Because Dallas, you know is a great place for seaplanes.
Speaker ARight?
Speaker ALike just talk about place for seaplane.
Speaker AYeah, right.
Speaker ATalk about kind of your timeline of training.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BSo I had my private for for a long time before I got anything else.
Speaker BAnd so I got my private in 2007 and I didn't get my instrument I think until 2014 or 2015.
Speaker BI have to go back and look.
Speaker BSo there was a gap and then I got my commercial in 2023 and my multi commercial in 2023 also.
Speaker BSo a lot of people say oh commercial super easy.
Speaker BIt's just mostly review from your private.
Speaker BThat is true unless you had 16 years between your private and your commercial in which case it's like doing private all over again.
Speaker BSo I had a pretty big gap and a lot of it's been just based on need.
Speaker BLike when I had my private I just didn't have money or the airplane to go do instrument stuff or commercial stuff and I wasn't doing it for a living so it filled my needs.
Speaker BThe seaplane thing was just a fun.
Speaker BIt was a fun vacation for me and my dad.
Speaker BIt was a very generous gift of his but we went to Alaska and learned to fly Super Cub on floats up there and it was still is the coolest 5.7 hours in my logbook.
Speaker BI've since flown a little bit more seaplane but still don't have very much time in them.
Speaker BBut it's an absolute ball.
Speaker BI'd love to own one one day.
Speaker BAnd then the commercial stuff was honestly for prereq for my CFI and so I really want to work on my CFI and get CFI and double I next year.
Speaker BBut obviously you needed the commercial and stuff before so I got to work on that and got that knocked out, and here we are.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AWhat was.
Speaker AI mean, you mentioned kind of like why there was the gaps, but was it just you wanted kind of priorities were in other businesses?
Speaker ADid you finally decide, like, all right, I need to be an instrument pilot?
Speaker AOr was there any kind of thing more deeper to why you took either.
Speaker AWhat was it, six years and 16 years between private and commercial and private and instrument?
Speaker BYeah, it's a good question.
Speaker BMy instrument.
Speaker BSo there was a. I'd have to go back and look at my logbook, but I took like a little bit of time off and I was.
Speaker BI was working in the corporate world and I had a really good buddy that I met there at this company, and we were talking every day and I found myself telling him a lot of flying stories you just couldn't believe.
Speaker BIt's like, oh, you went to this place and that place, and you can get in a small airplane and go do that.
Speaker BSo he was just really interested in flying.
Speaker BAnd so I'd like.
Speaker BIt was like a daily thing to tell him flying stories and stuff.
Speaker BAnd.
Speaker BAnd eventually he's asked me, he's like, dude, you talk about this all the time.
Speaker BLike, why aren't you still doing it?
Speaker BAnd I didn't have a good answer for him because at that point then I had the money to go back and fly and stuff.
Speaker BAnd I was like, you know what?
Speaker BYou're right.
Speaker BI'm going to do it.
Speaker BAnd so I used getting the instrument rating as a way to just get current again and kind of get back in the system and everything.
Speaker BI was like.
Speaker BI worked a couple miles from the airport and I did all but one of my training flights for instrument.
Speaker BI did it at night, so I just work all day.
Speaker BWasn't married at the time, didn't have kids.
Speaker BAnd so I just.
Speaker BI just go train after work, which is great.
Speaker BThe weather's bad and it's dark outside.
Speaker BAll the better.
Speaker BYou're training for that anyway.
Speaker BSo I did most of that at night, got my instrument, and then I was running planes for a little bit.
Speaker BAnd then mainly just because I wanted to fly more and I could afford it.
Speaker BI was like, it's time to buy an airplane.
Speaker BI ended up getting my 182.
Speaker BAnd then the commercial was.
Speaker BWas kind of a similar thing of just.
Speaker BIt was kind of based on need.
Speaker BI was like, I really, really want to become a flight instructor.
Speaker BAnd that was, you know, obviously prerequisite and stuff.
Speaker BAnd so it was just hard to, like, get around to finishing your commercial because it's not all that exciting.
Speaker BI mean, it's.
Speaker BIt's exciting in the sense that we're blessed to fly and it's fun to fly, but it's not like there's just.
Speaker BIt's not like in your seaplane rating, you're like, oh, my gosh, I can't wait to go do this training.
Speaker BCommercial's a little bland in the scheme of.
Speaker BYou know, in the scheme of things, but don't want to lose perspective on it.
Speaker BSo it was hard, but the point is, it was hard to prioritize.
Speaker BAnd so eventually, like, I started it a couple times and then stopped because life got in the way.
Speaker BAnd my wife is so much smarter than me, and she just sat me down.
Speaker BShe's like, look, we both need to just, like, dedicate a season to this.
Speaker BAnd you knock it out because you've tried a few times and stopped, and you keep saying you want to do it.
Speaker BLike, let's just carve it out.
Speaker BYou have my support.
Speaker BYou can study in the evenings.
Speaker BWe won't say yes to many things.
Speaker BJust get it done.
Speaker BI was like, okay.
Speaker BSo I finally kind of did a focused sprint, and I was flying a lot and studying a lot.
Speaker BLike, that's when I was able to knock it out.
Speaker BSo that's my plan for how to approach CFI as well.
Speaker AHave you told her that?
Speaker AHave you been like, hey, we need another season of life where all I do is study?
Speaker BYeah, I think she knows it's coming.
Speaker BHonestly, she's been wanting me to do it for forever, so I'm in my own way on that.
Speaker BLike, no, but I got this going and this going, whatever.
Speaker BSo she's like, you need to do it.
Speaker AGotta love it when you got some support at home.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker AIt makes things a little bit easier.
Speaker BYeah, I've been very, very blessed with my wife.
Speaker BGood example of marrying up.
Speaker AAll right.
Speaker AExactly.
Speaker AYeah, I agree.
Speaker AI did the same thing.
Speaker AThere wouldn't be a podcast on my wife.
Speaker AI told that story a couple of times.
Speaker ABut, yeah, this.
Speaker AI would still be playing video games.
Speaker AI'd probably be a twitch streamer playing Call of Duty or something like that.
Speaker ATalk about the 182.
Speaker AI mean, anyone that's listening to my podcast for probably a while would be like, man, Justin used to always talk about wanting a 182.
Speaker AThe problem was I started talking about this, and prices just went through the roof.
Speaker AAnd I just cannot justify spending, like, $250,000 on a straight tail 182.
Speaker ANow, I don't think those are 250 grand.
Speaker ABut you kind of get my drift, right?
Speaker ASuper expensive to get into the 182 market.
Speaker ASo I would love to hear timing of when you got in.
Speaker AWhat made you finally kind of.
Speaker ABecause everyone says, I want to buy an airplane one day and half the people actually do.
Speaker ANot even half.
Speaker AProbably one fourth of the people actually do.
Speaker ASo I want to hear about kind of the reasons why you actually bought it and just hear the story.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BSo I always knew I wanted to buy an airplane.
Speaker BIt was just a timing thing.
Speaker BAnd I was renting one for a little while.
Speaker BBut then in retrospect, I look back and I talk about this on the channel.
Speaker BI think it came down to three things.
Speaker BIt.
Speaker BAnd I kind of think about it in terms of like, freedom, frequency, and finances.
Speaker BAnd if at some point all three of those things lean more towards buying, then I think you've got the green light.
Speaker BLike, I didn't have enough freedom.
Speaker BThe freedom that I wanted when renting, like, it was only available at the last second, you know, in the evening or something.
Speaker BIt's like I couldn't.
Speaker BI couldn't plan a weekend trip even if I wanted to in a renting situation.
Speaker BSo I didn't have the freedom I wanted in terms of frequency.
Speaker BLike, I wanted to fly enough to where owning actually would be cheap.
Speaker BIf I.
Speaker BIf I could fly as many hours as I actually wanted to, it would actually be net cheaper to own.
Speaker BAnd so, like, the frequency kind of leaned towards now I'm flying enough that owning makes sense.
Speaker BAnd then the finances, you know, that's going to be a little subjective for everybody, but I felt like I was in a position where it made sense.
Speaker BUm, and so those three things kind of pushed me over to buying an airplane.
Speaker BI had mostly 172 tied a little 182 time at that, at that point.
Speaker BSo I was like, do I get a 172 or A.
Speaker BSome sort of Piper or something?
Speaker BAnd my flying mentor, Bob called me and goes, look, I just really want you to trust me on this.
Speaker BBuy182 if it's the only airplane you ever buy, you will never regret it.
Speaker BJust like, stretch a little bit and buy more airplane than a 172.
Speaker BAnd so I took his advice and I was like, great, let's start looking for one.
Speaker BAnd the next day he found it.
Speaker BAnd he goes, I'm calling you back.
Speaker BI found your 182.
Speaker BAnd he goes, and if you don't buy it, I will.
Speaker BBecause it was like A new engine, recently updated panel, newer paint, like all this stuff.
Speaker BAnd it was, and it was under market priced and we did a whole pre buy, did everything.
Speaker BLike there wasn't anything hidden on it.
Speaker BThe guy was just getting out of aviation and wanted it sold.
Speaker BAnd so we got it.
Speaker BAnd like a week between me deciding, okay, I'm going to buy an airplane, I want a 182.
Speaker BA week later it was in the hangar.
Speaker BAnd so it was kind of, it was kind of whiplash in that way.
Speaker BBut I think the Perks for the 182.
Speaker BI'm a huge believer in the 182.
Speaker BAnd just briefly, I would say that it's really not great at anything, but it is good at everything.
Speaker AOkay.
Speaker AI was like, that's not how you sell an airplane to someone.
Speaker AWe're saying it's not great at anything.
Speaker BIt's not.
Speaker BBut that's its superpower.
Speaker BI really do.
Speaker BI can say that with confident.
Speaker BSo, like, if it's not the best bush plane in the world, it's not the highest useful load, it's not the most efficient fuel burn, it's not the fastest.
Speaker BBut if you want to rank like economical airplanes that carry a decent amount, go decently fast, can land short, don't burn a ton of fuel, like, the 182 would probably be in your top five or at least top 10 airplanes and all of those lists.
Speaker BAnd it's probably one of the only airplanes that would be in all of those.
Speaker BYou know what I mean?
Speaker BAnd so, like, if you want something that's just going to be like a good Tahoe or like a Jeep, where you're like, it's going to be good at a little bit of everything.
Speaker BIt's not going to be, you know, leading in any one category, but it's going to be respectable.
Speaker BLike, the 182 is your airplane.
Speaker BSo I figured if it was the first and last airplane I ever bought, it would allow me to do a little bit of everything.
Speaker BAnd that has not failed me.
Speaker ADo you mind if I asked what you bought it for?
Speaker BYeah, I got it for $93,000.
Speaker BI know.
Speaker BBack in 2016.
Speaker BAnd, and even then, I mean, prices were a lot lower back then, but even then it was, it was under market.
Speaker BBut yeah, it's really unfortunate what's happened with all the pricing.
Speaker BLike, I don't.
Speaker BYeah, my, my airplane has appreciated in value, but I don't win on that because one, my insurance costs have just gone up because I have to insure it for more and then two if I ever want to, like, switch it out with anything else.
Speaker BLike.
Speaker BWell, the replacement costs also went through the roof.
Speaker BSo unless I was just going to sell the airplane and never buy another one and just get out of aviation, like, nobody wins on all that appreciation.
Speaker BSo it's.
Speaker BIt's unfortunate what has happened, but I was really lucky to get mine when.
Speaker AI did what you mentioned, how to upgrade a panel.
Speaker AWhat kind of panel are we talking about?
Speaker BYeah, I mean, it's not as upgraded now as it was like, in 2016, but I've got a Garmin 430 was and an Aspen 1000 PFD and an okay autopilot and decent comstack and stuff.
Speaker BSo it's kind of partial glass.
Speaker BIt's still got a vacuum system things in it, but at some point, I'd love to rip all that out and, you know, go, go full Garmin glass and everything.
Speaker BBut it's.
Speaker BIt's got.
Speaker BIt's got a lot of what I need.
Speaker BLike, there's a few things missing, but it, you know, in general, it's like, it's been a.
Speaker BIt's been a solid panel.
Speaker BIt's only once you start comparing it to, like, the kodiak with the G1000NXi, it's like, okay, once you start flying that, you're like, oh, you know, it's all perspective.
Speaker BBut then, like, when I'm just flying my airplane, I'm like, it's a great airplane.
Speaker BIt's a great panel.
Speaker BI'm really.
Speaker AOr you watch, like, YouTube and you see Aviation 101, and you're like, wow, I want that.
Speaker AAll right.
Speaker BI know.
Speaker BIt's all.
Speaker BIt's all a perspective thing.
Speaker BIt's so sneaky, you know, Perspective.
Speaker AWhat's the mission for you?
Speaker A182.
Speaker AWhat is.
Speaker AWhat's, like, a flight look like?
Speaker AWhat's.
Speaker AI mean, like, a month look like with this airplane?
Speaker AKind of talk about what you guys use it for.
Speaker BYeah, you know, I take it on a few long trips a year.
Speaker BLike, I just took it to Oshkosh and back, which is really fun.
Speaker BI've flown it to Idaho a couple times and back.
Speaker BI've flown it to Tennessee and Florida and Colorado and different places, and so I'll do that a handful of times.
Speaker BBut what I love about it is, like, it'll.
Speaker BIt'll get you to all of those places if you're willing to just sit long enough.
Speaker BIt's not slow by any means, but it's not a speed demon.
Speaker BBut it's comfortable and so it's good for those kinds of trips.
Speaker BBut if you want to just go do pattern work, you totally can.
Speaker BAnd it's not that expensive.
Speaker BSo, like, it's, it's, you know, it's a range.
Speaker BLike, I'll sometimes do those long trips.
Speaker BSometimes I'm just flying to get gas for fun.
Speaker BSometimes I'm flying a couple hundred miles.
Speaker BIt.
Speaker BIt really just depends.
Speaker BLike, I have, I have a lot of my friends have kind of dispersed across Texas.
Speaker BTexas is a big state, so it's not uncommon to have friends that live like a six hour drive away from you.
Speaker BAnd so that's been really helpful that I can go get early breakfast with my friend in Austin or College Station or something and fly home and work most of the day and stuff.
Speaker BSo I've been able to use it, I feel like, in a pretty functional way.
Speaker AYeah, that's good.
Speaker AAnd wife, kids, they like to fly in it.
Speaker BThey do.
Speaker BYou know, so we, our kids are 13 months apart, so we were in, like, baby phase for a while, and it was a lot.
Speaker BWe're very blessed.
Speaker BWe got a three and four year old and they love airplanes.
Speaker BYou know, we haven't flown a ton together, but they really love the Kodiak because they can, like, walk around in the back and spread out and stuff like that.
Speaker AI wouldn't love a Kodiak.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker BBut they do love flying.
Speaker BI'm really, really excited for them to get a little bit older and then for me to be like, hey, the weather's great.
Speaker BIt's a Tuesday.
Speaker BLet's fly to Arkansas and I'm gonna take y' all camping just for tonight.
Speaker BWe'll be back tomorrow.
Speaker BWe're gonna give mom the night off and I'm gonna take you camping.
Speaker BAnd I can't wait to do that because that's not something I got to do growing up.
Speaker BLike, I didn't.
Speaker BMy dad didn't get back into aviation until I was in, like, late middle school.
Speaker BAnd so I didn't get the elementary school years, like, in aviation.
Speaker BAnd so I can't wait to hopefully, hopefully give that to my kids.
Speaker AYeah, we're probably talking about, like, northwest Arkansas, like Bentonville area, I'd imagine.
Speaker AYeah, yeah, dude.
Speaker ASuper underrated.
Speaker APart of the country.
Speaker ALike, I, when I grew up in North Carolina, I think Arkansas, I mean, I think of Arkansas football.
Speaker AI do not think of Bentonville or northwest Arkansas.
Speaker AI think of, like, Mississippi type stuff.
Speaker ABut northwest Arkansas is actually pretty sick.
Speaker ALike, I mean, I, I don't Ever think I'd move there?
Speaker ABut if I ever found myself in a situation where I had to live there, I don't think I'd be that angry.
Speaker ALike, it's like, it's kind of nice.
Speaker BArkansas is such an underrated part of the country.
Speaker BBecause you're right, I like you don't really associate it with like, oh, it's gorgeous and there's a lot of cool flying there.
Speaker BBut northern and northwestern Arkansas is a really, really great place for aviation.
Speaker BFly oz or just flyoz.com, they've done a really good job of just documenting.
Speaker BThey've got like this really cool helicopter with an amazing camera on it.
Speaker BSo they've documented all these really cool strips that you can go to and stuff up there.
Speaker BSo there's a lot of good flying.
Speaker BAnd if you want to learn, you know, basic backcountry stuff, it's a great place to do it because there's some short strips if you want them.
Speaker BBut a lot of them, a lot of the really cool ones are still 3,000ft long.
Speaker BSo they're long by backcountry standards.
Speaker AYeah, they're pretty cool.
Speaker BAnd you don't have the density, altitude in the high elevation and the terrain.
Speaker BI mean, some of them have a little bit of terrain here and there.
Speaker BBut like the two times I've gone to Idaho, like probably one of the, maybe the coolest place in the whole country in my opinion, to fly.
Speaker BBut it's very intimidating and it's very unforgiving.
Speaker BI think Arkansas is like a perfect warmup for that.
Speaker BIf you want to learn how to fly near trees and, you know, land, land short and stuff.
Speaker BLike, it's, it's.
Speaker BI don't know.
Speaker BI'm a huge fan.
Speaker BSo I usually go out there a few times a year.
Speaker BIt's like a seven hour drive from Dallas, so I would probably never do that.
Speaker BBut it's like a two hour flight and a really pretty flight at that.
Speaker BSo it's become a really special place to me.
Speaker AYeah, absolutely.
Speaker ANo, it's a, it's a cool place.
Speaker AI haven't been there with the current job, but my last job, we would go in and out of Bentonville and fly certain families around and do their, do their thing.
Speaker ABut it was cool.
Speaker ALet's talk about YouTube and the 182.
Speaker AWas that kind of the precursor for your channel was like, I'm buying a plane, let's document it.
Speaker AOr were you doing stuff before then?
Speaker BSo I got the airplane in 2016.
Speaker BI didn't start the YouTube channel until 2019.
Speaker BActually, the precursor for the channel was Airplane Academy was originally a blog.
Speaker BLike, it was a, you know, I talk about different businesses I've started, how they're all an experiment.
Speaker BAt the time, I really, really wanted to learn SEO and blogging and stuff for various reasons.
Speaker BAnd so I wanted to pick a topic.
Speaker BLike, I had started other niche websites and boating and model rockets and different things.
Speaker BAnd I was like, this is cool, it's working, but I really want to blog about something that I really care about.
Speaker BAnd I really care about aviation.
Speaker BSo I was like, I really want to start an aviation website and try to help people.
Speaker BAnd so I was trying to think of what to name it, and I was shocked that airplaneacademy.com was available.
Speaker BAnd I was like, well, that's perfect for a blog.
Speaker BI'll do it.
Speaker BAnd I didn't really think very.
Speaker BI didn't really think very hard about it.
Speaker BI was like, I really love that domain and started blogging.
Speaker BAnd then I've always been interested in video and like making things, but I never really had anything to make a video about.
Speaker BLike, I don't like in a video myself putting gas in my car or something.
Speaker BIt's like, there's nothing.
Speaker BThere's nothing there.
Speaker BBut I thought, well, I've got an airplane and I want to, like, help people and spread the word and stuff.
Speaker BLike, maybe I can document some flying stuff.
Speaker BSo it's all just an experiment.
Speaker BAnd I started and it was a.
Speaker BIt was a lot of videos before it really got any meaningful traction.
Speaker BBut I just really loved the idea of putting a video together.
Speaker BLike, it was a fun project.
Speaker BAnd I was like, I kind of know what I want to make, but I don't know what it's totally going to look like, but I want to do it to find out.
Speaker BAnd that was kind of my motivation for.
Speaker BFor every project.
Speaker BAnd I was like, and if it helps somebody in the process, then like, awesome.
Speaker BAnd so just kind of do that.
Speaker BAnd little by little, and it kind of grew from there.
Speaker AWhat was the first video like?
Speaker ALike, do you ever go back and watch the first video and you're like, whoa, what the heck was I doing?
Speaker AIt's like, no wonder why people weren't watching it.
Speaker AOr was it just kind of like, ah, this is cool.
Speaker ALike, I love seeing, seeing how I started.
Speaker BYeah, I haven't deleted a single video on my channel, so you can go back and look and look at all my cringy things.
Speaker BIt was all big experiment I mean the first things that I posted were just like I had just gotten back from Idaho and I just stuck, you know, a single camera set up, you know, looking out front of the plane.
Speaker BAnd so I was like, well I've got some cool landings going into some of these cool places.
Speaker BI'll just trim that down and post it and see what happens.
Speaker BLike here's what it looks like going into Sulphur Creek or whatever.
Speaker BSo I did some of that and then I really wanted to do some things where I was just sharing my advice because again I was just meeting so many different people just as I got older that couldn't believe my co worker Paul who just couldn't believe that you can own an airplane and go on these adventures and stuff.
Speaker BAnd I was like, man, I'm so grateful that I grew up where that was normal, you know what I mean?
Speaker BBut to most people it's not normal.
Speaker BSo all the lessons that I've learned, all the screw ups I've had, not to my credit but those are probably helpful to someone not because I'm a genius but because like well I've screwed up.
Speaker BSo if you want to know what the screw ups are, here they are so you can dodge it.
Speaker BLike I've always found that content and all the business content I've ever consumed, I have always found it more valuable to hear people's mess ups than people's triumphs because triumphs are not always relatable.
Speaker BIt's like well good for you, I'm glad that worked out but that's not my situation, you know what I mean?
Speaker BBut screw ups are relatable.
Speaker BI'm like oh I've done that or I can, I can know, okay, I'm going to try not to do that.
Speaker BSo those have always really resonated with me.
Speaker BAnd so that's kind of been my perspective on the channel of like I don't think enough people share, share their mess ups and, and you know, I'll, I'll try to get vulnerable and share those in case it helps you.
Speaker BAnd so that's kind of what I started doing on the channel.
Speaker BJust filming, you know, here's, here's, here's my experience and stuff like that.
Speaker BAnd yeah, the production was terrible.
Speaker BI was in like a little echoey room in our house and like it was horrible like in retrospect and, and like the first video I ever had that like went you know, viral in, in you know, according to me like in my scope like the room was super echoey and I Got so many rude comments and I was like, why are people being mean to me?
Speaker BThis is crazy.
Speaker BJust trying to help them, you know.
Speaker BAnd then, and then as it got more traction, I was like, I probably need to like buy better microphone and buy better lighting.
Speaker BAnd you just start to kind of level it up over the course of time.
Speaker AYep, absolutely.
Speaker ASpecifically about the 182 though, did you kind of post about.
Speaker ABecause it doesn't sound like there's many mistakes made in this purchase.
Speaker ALike it almost sounds like it was just like perfect, you know, like perfect timing in the sky.
Speaker ALike, hey, you need to get a 182.
Speaker ALike, oh cool, yeah, I'll get a 182.
Speaker AHey, guess what?
Speaker AI found you a 182.
Speaker AYou know, it's like, how did you kind of introduce that content into your, your channel?
Speaker BYeah, that.
Speaker BYou're right.
Speaker BThat part was definitely smooth.
Speaker BAnd when I say sharing my screw ups is probably, I mean, I've definitely screwed up some on the ownership side, but more like here's a really dumb mistake I made in the mountains.
Speaker BAnd not because I'm trying to get attention for it, but because like, I feel like I've healed from it and I can look at it objectively.
Speaker BSo I want to share it with you now so you don't make the same mistake.
Speaker BThose are a lot of the videos that I reference.
Speaker BBut yeah, like in ownership, I've definitely shared a lot of things that, like, hey, here, here are ways that I spent way too much money in early airplane ownership and stuff.
Speaker BAnd I've like gotten such mean comments.
Speaker BBe like, can you, can you believe you did that?
Speaker BI'm like, yeah, that's why I made the video.
Speaker BLike, I regret doing that.
Speaker ALike, come on, I'm an idiot.
Speaker AI know, I'm calling myself.
Speaker AI know.
Speaker BLike, you don't have to rub it in.
Speaker BThat's the point of the video, man.
Speaker BBut yeah, just kind of mistakes.
Speaker BAnd enter.
Speaker BBut then I've been able to also share like things that they went well and I'm like, I'm really glad it happened this way.
Speaker BSo I encourage you to do the same.
Speaker BLike, one of the early things that enabled me to get an airplane was finding a hangar before I had the plane.
Speaker BBecause hangars are just so hard to find and we were able to get a hold of a hangar.
Speaker BI was like, well, I don't have an airplane, but I have a hangar now, so I can go fill it with something.
Speaker BAnd so I tell people, I'm like, you know, people will Send me, you know, a listing of like, hey, this airplane's really cool.
Speaker BWhat do you think about it?
Speaker BAnd I'm like, I think you might have missed the line at the very bottom that it comes with the hangar.
Speaker BSo I would get it, get the hangar and sell the airplane, then go buy the one you want.
Speaker BLike, just trying to help people understand that.
Speaker BLike, I'm really glad that's how it worked for me.
Speaker BSo I'd encouraging you to do the same, you know.
Speaker AYeah, I.
Speaker ASo I called around where I live in North Carolina and I was just like, hey, I want to be on put on the wait list for a hangar spot.
Speaker AAnd they're like, okay, cool.
Speaker AWhat is your tail number?
Speaker AI'm like, I don't have a tail number.
Speaker AI want to go on the waitlist.
Speaker ALike, well, now you can't even go to the wait list without having a tail.
Speaker AAnd it's like, holy smokes.
Speaker ALike, why is it so hard to get this out?
Speaker AIt's like, I don't want to buy an airplane and then not have a place to put it.
Speaker AEspecially some of the airplanes I'm looking at.
Speaker AIf they're fabric, it's like, I'm not trying to have it sit outside the whole time.
Speaker ASo.
Speaker AYeah, I agree with you there.
Speaker AIf you ever see an airplane that comes with a hangar, buy it so you can have the hangar.
Speaker ALike, just get it.
Speaker BThe hangars were 10 times more than the airplane.
Speaker BYou can sell the airplane.
Speaker AThat's crazy.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AHaving a hangar be cool, you know, having like a hang.
Speaker ALike right now I'm just in a guest room, but if I could put this all by an airport, that'd be pretty sweet.
Speaker AThat's the goal.
Speaker BDefinitely.
Speaker AWith my airplane in the background.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker AInstead of this wall with a blue light on it.
Speaker BYeah, that's awesome.
Speaker AYeah, dude, that's cool, man.
Speaker AJust having 182, having the ability to go do that.
Speaker AI see what you want to do with your family and your kids when you go fly.
Speaker AI'm thinking myself, I have a 3 year old.
Speaker AIf I could fly him to the beach just for the day and then we fly back, you know, it's like, hey, dude, guess what?
Speaker ADon't tell anyone, but we're not going to school today.
Speaker AWe're gonna go to the beach, you know?
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BHow often?
Speaker BThat'd be the best absent, like, absent excuse ever.
Speaker BLike, oh, we flew to the beach.
Speaker BHe's like, what do you mean you flew to the beach?
Speaker BLike, I got it.
Speaker AThat's what we do.
Speaker BYeah, I went to the beach, people.
Speaker AOur family does, right?
Speaker AYeah, we fly to the beach.
Speaker BBeach, yeah.
Speaker BIt's crazy, but people can do it.
Speaker BThat's what I'm trying to share on YouTube.
Speaker BI'm like, a lot of people, golf is their thing or cooking is their thing or whatever.
Speaker BBut, like, if you want getting an airplane and flying to the beach to be your thing, like, you can do it.
Speaker BIt's kind of expensive, and it's going to take a lot of work, and it's, you know, you got to, like, put some effort into it, but it can be your thing.
Speaker BAnd I think a lot of people, like, it takes them hearing that a few times before they're like, oh, wow, that could be my thing.
Speaker BAnd I think.
Speaker BI don't know.
Speaker BThat's just the perspective I've taken on YouTube of, like, more people need to hear that this could be your thing.
Speaker BAnd if they believe it, then I think, like, more.
Speaker BMore people are going to become pilots, which is going to make it better for everybody.
Speaker BSo I'm real passionate about that.
Speaker AYeah, absolutely.
Speaker AWhat would you say is one or two things that surprised you about aircraft ownership?
Speaker AMaybe for the good or for the worse?
Speaker BOne big difference from renting was, like, the timing of expenses, and just.
Speaker BYou just have to be prepared for that mentally.
Speaker BAnd what I mean by that is, like, when you rent, one of the downsides is you say, cool, I'm gonna go watch the sunset tonight.
Speaker BI'm gonna take my wife or my girlfriend or whatever, and you're gonna go watch the sunset, which is great.
Speaker BYou have a great time.
Speaker BAnd then when you land, you get a bill on your credit card for, like, $600.
Speaker BAnd so you, like, side by side, you immediately compare.
Speaker BWas that experience worth $600?
Speaker BAnd sometimes you'll say yes, sometimes you'll say no.
Speaker BBut, like, there's a one for one comparison to it, which.
Speaker BWhich can be really demotivating sometimes in airplane ownership, it's the total opposite.
Speaker BLike, there's some flights where my airplane was already full of fuel.
Speaker BI got to go fly for a few hours, came back, never saw Bill.
Speaker BThe whole thing felt free somehow.
Speaker BAnd then the opposite is also true where the airplane's in the shop for a few weeks.
Speaker BYou know, you got to change a cylinder or something.
Speaker BThen you get a cold, and you don't.
Speaker BYou know, you're on this.
Speaker BAll this cold medicines, you can't fly.
Speaker BThen the weather sucks, and you're like, I haven't flown in two months, but I have all these bills.
Speaker BLike, the hangar's still getting billed, My insurance is still getting billed.
Speaker BI got a shop bill.
Speaker BAnd you're like, I didn't.
Speaker BI don't have any.
Speaker BAny, you know, flying to show for it, but I spent a lot of money, and you just have to be kind of prepared for that.
Speaker BAnd for me, it's always been worth it because I'm like, those days that feel free are like, some of the best days you can possibly have.
Speaker BAnd you just need to be ready to stomach the times where you're not flying, but you're paying for a lot of flying, and it's just a lot.
Speaker BA lot different than renting.
Speaker BSo that was a.
Speaker BThat was a new experience for me, which took.
Speaker BTook me a few years to, like, get really used to and.
Speaker BAnd ready for.
Speaker BBut I try to warn, you know, upcoming owners about that new reality.
Speaker AHas there been a year or month or kind of a time period where you're like, ah, man, maybe this plane just isn't for us anymore and I need to sell.
Speaker BI mean, I'd be lying if I said that the thought hadn't crossed my mind.
Speaker BI mean, sometimes, like, when you.
Speaker BWhen you go through those periods, like the last.
Speaker BThe last couple of years, I've just been working a lot.
Speaker BI've just been working a lot.
Speaker BAnd so there's been times where it's not as enticing to say, I'm gonna go fly 10 miles to another airport and go get gas and come back.
Speaker BI'm like, Well, I live 30 minutes from the airport, so, you know, I'm a dad of two little kids.
Speaker BI got a business I'm running.
Speaker BYou got things going on.
Speaker BI'm like, am I really gonna take half the day to drive down the airport, fight traffic, get in the airplane, go fly 10 miles away, get gas, you know, do the whole thing.
Speaker BAnd like, a lot of those.
Speaker BA lot of those days I'm just like, it doesn't feel worth it today.
Speaker BAnd then you kind of do that and you're like, cool, I'll just go next week.
Speaker BAnd the next week the same thing happens.
Speaker BAnd like, before you know it, you haven't flown that much.
Speaker BAnd there have been times where I'm like, man, like, I gotta fly more if I'm gonna own this airplane.
Speaker BNow, obviously there's years where I fly a ton, but, yeah, I mean, that happens.
Speaker BLike, I think, like, I'm human.
Speaker BAnd everyone has ups and downs where times where you're like, man, this is really expensive.
Speaker BThis is not as fun or, you're not flying it as much where you're, you know, might be on the chopping block.
Speaker BBut for me, I'm like, I, I just kind of end up coming to.
Speaker BI, I want to fly for as long as the Lord will let me.
Speaker BLike, I want to fly.
Speaker BI'm willing to pay for it.
Speaker BI'm willing to do whatever I have to do to pay for it.
Speaker BI want to fly until I can't.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BAnd, and the risk that comes with that and the financial burden that comes with that, I'm okay with.
Speaker BBecause I would rather, I would rather live a life like that than a life without aviation in it.
Speaker BAnd so for me, it's, it's always been worth it.
Speaker AWhat can you change to make it easier to go do those flights?
Speaker AIs it working less?
Speaker AIs it bringing family with you on those flights?
Speaker ALike, what would be a way to not have that kind of come up with, like, oh man.
Speaker ALike, gotta make the excuse of not going to go do it.
Speaker BI think for me it's been really helpful to have missions.
Speaker BAnd so a mission could be simply, hey, I'm taking a friend flying.
Speaker BHe's never been flying before and finally mustered up the courage to go.
Speaker BCool.
Speaker BI'm going with him Wednesday.
Speaker BUnless the weather sucks.
Speaker BLike, we're going have stuff on there that isn't as fragile as I'm just gonna fly and get gas and come home.
Speaker BBecause that's super exciting at the beginning.
Speaker BDon't be wrong.
Speaker BLike, I used to clear my calendar to just go do that.
Speaker BCause it was noon, it was novel.
Speaker BAnd once you've done it a lot, just like anything else, like it doesn't, it's not as exciting as it once was.
Speaker BEven though it's still awesome that we get to do it.
Speaker BUm, and so I have found that just having, having important missions on there, like even, even, okay, I've got, I've got some filming I want to do.
Speaker BSo like that's on the calendar.
Speaker BI'm doing that.
Speaker BOr I'm, you know, just like find reasons to go that, that aren't as fragile as I'm just flying 10 miles away for fuel.
Speaker AYou know, as your family, whether it grows or as your kids get older, is kind of wants and needs change.
Speaker ADo you see yourself keeping the 182?
Speaker ADo you see yourself looking for, you know, a six seater?
Speaker AAre you like, hey, that Kodiak 100 is kind of cool, dad.
Speaker ALike, what's your plan there?
Speaker AYou know, like, kind of talk about what you kind of see for your family either in the future or just kind of plans that you have?
Speaker BIt's a good question.
Speaker BYou know, I think airplane ownership all comes down to mission.
Speaker BUnless you have infinite money, which nobody does, it's all about, what airplane do you need for your mission?
Speaker BAnd right now, the 182 is, like, perfect for my mission.
Speaker BI could see a world in which having a 206 makes more sense one day because you can carry more, you know, go higher, faster, like, turbo 206, still go back country.
Speaker BLike, backcountry is still my favorite thing to do, even though I haven't done nearly as much of it as, like, Trent Palmer, you know, some of the other guys.
Speaker BBut, like, it's still my favorite type of flying.
Speaker BSo I really want to own an airplane that.
Speaker BThat can do that.
Speaker BLike, I don't think I'll ever own a cirrus because of that, even though those are really cool airplanes.
Speaker BSo I think, like, a 206 might make sense one day, but it really kind of depends on what our family and up doing with the Kodiak, because right now it's a lot cheaper to buy fuel in the Kodiak than it is to sell my 182 and buy a newer 206, you know, so.
Speaker BBut, like, the days that I'm like, man, what are.
Speaker BWhat are we gonna do?
Speaker BWhat are we gonna do?
Speaker BThe family grows.
Speaker BI'm like, again, it all comes back to perspective.
Speaker BI try to pinch myself of, like, the.
Speaker BThe fact that, like, that's the.
Speaker BThe.
Speaker BThe thing on my mind that day or something that I'm stressed out.
Speaker BLike, what are we gonna do with 182?
Speaker BIt's like, man, I'm so blessed and so fortunate to even have that be on my radar.
Speaker BLike, if I can step back, like, it.
Speaker BIt just makes me so happy to have the 182 that I do and gives me a lot of patience to not really need to change anything for a long time, you know?
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AWhat's.
Speaker AObviously, you mentioned that a panel, right?
Speaker ALike a full g new garment panel probably needs to happen, right?
Speaker AYou know, I'm going to push you for this.
Speaker AI'm going to text you randomly, like, hey, dude, you need that garment panel?
Speaker AIt's like, come on, man, I want to see it in the next video.
Speaker ABut any other upgrades that you want to do to it, anything else, you can make it your own or you kind of happy with what you got right now?
Speaker BYeah, it's a slippery slope on the panel because it all started with.
Speaker BI would really Love a stronger autopilot that can also do to altitude changes and things.
Speaker BAnd so I really love the Garmin autopilots and stuff, but I start to run into some compatibility issues with my Aspen and different things.
Speaker BAnd so it's a slippery slope of like, okay, well, if you want the Garmin autopilot, then you need a Garmin pfd.
Speaker BAnd if you're going to do that, then you might as well change this.
Speaker BAnd if you're going to change that, you might as well change this.
Speaker BLike, and then the airplane's going to be down for a while because you need to build new panel and put it the shop and like, eventually it's worth just, just doing the whole thing, you know what I mean?
Speaker BAnd so I think if I'm going to touch the panel, it's going to be kind of an all or nothing thing.
Speaker BAnd I, I love Garmin.
Speaker BHuge fan of Garmin.
Speaker BHave some Garmin in my airplane.
Speaker BAnd so I think that would be a really fun dream thing.
Speaker BBut then at some point, like, I'm kind of a, I'm kind of a nerd for branding.
Speaker BLike, I went through a whole rebranding with Airplane Academy last year to make flashcards look the quality that I wanted them.
Speaker BAnd I just, I loved that process.
Speaker BAnd so I thought it'd be really, really, really cool to repaint my airplane in the new Airplane Academy paint scheme and fly with that and have the logo on it and stuff.
Speaker BAnd I think that would be really, really cool because I'm going to need new paint at some point.
Speaker BYeah, my interior in the Texas sun is just really, really dried out.
Speaker BSo it, you know, eventually I could see going all in on the 182 and just like redo the whole thing.
Speaker ABut there's not, there's not that content too.
Speaker BYeah, it'd be fun.
Speaker BIt'd be such a fun thing to do.
Speaker BSo, you know, we'll see.
Speaker AYeah, that's cool, man.
Speaker ATalking more specifically about Airplane Academy, you talked about the rebrand, you talked about the flashcards, you talked about the want and need to make more products.
Speaker AAre you able to share stuff that you're working on that you want to do stuff like that, or are you kind of happy with where it is right now?
Speaker BYeah, still, still working and, and trying to find the balance between, like spending time on everything.
Speaker BLike, I, I don't want, you know, anyone listening.
Speaker BBe like, man, Charlie's just working hard and everything's working.
Speaker BIt's like there's a lot of good things Happening.
Speaker BI'm very blessed.
Speaker BBut like, I'm human too.
Speaker BI struggle to balance my to do list every day.
Speaker BI have kids.
Speaker BI want to be a good dad.
Speaker BI also want to be a good business owner.
Speaker BIt's like not everything's perfect behind the scenes, you know what I mean?
Speaker BBut trying to split my time between being consistent on content and making YouTube content and working on showing up more on Instagram and email and things.
Speaker BBut.
Speaker BSo that's kind of my first priority is content and then trying to find more ways to get the word out about flashcards I think can really help people because it's been really helpful to me.
Speaker BAnd then I'm also starting to work on instrument flashcards for the instrument rating and like, I could probably hire some CFIs to do that for me.
Speaker BBut like, I'm.
Speaker BI'm pretty detail oriented and I just like, I really, really want to get in the weeds and build all the cards myself.
Speaker BI still want to have a lot of oversight from CFIs to check in and give me input and stuff.
Speaker BBut like, it's more than just a product for me.
Speaker BLike, this is like I.
Speaker BLike I said I want to fly for as long as I can.
Speaker BAnd so I want to go through the process of having to build these cards so I can.
Speaker BSo I can relearn all this stuff for myself and like in more deeply ingrain it in myself.
Speaker BAnd to do that just takes longer.
Speaker BSo I don't know when those are going to be ready, but I'm.
Speaker BI'm doing it the hard way.
Speaker BBut the first set were really high quality, so I have no doubt the second set will be really high quality too.
Speaker BAnd then there might be subsequent flashcards after that for commercial or CFI or whatnot, but definitely private and instrument.
Speaker BAnd then I'm working on.
Speaker BI'm not ready to like announce all the details of it yet, but I'm working on kind of a unique way to digitize them at some point in a way that I'm really, really excited about.
Speaker BIt's going to take a little time, but I'm working on it.
Speaker BSo I mean, at the end of the day, like, I'm trying to grow it to help more people, but like I mentioned earlier, like, this has been a really fun business and project and vocation to work on because I am my own customer.
Speaker BSo I'm just thinking, okay, I'm a pilot trying to be active.
Speaker BI'm an airplane owner.
Speaker BLike, what pain points do I have for that?
Speaker BAnd is that something I could solve?
Speaker BBecause I know if I have that problem, other people have that problem problem too.
Speaker BAnd so it's not just a money grab of like, what could I sell people?
Speaker BIt's like, what problems can I solve?
Speaker BHow can I be helpful?
Speaker BBecause that, that's what I want my brand and channel to be known for, is helpfulness, like, encouragement and authenticity and helpfulness.
Speaker BAnd I want my products to, to be the same.
Speaker AIf you could look back, he kind of answered it, but try to change it with this question.
Speaker AIf you could look back, let's say in 50 years, you know, you're re listening to this podcast, podcast, and whatever it may be, but you're looking back on Airplane Academy, kind of your career, what you've done, what would make you most proud with Airplane Academy.
Speaker ALooking back in the future.
Speaker BI think personally, if, if my kids, they don't even have to be pilots, like, they can do, you know, whatever they feel like the Lord is calling them to.
Speaker BBut like, I think if, if they can grow up saying, like, man, our dad was always very encouraging of what we wanted to do, whether that was aviation or beyond, and we got to take cool trips in his airplane and go camping together and catch fish, that would be more meaningful to me, I think, than any, any business accomplishment, just for my kids to know how much I love them.
Speaker BBut then, like, on the business side, I, I can't really quantify this.
Speaker BMaybe I should at some point as a, as a stretch goal.
Speaker BBut like, I just, I just decided a long time ago, like, if I could in some small way help there to be more pilots in the world, like, I would be deeply honored to play that role.
Speaker BLike, like, I, I just would.
Speaker BAnd so I don't know what that looks like in terms of, like, right now on the channel.
Speaker BI've got flashcards and I've got hopefully some encouraging content of, like, if you want to do this, you can do this.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker BRight now, that's kind of the way I'm trying to do that.
Speaker BBut I think if, if I could just help more people go from the, oh, one day, that would be fun.
Speaker BAnd that's been my childhood dream to I'm actually doing it.
Speaker BI don't even know what number that would need to be.
Speaker BIf it's one, it's worth it.
Speaker BAnd I think if I, if I could help more people become pilots and provide for my family along that process, I can't think of many things better than that.
Speaker AWell, I'll give you a chance right now.
Speaker AWhat's your elevator pitch to someone that is in that situation that's like, hey, Charlie.
Speaker AHey, Justin.
Speaker AI want to be a pilot.
Speaker AYou know, like, I want to do this, but I just don't know if I can or I don't know if I should.
Speaker AShould give me an elevator pitch right now of why.
Speaker AWhy you do that.
Speaker BSo I had a really meaningful conversation with an Uber driver the other day, and a lot of wise advice came from him, a kind of unsuspecting source.
Speaker BHe mentioned how he had a barbecue company, like, a barbecue restaurant.
Speaker BAnd I was like, man, I love entrepreneurship.
Speaker BI was like, that's awesome.
Speaker BThat's so cool.
Speaker BHow's it going?
Speaker BAnd he goes, well, not good.
Speaker BI'm actually closing it because I couldn't get it to make money.
Speaker BAnd I, like, it was like, oh, my gosh, I feel so stupid, right?
Speaker BAnd I said, oh, gosh, I'm sorry.
Speaker BI'm sorry to hear that.
Speaker BAnd he smiled really big.
Speaker BI'll never forget.
Speaker BAnd this.
Speaker BThis applies to aviation.
Speaker BHe goes, no, I'm.
Speaker BI'm so happy.
Speaker BHe goes, I did it.
Speaker BAnd now I know.
Speaker BAnd I won't be an old man looking back, wishing that I had done that, I did that.
Speaker BAnd I thought that was so profound.
Speaker BAnd I think it applies to aviation and beyond of, like, there's so many people that have this bug in them, or they're like, anytime the air, you know, an airplane flies over the soccer field, the rest of the dads aren't looking up, but they're looking up, right?
Speaker BLike, he has the bug.
Speaker BAnd if you're listening that.
Speaker BAnd you're like, that's me.
Speaker BYou have the bug.
Speaker BAnd.
Speaker BAnd I think, like, you have two.
Speaker BYou have two options.
Speaker BLike, Max, my Uber driver, said, you can either go for it and it might not work out.
Speaker BYou might fail, whatever failing means to you, but you'll know, and you'll never have that regret, and you'll never carry that burden of, like, what if.
Speaker BWhat if I could do this one day?
Speaker BI still want, you know, you could either go for it, or the.
Speaker BThe that burden and that regret of not doing it yet will only grow and it will only compound.
Speaker BAnd those are the two routes you have.
Speaker BAnd so if it's something you know you want to do, which route do you want to go?
Speaker BAnd so I try to encourage as many people as I can to pick door number one.
Speaker ALove it.
Speaker AThat's a great answer.
Speaker AGreat question.
Speaker AGreat way to.
Speaker ATo give that outlook on it, because you are right.
Speaker AI mean, we talked about this earlier.
Speaker AWe talked about how there's so many people that will come up to you.
Speaker AYou know, you say you're a pilot, like, oh, dude, I always want to be a pilot.
Speaker AAnd you're like, well, all right, you're, you're 35.
Speaker AWhy don't you go to a pilot?
Speaker ALike, why don't you go do it?
Speaker AAnd it's like, ah, you know, I got this, I got this, I got this.
Speaker ABut yeah, when you phrase it that way, it's kind of like, well, I mean, what do you, when you always want to look back on it and be like, I did that.
Speaker ALike, you never know.
Speaker ASomeone could take a lesson.
Speaker AListen to this.
Speaker AGo take a lesson.
Speaker AThat could be fine for United or American or who may, who, whoever it may be, living a new dream that you never thought that you could have have.
Speaker ASo go do it.
Speaker AThat's all we got to say.
Speaker AJust do it.
Speaker ANike had it right.
Speaker ADon't sue me, Nike, for using your slogan, but just do it.
Speaker BCouldn't agree more.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AWell, Charlie, I appreciate you coming on the podcast.
Speaker AIt was a lot of fun to talk with you.
Speaker AI really look forward to, to seeing your channel grow.
Speaker AI look forward to seeing your business grow and other businesses as well.
Speaker AI wish you the best and hopefully, you know, one day you'll be in your Kodiak 900 or whatever, PC12 doing whatever it is you may be doing, flying all over the country and all over the world, whatever it is.
Speaker ABut I appreciate your time and thank you so much for coming on.
Speaker BThanks for having me.
Speaker BIt's been great to talk with you.
Speaker AAbsolutely.
Speaker AAviation, that is a wrap on today's episode.
Speaker AThank you so much for listening to the podcast.
Speaker AI hope you enjoyed it and if you did, please leave us review Spotify iTunes, go to YouTube, drop us a follow up because we're trying to grow our YouTube as well.
Speaker ABut Avia Nation, it was cool to hear someone buy an airplane.
Speaker AYou know, every time I hear that, I'm just like, gosh, my, I need an airplane.
Speaker AAnd I've been talking about getting an airplane.
Speaker AThis is probably not the year to get an airplane just with things going on, but one day there will be an airplane.
Speaker AYou know, we'll get pilot to pilot on the side, we'll do in flight podcasts and pretty cool.
Speaker AWe'll make it happen.
Speaker ABut aviation, I hope you are having a great day and as always, happy flying.
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