Episode 333 of the pilot to Pilot Podcast takes off now.
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Speaker BCox call sign Freak from the Air Force so that starts the the Aviation story.
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's a great one.
Speaker AIt is with cleared direct on Instagram, on YouTube.
Speaker AHad a lot of fun talking with him.
Speaker AYou know he was a F15 pilot, he flies for major airline, gets in the back country, tells an epic story about how he crashed a bonanza in a river and had to swim with a broken hand with his wife.
Speaker AThat's probably gonna be clipped.
Speaker AYou probably saw.
Speaker AThat's probably why you're here to be honest with you, because that story was just so wild.
Speaker AIt was great having Steve on.
Speaker ASteve is a very humble, very impressive guy to talk to.
Speaker AI had a lot of fun chatting with him.
Speaker AShout out to Steve for waking up early to do this with me as it was a great, great time.
Speaker AAV Nation, I hope you're enjoying these podcasts.
Speaker AWe are getting back to doing weekly podcast this year has been a little bit more on the difficult side for everyone over here in the Seams household.
Speaker ABut you know, we're trying to get through more on that probably later possibly, but we are.
Speaker AYeah record as much as possible.
Speaker AI appreciate you asking questions about what's going on or appreciate you just reaching out.
Speaker ABut yeah, we are getting some podcasts out.
Speaker AWe are making sure we are still doing the podcast as often as we can and it's been great.
Speaker AIt's been great to talk to you all until talk to Steve and feel like we're best friends now.
Speaker AHe probably doesn't feel it.
Speaker AHe's probably like God, I'm so glad the podcast over with but it was a good time.
Speaker AIt's a good time chatting with Hope you enjoy this podcast.
Speaker AWithout any further ado, here's Steve from Cleared Direct.
Speaker AI want to kind of touch a little bit on I played football.
Speaker AI was a D1 football player so it's nice to see another athlete enter aviation.
Speaker AI always say that athleticism or not athleticism but athletes and pilots have a lot in common.
Speaker AThere's a lot of training.
Speaker AThere's a lot of kind of like put in practice, practice, practice.
Speaker APerfect your craft so you can be the safest pilot you can be, have the best flight you can have or win the competition that you're in if you're whether you're doing aerobatics or you're just competing in your sport in general.
Speaker ABut it's always great to talk to another athlete.
Speaker AI think it'd be awesome if we can see more athletes come because there is some such a correlation.
Speaker ABut I want to talk a little bit about the mentality that you had going from, you know, swimming.
Speaker AI'm guessing your goal was to be in the Olympics.
Speaker AI'm guessing that's kind of like where the kind of the top end of being a swimmer is, right?
Speaker BWell, I, I probably for most but as with everything, there's a little bit of a oddity oddity to me.
Speaker BI I actually my, my main sport in high school is water polo and I actually was recruited to at the time PAC 10 schools for that thought about going to Stanford, UCLA or whatnot.
Speaker BBut I also really liked the idea of airplanes and being an aeronautical engineer and Bert Rutan was one of my kind of heroes growing up.
Speaker BI know total nerd but myself but, but so I went to Cal Poly to follow in his footsteps.
Speaker BHe was an aeronautical engineer from from Cal Poly and and they didn't have a water polo team.
Speaker BSo I just kind of walked onto the swim team and and really knew that that wasn't gonna take me to the Olympics, since that was kind of my backup sport.
Speaker BJust wanted to get that letter and stay in shape and get some sun, you know what I mean?
Speaker BSo.
Speaker AAbsolutely.
Speaker AI love the west coast vibe.
Speaker AI get the west coast vibe big time.
Speaker AI love it, man.
Speaker AIt's.
Speaker AI mean, just talking about water polo, like, I grew up in the East Coast.
Speaker AWater polo is not a thing.
Speaker AI don't think.
Speaker AI can't even think of.
Speaker AI don't know if schools have water polo.
Speaker BI think.
Speaker BWell, I think Princeton, a couple of Ivy leagues have it, but yeah, it's kind of, I should say southeast, snooty sport out there, but it' a kind of a badass sport in the.
Speaker BOn the west coast.
Speaker BAnd I mean, yeah, my sister's a pro surfer her whole career, so definitely living the west coast vibe.
Speaker AYeah, I love it, dude.
Speaker AYeah, it's funny, the differences, you know, West Coast, Southeast, the East Coast, Northwest.
Speaker AAnd now you're living in the Northwest, you probably see the differences there as well.
Speaker BIt's very much west.
Speaker BWest coast still, though.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker AThat's awesome that you had.
Speaker AYou had someone that you kind of looked up to and you wanted to follow in their footsteps.
Speaker AWhat was it about Burt Rutan that you really kind of wanted to end?
Speaker BGosh, dude.
Speaker BHe was just a groundbreaker, right?
Speaker BHe was kind of the first to lean into the whole composites world.
Speaker BAnd my neighbor across, you know, so he was from Mojave in Southern California, and this really ties in the whole origin story together is my neighbor across the street in Agoura Hills, California, was building one of the first Lancaira kits.
Speaker BIf, you know, experimental, you'll know Lancair.
Speaker BThey're just the first, like super sleek, just beautiful lines.
Speaker BHe's building that in his garage.
Speaker BAnd I was just.
Speaker BI would probably annoy the hell out of him as an 8 year old, right?
Speaker BBut he was so great and showed me everything about this airplane and about flying.
Speaker BTook me flying.
Speaker BWe actually flew to Mojave and kind of saw.
Speaker BI didn't get the tour of Scaled Composites or whatever it was called back then, but.
Speaker BBut that was kind of the, you know, the whole origin story, especially tying in with experimental aviation, because that's always what I've wanted to do.
Speaker BI think I turned nine and I asked for a Lance Air for my birth or a Long Easy, because I just love the looks of all the composite sleek, which is weird that I built a boxy aluminum riveted bush plane, but it's kind of all I could afford right now.
Speaker AI'm sure the 9 year old didn't understand the cost of a Lance Air.
Speaker AYeah, absolutely.
Speaker BAnd they were quite a bit cheaper.
Speaker AYeah, it's still expensive.
Speaker AYou look back in the day, people say the flight hours were $25 an hour, but $25 an hour was.
Speaker AOr $25 is way more expensive back then.
Speaker AYou know, I mean, obviously it's more expensive now, but it's still comparative.
Speaker AIt's still not cheap to go fly your planes.
Speaker BTotally.
Speaker BOh, my gosh.
Speaker ASo what was.
Speaker ASo you wanted to be a pilot?
Speaker AYou wanted to kind of get in aviation Athletics seems like something that always kept you busy.
Speaker ASeems like you're a guy that, like you said, you're always on the go.
Speaker AYou always wanted to do something.
Speaker AYou know, competing is probably something you like.
Speaker AYou like testing yourself.
Speaker AYou like pushing yourself to the limits.
Speaker AWas there any kind of progression from Bert Rutan the Lancer asking one when you're nine years old to actually flying kind of before you got to the Air Force, or is all the flying done in the Air Force?
Speaker BNo.
Speaker BGood question.
Speaker AI.
Speaker BLet's see.
Speaker BOkay, so.
Speaker BOh, God, I don't know if I should tell this.
Speaker AOh, you.
Speaker AWhenever you start out with I don't know if I should tell this, you have to tell it.
Speaker AThat's the rule of a podcast.
Speaker BAll right.
Speaker BNo, this is good because nobody knows this.
Speaker AI love it.
Speaker BExcept my buddy Mike.
Speaker BThat is not our freshman year.
Speaker BI hadn't quite grown up into the athlete quite yet, and I played the bass drum in the marching band, and we went to this marching band performance thing in Camarillo, California.
Speaker BHe and I said, this is lame.
Speaker BWas like my last thing with the marching band, clearly.
Speaker BAnd we snuck off and we, like, went to the airport, and some guy pulls up in his brand new to him Stearman and said, hey, boys, want to go for a ride?
Speaker BI think about this now and I go, oh, my God, what was I thinking?
Speaker BBut as a.
Speaker BAs a, I don't know, freshman in high school, I'm like, hell, yeah, let's do it.
Speaker ALet's go.
Speaker BYeah, sure.
Speaker BBaseball bat, stick in the front seat.
Speaker BWe hop in and blast out over the beautiful Pacific Ocean.
Speaker BAnd I don't think we did any, like, barrel or loops or aileron rolls or anything, but it was magical open cockpit.
Speaker BAnd, you know, I was pretty set on aviation at that point.
Speaker BBut after that, it was forget about it and forget about marching band athletics.
Speaker ANo offense to anyone in marching man.
Speaker AAll right.
Speaker AIt is no no, no, no, no.
Speaker BI just.
Speaker ADidn't suit me, man.
Speaker BYeah, absolutely.
Speaker ADid your parents kind of understand this aviation?
Speaker AWas there any aviation in their background or was this pretty formal?
Speaker BThey didn't quite.
Speaker BThey were both marriage and family therapists.
Speaker BIn fact, they were.
Speaker BMy dad was the therapist to the Menendez brothers.
Speaker BDad, Parents.
Speaker ANo.
Speaker BYeah, like, nice, nice job.
Speaker BDad failed on that one.
Speaker BHe was his fault.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BBut he tried to get the.
Speaker BI'm not even going to go there.
Speaker BBut that's.
Speaker BThat was my.
Speaker BMy folks, they're kind of over educated, under socialized, if you will.
Speaker BSo I.
Speaker BThis is all on my own.
Speaker BAnd they're supportive, but not financially and not really, you know, feeding into it, but they kind of got that I had a passion and are still to this day understand now what it's led to, but I'm appreciative for their support.
Speaker BBut, yeah, I think I just took out a student loan at Cal Poly, another student loan, and Cal Poly wasn't that expensive, but threw down on my pilot's license that I think 100 years ago cost like $2,500.
Speaker BSorry, guys.
Speaker AEveryone's like, but what a great place.
Speaker BTo get your license.
Speaker BCoastal California is awesome.
Speaker BIn the summer between my sophomore and junior year and.
Speaker BOr maybe one year later because I got my license.
Speaker BTwo funny things about that.
Speaker BI was.
Speaker BI had like 40.2 hours.
Speaker BI wanted to hardcore do it.
Speaker BAnd like, in fact, I had to fly to Bakersfield.
Speaker BI took off with like 39 hours, got my 40th hour on the way to the DPE to get my checkride.
Speaker BAnd the other funny thing is, is that it was my 21st birthday, so we partied that night.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker AI mean, what better way to celebrate?
Speaker AHopefully there's no flying after the party, but, you know, better way to celebrate.
Speaker AI got my license.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AAnd I lost it.
Speaker AGoing back to kind of parents and.
Speaker AAnd doing something that's so different, like aviation.
Speaker ATo someone that doesn't know aviation, it's just so foreign to them.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker ALike anytime your kid comes up to you and just like, I want to do something that's not kind of what the family has done or what, you know, it's just so foreign.
Speaker AAnd it's up to the parent to find a way to support them.
Speaker AAs someone that is a parent, how do you think someone can do that right now?
Speaker ALike, there's a lot of people that could be 13, 14, 15 listening to this podcast with their parents in the car, and the parents are like, I don't know how to Support my kid in aviation because I'm an accountant.
Speaker AI'm a therapist to a family, whatever it may be.
Speaker AHow would you recommend or what you've seen with your parents and what you do with your kids to help support.
Speaker BYou know, I think here's.
Speaker BThis is.
Speaker BThis is going to be a hot take or a controversial thing.
Speaker BI think you just have to support them and say, do it, go for it.
Speaker BIt's as long as it makes you happy and be there for them.
Speaker BIt is not your job as a parent.
Speaker BI got three kids.
Speaker BIt's not my job as a parent to make it happen for them.
Speaker BThat's on them.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BTheir job is to go to school and to be contributing citizens and good people to support them for their ventures.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BMaybe help them out with undergrad and college if that's what they want to do.
Speaker BHelp them out and give them pointers and recommendations and advice.
Speaker BBut it's not.
Speaker BI don't look at it as my job as a parent to make it happen for them.
Speaker BAnd maybe that's because my parents really didn't make it happen for me.
Speaker BI had to figure it out.
Speaker BSo I guess I'm a bad dad.
Speaker ANo, no, not at all.
Speaker BI got three kids.
Speaker BMy eldest.
Speaker BEldest is following a little bit in my footsteps.
Speaker BShe's off to University of Michigan.
Speaker BGonna go rotc.
Speaker BI didn't do rotc, but she's gonna be.
Speaker BShe wants to be a doctor, so she wants to be a aerospace surgeon.
Speaker BSo flight doc we grew up with.
Speaker BShe grew up with.
Speaker BYou know, each squadron I was in had a flight doc assigned to us, and they were awesome people and took care of us.
Speaker BAnd they only had, you know, their 25 pilots plus their families.
Speaker BAnd so they had the time to be fricking awesome.
Speaker BAnd she wants to do that.
Speaker BSo I'm super proud of her.
Speaker BAnd.
Speaker BAnd go blue.
Speaker AAh, that's painful for you to say, man.
Speaker AI went to.
Speaker AI bought Ohio State.
Speaker BNo, I didn't even know that.
Speaker AYeah, we're gonna hit stop right now.
Speaker AGood day.
Speaker AWish you the best.
Speaker ANo, I'm just kidding.
Speaker AThat's cool, though.
Speaker AIt's fine.
Speaker AWhatever.
Speaker AWe won the national championship.
Speaker AIt's.
Speaker AI don't really care if we lose Michigan anymore.
Speaker AIt's all about national championships now.
Speaker AAll right.
Speaker ABut I just wanted to say my wife is a doctor.
Speaker AOne of her really good friends was a flight doctor and then is doing a civilian residency as well.
Speaker AVery well rounded, great doctor, great person.
Speaker ASo it's a great route to go.
Speaker ASo.
Speaker AYeah, that'd be awesome for.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BCouldn't be more proud of her.
Speaker AThat's great.
Speaker AI mean, she has bad taste in schools and color.
Speaker AOther than that, I hear Ann Arbor is great in the fall.
Speaker AThat's about all I know.
Speaker BI can confirm.
Speaker AThat's cool though, man.
Speaker AI.
Speaker AI agree with everything that you've said about parenting and giving your kid the opportunities.
Speaker AAnd it's up to them to figure it out because you can't hold a kid's hand forever.
Speaker ARight?
Speaker ALike, I mean, yeah, they have to pass a check, ride with the dp and you are not going to be able to help them or they're going to have to overcome adversity in the airplane.
Speaker AAs you know, things happen in cockpits and you can't call your dad at 37,000ft.
Speaker AHey, dad.
Speaker AHydraulic failure.
Speaker AWhat do I do?
Speaker AYou know, you got to do it.
Speaker AYou just got to.
Speaker AYou got to eventually do it and bite the bullet and just go for it.
Speaker ASo.
Speaker AYeah, totally agree with you now.
Speaker APrivate pilot license, you said sophomore, junior.
Speaker BIsh.
Speaker AYear of high school.
Speaker BNo, of college.
Speaker AOf college.
Speaker AOkay.
Speaker AOf college.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker AAnd were you kind of on a war path of, I'm gonna be a professional pilot, I'm gonna go to the Air Force, or were you kind of just seeing where it all took you?
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BSo fresh.
Speaker BI went to.
Speaker BI.
Speaker BI went to Cal Poly and got into aeronautical engineering, like.
Speaker BLike Bert Rutan and then hit calculus and said, this ain't for me.
Speaker BMuch like Marching man, this ain't for me Deuces.
Speaker BSo I switched to a major called industrial technology, which was awesome.
Speaker BAnd you know, it's a joke because it stands.
Speaker BIndustrial technology.
Speaker BIt actually stands for.
Speaker BI tried engineering, so it had a lot of the engineering dropouts.
Speaker BOne of them.
Speaker BSo at that point I knew.
Speaker BI'm like, okay, well, I'm not gonna be an engineer.
Speaker BI wanna.
Speaker BI wanna not design these things.
Speaker BI wanna fly them.
Speaker BI was singing airlines and I just, I.
Speaker BI was intimidated about all the cost.
Speaker BI didn't want to live on peanuts like a lot of you guys do out in the audience.
Speaker BGood on you.
Speaker BYou know, with the drive to.
Speaker BTo get all those ratings.
Speaker BAnd I just, I.
Speaker BI decided, you know what?
Speaker BAir Force is probably the best way to get my training paid for and.
Speaker BYeah, make a little bit of money doing it.
Speaker BI'll do it for eight years or whatever the pilot training commitment was.
Speaker BAnd I was the first guy to sign the 10 year.
Speaker BOh, my gosh, the pilot training contract.
Speaker BI was class 0001 at officer training school.
Speaker BAnd they had.
Speaker BI get to MEPs, they're like, I'm enlisting or signing the paperwork to go to commissioning.
Speaker BAnd I'm like, hey, what does that say?
Speaker BMy eyes weren't as bad as they are right now.
Speaker BAnd they go.
Speaker BAnd I actually said 10 years versus A.
Speaker BI thought they said, well, what are you gonna do there, mister?
Speaker BLike, took a bus, three hours to go, you know, join the air Force.
Speaker BAnd I'm like, I'm not gonna.
Speaker BI have two years, whatever.
Speaker BBut then I realized it's after pilot training, which is like two years.
Speaker BSo suddenly I'm at the 12 year point going, well, might as well try to get the.
Speaker BYeah, exactly.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker ADang, that's.
Speaker AThat's a sneaky one right there, right?
Speaker AOh, we said eight, but yeah, it's ten now.
Speaker AOh, yeah.
Speaker BJust kidding.
Speaker AKind of committed now.
Speaker ANo turning back.
Speaker AAll right, so you, you know, you signed the papers.
Speaker ADid you have any regrets?
Speaker ADid you have any kind of like sticker shock?
Speaker ALike, oh, my gosh, what did I do?
Speaker BNot really.
Speaker BI.
Speaker BBecause, like, I expected the worst.
Speaker BI was amazed at the people that did have regrets, especially the pilot candidates that were at officer training school that, like, dropped out because they didn't like it and yelled at.
Speaker BI'm like, dude, this is a game.
Speaker BLike, have you ever heard of this thing called the military?
Speaker BLike, get through training and you're going to be a pilot.
Speaker BIt's going to be badass.
Speaker BSo.
Speaker BBut they, like, dropped out.
Speaker BI'm like, okay, well, it's probably better that they dropped out now because, yeah, the yelling might stop, but it's not going to get any easier.
Speaker BYeah, so.
Speaker BSo no.
Speaker BNo buyer's remorse.
Speaker BEspecially when I, you know, got into the fighter.
Speaker BI actually didn't even want fight.
Speaker BI didn't know I wanted fighters.
Speaker BTurns out I loved it.
Speaker BGlad I did.
Speaker BBut I, you know, like I said, I was just like, okay, eight years, get my tickets, go off to the airline and got a fighter.
Speaker BAnd it kind of sucks you into that culture and that environment.
Speaker BAnd it's taken me a few years to kind of get out of it.
Speaker BAnd this YouTube channel's.
Speaker BMy YouTube channel is part of the whole, you know, thing of.
Speaker BI wanted to kind of share some of those amazing scenes and beautiful landscapes and some of the crazy, you know, just dog fights.
Speaker BAnd unfortunately, a lot of that you can't share because of classification.
Speaker BBut towards the end, they're starting to let me bring a GoPro in the camera as long as they reviewed it.
Speaker BSo that kind of kickstarted my interest in, in YouTube.
Speaker ANice.
Speaker AWhat was trading like for you?
Speaker ALike, you mentioned the yelling, you mentioned the screaming, but that didn't really seem to be a problem for you.
Speaker BNo, I mean, it was 13 weeks.
Speaker BWhatever.
Speaker BGood.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AAnd I liked how you mentioned it was a game.
Speaker ABecause, I mean, any kind of training scenario, it is a game.
Speaker AThe number one thing you need to think of is cooperate, graduate.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker ALike, just play the game, play into it.
Speaker AThe more you try to do something different, the more they're either going to make an example out of you or the worse it's going to be on yourself.
Speaker ASo try to make it easy for yourself.
Speaker BYep.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BSo as far as the, the officer's training, I, I kind of liked it.
Speaker BI, I was the, let's see, what did they assign me?
Speaker BThe, the PT leader.
Speaker BI was like the ot.
Speaker BCaptain Cox was the wing commander or wing.
Speaker BWing fitness guy.
Speaker BSo.
Speaker BBut then off to pilot training, I got like.
Speaker BI got into this weird headspace of like, God, if I fail out of this, what are my parents gonna think and what am I gonna do with myself?
Speaker BSo I kind of got a little.
Speaker BI went through a period where I was a little overly intense and like, just scared of failure and that it motivated me to a point.
Speaker BBut, you know, there's that whole, you know, stress versus performance scale.
Speaker BI was kind of at that peak and then falling off the other side, the bad side of too much stress.
Speaker BSo we, you know, I kind of.
Speaker BI had a, I had a German instructor pilot of all.
Speaker BOf all nationalities, German guy sit me down and says, I think my, my call sign and pilot training was stubby.
Speaker BKind of natural with the last name.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BAnyway, he goes, I can't do a German accent.
Speaker BBut he goes, stubby, you need to smoke some crack.
Speaker BWhat?
Speaker BAnd is an American or a Dutch guy came over, he said, what are you.
Speaker BOh, he means you need to like, smoke some weed and relax.
Speaker BSo I was just so uptight for the first few months of pilot training because I was at the show, right?
Speaker BI was at Air Force pilot training.
Speaker BNot only.
Speaker BI was at njep, the Euro NATO Joint Jet Pilot Training Program.
Speaker BSo I was, I was like, I took that pressure serious, so which is good.
Speaker BSo I didn't take his advice and get into the, the drug.
Speaker BThe drugs.
Speaker BBut, but I, I just kind of started exercising more, which I think I stopped doing, which I think was a big problem.
Speaker BI mean, imagine yourself just like after D1 and just dropping it all at the, at the drop of a hat.
Speaker BI was doing half Iron Mans leading into the Air Force, and then I just dropped it for pilot training.
Speaker BI'm like, okay, no, I need to go out for a run and just get those endorphins back.
Speaker BBut that.
Speaker BThat really helped.
Speaker ANow, it's very healthy for you to mention that you're kind of on a dangerous path of.
Speaker AFor the pressure and putting it on yourself.
Speaker AIs that something you realize?
Speaker ALike, obviously, the German instructor helped you realize it too, but was it something you were able to overcome relatively easily once you figured it out, or was this kind of like a difficult spiral and something you.
Speaker ACould you continue to struggle with throughout your training?
Speaker BNo, I.
Speaker BIt was a.
Speaker BIt was a poignant moment in that it kind of pulled me out of it, and I was open to it.
Speaker BAnd I realized that, yeah, this.
Speaker BThis is.
Speaker BThis is not sustainable for me.
Speaker BI'm.
Speaker BI'm that SoCal kid, the laid back guy.
Speaker BAnd if anything, it kind of went too far because in, you know, I did really well.
Speaker BI got my F15.
Speaker BAnd at the time, that was kind of the premier fighter before the F22 came online.
Speaker BAnd.
Speaker BAnd then in F15 school, I was a little bit too laid back.
Speaker BBut in.
Speaker BIn my own defense, I was the first active duty class to go through an Air National Guard training program at Klamath Falls.
Speaker BThey had flown F16s.
Speaker BThey just learned how to fly the F15, and now they're instructing the F15.
Speaker BAnd the former schoolhouse at Tyndall was known to be just a ball buster.
Speaker BJust like, eat your young, like, you will graduate, you know, really, really good, but also really, really scared of any instructor pilot.
Speaker BAnd this was the opposite.
Speaker BSo I had this like, hey, you guys are the.
Speaker BYou're the first students that earned your F15 because we got guard babies.
Speaker BNothing against guard babies.
Speaker BI would have gone that route if had I known about it.
Speaker BThat's a great way to go.
Speaker BBut they all got their F15 before they went to pilot training.
Speaker BWe had to compete for it, so we were all pretty decent.
Speaker BAnd.
Speaker BAnd they were like, they're like, asking us, hey, how was that brief?
Speaker BLike, who you're asking me, how is that brief?
Speaker BBecause they just learned how to fly the F15s.
Speaker BAnd so the training was.
Speaker BI don't want to disparage the program, but they know it.
Speaker BThey needed to step up their game.
Speaker BAnd so they produced a substandard F15 wingman at the time.
Speaker BAnd when I heard about it, man, when I got to Alaska, that's how I earned my call sign.
Speaker BI went to Alaska and I'm like, check in time.
Speaker BLike, you start up your aircraft.
Speaker BIt's the time that you got to be on the right frequency with your jet all program ready to rock.
Speaker BAnd I'm like, no, wait for me.
Speaker BThat wasn't exactly my mentality, but.
Speaker BBut that's, you know, that's just kind of a.
Speaker BA basic, you know, recap of kind of what happened.
Speaker BAnd so that's how I got.
Speaker BI don't know if you care, but that's how I got the call sign freak, which is like sort of a frequency for eq because I wasn't on the right frequency as well as I'm a big.
Speaker BI'm 6 foot 4 to 20.
Speaker BI'm a big tall freak.
Speaker ASo, like, freaking out on someone.
Speaker BOh, no.
Speaker BWell, there's.
Speaker BThere's another classified story that I can't get in to here.
Speaker BBut that's the basic, basic.
Speaker AI like pilot after hours.
Speaker BBut yeah, hopefully.
Speaker BI know.
Speaker BI don't know.
Speaker BI can't even remember what the initial question, I guess the whole, you know, spiraling.
Speaker BYeah, I shifted and kind of went too far the wrong way.
Speaker BSo that is a hazard too, is you could get too relaxed.
Speaker BAnd so it's just finding that balance of like I was talking about earlier, that stress versus performance scale of keeping yourself kind of at that optimal, optimal place.
Speaker AWhat was military flying like for you?
Speaker AA lot of people say it's very fulfilling.
Speaker AYou know, you're training to do a mission, you go out, do the mission.
Speaker AIt's like a brotherhood, a sisterhood, talk about the actual flying itself.
Speaker AI mean, obviously you liked it because you were in there past the 12 years that you were supposed to be there.
Speaker ASo it's not like you just did it because you had to.
Speaker BRight?
Speaker B21.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker BYeah, exactly.
Speaker BSo it's.
Speaker BAfter a while, it's kind of all, you know, I mean, at the time I could.
Speaker BWas eligible to get out, it was like 2008, just financial crisis, great recession or whatever.
Speaker ATake me back.
Speaker BSo I'm like, I'm like, yeah, I'm staying in, man.
Speaker BI'm gonna go be a check of the month club kind of guy and.
Speaker BBut the flying is.
Speaker BIs amazing.
Speaker BAnd it is a culture, is absolutely a culture that I had to learn how to operate within.
Speaker BAs I mentioned earlier, I was, you know, overly laid back guy getting to my first squadron and I had to kind of buckle down and then.
Speaker BAnd then I became somebody I wasn't again.
Speaker BYou know, it's just part of life and growing and figuring out who you are.
Speaker BAnd so there was a time where I was miserable, honestly.
Speaker BI was trying to figure out how to be a new husband living in the state of Alaska in a fighter squadron.
Speaker BIt was like the premier Eagle squadron because we had these new V2 radars.
Speaker BWe were first to get the Aim 9X and the JamX fancy helmet.
Speaker BSo you couldn't swing a dead cat without hitting about five patch wearers, like essentially the Air Force equivalent of Top Gun guy.
Speaker BSo here I am, this brand new lieutenant, just getting his, you know, butt handed to him.
Speaker BSo, so I, I was kind of miserable trying to figure out things.
Speaker BAnd it wasn't till, I'd say the second half of my career that I figured it out.
Speaker BI mean, the flying was fantastic, don't get me wrong.
Speaker BI mean, it was, that was amazing.
Speaker BThe, the, and then the Friday afternoon shenanigans at roll call was always super fun.
Speaker BI was always making the videos and having a great time.
Speaker BBut, but as far as like, you know, getting myself in the books and studying the tactics, there's a lot to know.
Speaker BAnd you got to be like not only an athlete to literally, to withstand the G forces, you've got to, you know, take care of yourself nutritionally.
Speaker BAnd you know, you're a young guy at that point.
Speaker BYou can kind of get away with it drinking too much beer and having too much dip and popcorn and whatnot.
Speaker BBut, but, but athletically you got to keep somewhat shape to pull those GS and just to suffer through, you know, a 12 hour debrief.
Speaker BI mean, the debriefs can be really, really long.
Speaker BLike your days are sometimes pushing 20 hours long.
Speaker BAnd so in that regard you got to be in good shape.
Speaker BAnd then you got to essentially get yourself a law degree within the fighter squadron.
Speaker BLike, because these, these AFTPs, the tactics, techniques and procedures manuals that you got to read are, are long and involved and sometimes they're not written super well and they're getting better and better.
Speaker BAnd so you're trying to figure out what does this mean?
Speaker BAnd then you don't want to bother an older fighter pilot because they're grouchy also.
Speaker BAnd so you're just kind of figuring this out amongst all the lieutenants.
Speaker BAnd then you're also reading about the threats.
Speaker BYou got to be not only the master of your own domain, you got to understand what the threat is offering to you.
Speaker BSo my point is it's busy and I didn't do the best job in time management.
Speaker BAnd also I'm Divorced now is just the wrong person to be married to.
Speaker BAnd so that added to the struggle and then living in Alaska.
Speaker BI mean, the.
Speaker BI'm not a.
Speaker BI'm not like a dark weather person.
Speaker BI think a seasonal affective disorder.
Speaker BI'm painting this like, horrible picture.
Speaker BI'll get to the good stuff here in a second.
Speaker BBut, but the dark was tough for me in the, in the wintertime, summertimes were great, although it was pretty cloudy all the time, but.
Speaker BAnd then you can't sleep because it's, you know, like 21 hours a day.
Speaker BYeah, yeah.
Speaker BBut, but over to the flying man and then the camaraderie.
Speaker BThere's nothing like, you know, going to a red flag or actual deployment and just building the bonds with the bros and, and then, you know, being responsible for not only a $50 million jet with about $15 million worth of serious weapons on board, you're also potentially in charge of the folks you're trying to defend or the, the folks, you know, that whether it be wingman or high value airborne assets or folks on the ground and just understanding the different missions.
Speaker BAnd once you start to kind of figure out where you belong in the whole Air Force world, there's a lot of F15 guys that think they're on the pointy spear.
Speaker BYou know, I'm sorry to break it to you fellas, but you're a support asset.
Speaker BI can say that now.
Speaker BI mean, we, you know, we're there to do offensive counter error or defensive counter error or high value airborne asset, which is essentially defensive.
Speaker BSo you're either offense or defensive for other guys.
Speaker BBomb droppers, we don't drop the bombs.
Speaker BWe just, you know, we are the mission in more of a defensive, but we're rarely defensive.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BIn a big picture thing sense.
Speaker BSo when it all starts clicking, especially when your relationship with the bros is good, with your boss is good, you know, you're bringing up some younger wingman as an instructor.
Speaker BThat's, that's when it all comes together.
Speaker BAnd my best assignment by far was my operational test and evaluation where I was not deploying and I was putting.
Speaker BPut in charge of developing or helping develop new missiles and test flying those missiles and radar systems and, and data and, and I got to shoot some pretty amazing missile shots.
Speaker BSo that was super rewarding.
Speaker BAnd I think it, you know, I make, you know, I'm more of an athlete than geek, but I definitely have a big geek side too.
Speaker BAnd I nerded out over some of the cool capabilities that these, these weapons could.
Speaker AYeah, Absolutely.
Speaker AEspecially when you start getting some data that other people don't have.
Speaker AYou're like, oh dang, that's sick.
Speaker AThat's pretty cool.
Speaker AYou mentioned that the second half of your career you kind of felt more confident.
Speaker AYou know, you felt like you fit in more.
Speaker AWas that a confidence thing?
Speaker AWas that just like, you know, other people could do it better, other people have been done it longer.
Speaker AYou mentioned the grouchiness of the older fighter pilot.
Speaker AWas it kind of just a confidence thing of fitting in and just being, believing in yourself, would you say?
Speaker BI think so, yeah.
Speaker BI think a lot of it just, just does come with maturity and there was some, a divorce in the mix that kind of sets you aside both financially and just mentally for a few years.
Speaker BAnd so that's really tough.
Speaker BThe biggest advice I'd give to the younger folks is just don't be in a rush to get married.
Speaker BI mean, you definitely change.
Speaker BYou can tell my whole story is about how I've changed through my career.
Speaker BExcuse me.
Speaker BAnd to, to think that that person's gonna grow with you.
Speaker BIt absolutely happens.
Speaker BBut the, the odds get higher the older you get.
Speaker BI'll just kind of say it like that.
Speaker BSo, so yeah, I definitely matured and, and, and grew with self confidence and just kind of been, became more okay in my own skin.
Speaker BAnd there's a big part of me who doesn't fit in as a fighter pilot.
Speaker BI mean, I kind of portray it a little bit, but, but I, you know, I know that there probably would have been more, more different careers that would have fit my exact personality better.
Speaker BLike maybe social media influencer, just goofball on TV or something.
Speaker BOr maybe I should have kept going with swimming or triathlon, I don't, I don't know.
Speaker BBut, but you know, I wasn't the, I wasn't the most naturally gifted bfmer dogfight, basic fighter maneuvers.
Speaker BYou know, I wasn't the best in the cockpit by, by any stretch.
Speaker BI mean there's some seriously talented fighter there.
Speaker BBut I, I made it work and I, you know, fake faked it till.
Speaker AI made it right, dude, that's the most important thing.
Speaker AFake it till you make it.
Speaker AI preach that.
Speaker AYou know, just keep doing it.
Speaker AYou'll convince yourself one day that you're going to do it and eventually it's just going to click.
Speaker AThis is what you got to do.
Speaker BI mean most people, I mean even, even the most cocky fighter pilot out there has some self doubt in there that, that drives them to be, to be better.
Speaker BSo just listen to that.
Speaker BTo a point.
Speaker BBut also, you know, take care of yourself, man.
Speaker AYeah, absolutely.
Speaker AEspecially when you are trying to be the best.
Speaker AWhen you're in very high pressure situations, whether it's a fighter pilot, whether it's an athlete, whether it's a doctor, you can really neglect your personal care.
Speaker AYou can neglect the people around you.
Speaker AYou can just be so laser focused on what you need to achieve and kind of forget the whole thing that you're living life, that you need to try to enjoy these moments because this moment is temporary and it's fleeting.
Speaker AAnd one day you're going to look back on it and be like, dang, I wish I would have smiled.
Speaker AI wish I would have known these people better.
Speaker AYou're like that guy.
Speaker AThey're really good friends.
Speaker AHow come?
Speaker AYou know, it's just like, just enjoy where you are.
Speaker AIt's very hard.
Speaker BThere's like a decade in my life where I'm like, God, I wish I could have done that over again.
Speaker AI know, right?
Speaker AYou know, everyone has that and it's okay.
Speaker AThat's the worst.
Speaker AYeah, it's okay.
Speaker AIf you're in the situation right now, it's just try to recognize it before it's too late.
Speaker ARight?
Speaker ATry to recognize what's important to yourself.
Speaker AYeah, exactly.
Speaker BAnd be honest with yourself too.
Speaker BIn the, in that, hey, if something's not working, like, there's a.
Speaker BMy.
Speaker BMy wife is on this, like spouses of airline pilots Facebook group.
Speaker BAnd, and there was this one post.
Speaker BI'm.
Speaker BMaybe I shouldn't say this, but this poor guy was like, kept failing checkrides and whatnot.
Speaker BAnd his spouse was on there like, what.
Speaker BWho could we talk to?
Speaker BWhat could we do?
Speaker BAnd my wife and I look, I look at each other like, maybe it's just not for you, man.
Speaker BI mean, let's be honest, it's not for everybody.
Speaker BAnd, and that's okay, you know, make it.
Speaker BFind something that does make you happy.
Speaker BAnd I didn't have the pressures of parents telling me that.
Speaker BHow to do this, right?
Speaker BSo I was free to do whatever I want.
Speaker BAnd I feel lucky to have that passion.
Speaker BSo.
Speaker BBut if that passion.
Speaker BYeah, but I mean, to be fair, if I wasn't any good at what I do, and you know, I'm not the best, but if it just wasn't working out, that scares me.
Speaker BLike, I don't know what else I would do, right?
Speaker BMaybe go back to sports or something or just make goofy videos.
Speaker BBut, But I hear you.
Speaker BIt's.
Speaker BThere's some people who have A hard time giving up on the, on the dream.
Speaker BThat would suck.
Speaker BSo.
Speaker AEspecially when you get so close.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker AYou made it to the airlines.
Speaker AYou know, you see this multi million dollar career ahead of you and you're just.
Speaker ATo walk away would be tough at that time.
Speaker ATotally agree.
Speaker BBut you know, there's, there's the other.
Speaker BI mean, there's pretty rich.
Speaker BI think about this of like, if I lose my license or if I get sick or something, you know, lose my medical.
Speaker BI mean, well, like our company is fantastic for the walking wounded.
Speaker BAnd, and, and I realize that there's a lot of other good careers in the airline world that don't involve flying, that you're around aviation.
Speaker BSo that's something I really never thought of.
Speaker AAbsolutely a lot of options out there.
Speaker ABut yeah, it's, you know, flying the plane is what we want to do.
Speaker AFlying the plane is what we like to do.
Speaker AAnd you have mentioned that that's something that you love to do.
Speaker AIt's one of the reasons why you got involved into kind of backcountry flying.
Speaker AThe freedom you probably get doing that is probably unparalleled to what you've done.
Speaker AAnything else, because airlines, you're following sops.
Speaker AI'm not saying you're not following kind of your own SOPS that you've made, but being able to fly where you want, when you want, land on something that maybe hasn't been landed on before, you overfly it, inspect it, land, and just having that freedom, I'm sure is kind of just kind of changed your way you look at aviation.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BBecause believe it or not, flying the 15, there's a lot more freedom than flying an airliner.
Speaker B121 is just, you know, it's, you know, my airline, we used to be able to fly certain routes VFR up in the state of Alaska.
Speaker BAnd you know, this is why we can't have nice things.
Speaker BSome people kind of abused it and so even that was taken away.
Speaker BSo this absolutely is just like you're saying, it's so free.
Speaker BAnd it helps me also just share the beautiful perspective of out here on the west coast, flying through the mountains, landing on strips, going fly fishing and you know, shout out to, to Trent Palmer, who really kind of got so many people into this, including me.
Speaker BLike I'm absolutely a.
Speaker BI don't know, a Trent like effect.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BEspecially during COVID because he'd be putting out these gorgeous videos and we'd be kind of on lockdown and, and anyway, so.
Speaker BSo he's just kind of the Godfather, even though he's like 12 years younger than I am and become a friend, but he's like, he's like the godfather of backcountry aviation in the.
Speaker BIn the respect of cinematography.
Speaker BRight?
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker BThere's plenty of people who have a lot more experience and.
Speaker BAnd.
Speaker BAnd he tells a great stories in the back country.
Speaker BYeah, that's.
Speaker BAnd that's kind of what's inspired me.
Speaker BAnd.
Speaker BAnd it's kind of awkward now because we both like pointing cameras at.
Speaker BAt each other going, oh, we're gonna make the same video, or.
Speaker BBut I mean, he's just, what, like, 20 times as big as I am.
Speaker ASo it's all good.
Speaker BHe's like, that's adorable.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AMy video will do better than yours, right?
Speaker ATry it.
Speaker BYeah, no, he's told me he's like, rising tide floats all boats.
Speaker BSo he's definitely on board with.
Speaker BWith supporting small guys like me.
Speaker AWhat's your kind of.
Speaker AYou mentioned Trent Palmer, you mentioned Covid.
Speaker AWas this kind of like a covet idea?
Speaker AWas this you watching YouTube and like, Ah, that sounds fun.
Speaker AYou can build your own airplane, or was this kind of more of a deeper kind of wish?
Speaker ASince you saw the lance there, since you saw someone building an airplane, you always had this in the back of your mind.
Speaker BYeah, no, it definitely was always in the back of my mind.
Speaker BIt just provided the opportunity because I knew that once I.
Speaker BMy retirement paperwork was in.
Speaker BExcuse me.
Speaker BAnd I knew that I'd be going back to the airline, and I also scored a COVID leave from the airline.
Speaker BSo I was not only retiring from the Air Force, going to be collecting some money from the Air Force.
Speaker BI was getting like a small paycheck also from Alaska Airlines and not working.
Speaker BSo I'm like, oh, this is perfect.
Speaker BAnd it's supposedly going to be two years long.
Speaker BWe didn't know.
Speaker BIt ended up only being a few months, but that was the impetus I needed to do this lifelong dream.
Speaker BJust.
Speaker BJust which was which airplane?
Speaker BWhich was the biggest decision now and how quickly could I get it to take advantage of that period?
Speaker BThe lead times are like two years.
Speaker BSo it's like, yeah, you could decide you want to build something and then, oh, I'll.
Speaker BI'll actually start building it in two years.
Speaker AThat was a bit of a change in two years too.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BOh, 100%.
Speaker BAnd that's actually what helped me is I think somebody wasn't ready for their kit or was getting out of the kit world.
Speaker BI can't remember.
Speaker BAnd so they offered me their Kit.
Speaker BSo I got into it a lot earlier then I didn't have to wait the full two years.
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Speaker ASo is that a kind of deciding factor in what airplane you built or did you make the decision of what airplane you wanted before that opportunity came up?
Speaker BI made that decision before that opportunity came up.
Speaker BAnd you know one of my better performing videos was comparing the, the RANS S21 and the kit Fox.
Speaker AOkay.
Speaker BAnd a couple people out there going oh, he's that guy and you.
Speaker BThat's me.
Speaker AI just have, I'm looking it up right now.
Speaker AJust remind myself, so it's, it's a.
Speaker BNew, it's definitely not a Cub.
Speaker BIt's a new kind of higher perform well higher speed envelope, larger speed envelope, high wing tail dragger.
Speaker BYou can get in in a trike but it looks ugly so it's all metal and it's just a newer design.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BSo a little bit more engineering put into it which means less weight and more fairings.
Speaker BAnd so this thing will do 150 miles an hour.
Speaker BAnd, and also I call it light stole because it's not full curb landing at 20 miles an hour.
Speaker BI'm, I just, Trent helped me put on VGs last week and I'm, I'm messing with that this week is getting, going out there and messing with the angle of the incidence of my horizontal stabilizer because I'm running out of elevator and trying to get the, the stall speed down.
Speaker BI got it down down to about 36 miles an hour which is pretty dang good.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker BAnd I got 29 inch bush wheels so I'm, I'm, I'm playing with, with the bigger boys.
Speaker BBut I'm also a big part of my flying mentality as well as in my videos is, is the crawl, walk, run mental mentality or training process through learning backcountry Aviation, having, you know, all the experience I have, you could.
Speaker BYou could easily kind of over do it and have a little bit too much overconfidence.
Speaker BAnd I have a huge amount of respect for these aviators and for the weather and for the terrain that I go, no, no, we need to take this slow.
Speaker BAnd so I'm kind of doing a bunch of testing of certain things and working on my skills, part tr.
Speaker BPart test training style before I put it all together.
Speaker BBut I've also already seen some pretty amazing things that have challenged me and have gotten me a little bit out ahead of my skis.
Speaker BBut luckily, all good outcomes so far.
Speaker ASo what's.
Speaker AWhat's one.
Speaker BBack it off for a little bit.
Speaker AWhat's one scenario that has tested you and kind of pushed you to maybe where you didn't feel as comfortable as.
Speaker BYou should in the backcountry?
Speaker BI'd say.
Speaker BSo I was down the Oahees, which is in southeastern Oregon, and a little bit in Idaho, which is beautiful, but it's more rollers, rolling hills.
Speaker BThey're not the serious jagged or steep mountains of the Cascades or the Sawtooth or the Alaska Range or whatnot.
Speaker BThey're just more roller.
Speaker BSo they're a little bit more tempting and I think insidiously dangerous in that, you know, the guys I was flying with wanted to land just on the top of a random hill, and he'd landed there before, so you knew there weren't any big rocks, but there wasn't a lot of room at the top of this hill, and there's already two Cubs parked at the top of the hill.
Speaker BSo I, My, my, my window was closing a little bit, and I.
Speaker BAnd it's hard to tell the grade of a landing spot until you're like, right on it.
Speaker BSo you want to descend if you're shopping the strip a little bit.
Speaker BSo I flew over it, saw them land, so I think I could probably do it.
Speaker BAnd there was a go around option, so I.
Speaker BI had that in forefront of my mind, and my approach was looking good, so I definitely landed.
Speaker BBut as I was right about to touch down, I had to.
Speaker BI had to go full throttle.
Speaker BNot, not to go around, but to actually arrest my sink rate.
Speaker BPull the nose up 20 degrees, and it was still pretty hard landing.
Speaker BIt wasn't super hard, but.
Speaker BAnd then.
Speaker BAnd I.
Speaker BI stopped in like 60ft and bloop.
Speaker BI'm at the top of this hill with the two cups.
Speaker BI'm like, my heart was just pounding.
Speaker BI'm like, I shouldn't have done that, but I'm glad I did.
Speaker BAnd there was a good outcome.
Speaker BYou know, you always got it's mitigated risk.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BYou know, you're taking this risk.
Speaker BI wasn't with anybody.
Speaker BNobody else was with me in my airplane.
Speaker BI had a helmet on, doing those things.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BBut, but you know, you gotta push yourself a little bit.
Speaker BAnd, and so I don't really regret that.
Speaker BBut that's one thing.
Speaker BTo answer your question, that got.
Speaker BGot my heart bumping quite a bit.
Speaker AWhen you landed, were you able to keep your cool or were you kind of like, oh, boys, wow.
Speaker BI was able.
Speaker BI mean, shoot, I've, I've, I've, you know, flown fighters for 20 years.
Speaker BI think I can keep my cool in tough situations.
Speaker BBut I definitely, I felt the adrenaline rush.
Speaker BIt was, it was exhilarating.
Speaker BAnd the best part of that was the takeoff because you're just taking off the other side.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker BAnd just, you know, not a.
Speaker BIt wasn't a cliff, but it was off a steep hill.
Speaker BAnd it's just.
Speaker BThat's so much fun.
Speaker AWhat do you say?
Speaker AOne thing I've noticed, and I tell this to other people, it's like, you know, especially in your training, I always tell people, kind of what we talked about earlier is try to enjoy it because the chances of you flying GA again is very slim.
Speaker AYou know, we look at the people we fly with.
Speaker AMaybe it's different in Alaska or I'll cut that out.
Speaker AMaybe it's different at the airline you fly at.
Speaker ABut when not everyone flies GI GA ever again, some people think it's unsafe.
Speaker ASome people think it's too much money.
Speaker ASome people just think that, you know, I don't do that anymore.
Speaker AI fly 121.
Speaker AI fly private jets, whatever it may be.
Speaker AI fly in the flight levels.
Speaker AI fly ifr.
Speaker AWhat do you say to kind of the skeptic?
Speaker AThat's the airline pilots like, oh, it's not safe.
Speaker AI can't do that.
Speaker AWhat do you say to them when you, when you start telling your cool stories?
Speaker BWell, first off, I start with a anecdote as far as I had to ditch my first bonanza in the Columbia River.
Speaker BSo I've been there.
Speaker BI've lost an engine and had to swim away from it.
Speaker BBroke my hand in the process.
Speaker BMy wife and I were sore as hell, but we swam away from that incident.
Speaker BAnd all your training of all your years and, you know, 135 and then 121 or however you get there, you're given this thing called airmanship, or you're developing this thing called airmanship, and it's going to kick in.
Speaker BAnd.
Speaker BYeah, I mean, not every situation is going to be safe, but that situation in particular made me such a better pilot.
Speaker BI didn't know if I was going to fly GA again after that incident.
Speaker BFor a few days of pure adrenaline and, you know, nursing a.
Speaker BSome sore muscles and broken bone, I'm like, you know what?
Speaker BI.
Speaker BI can.
Speaker BI can.
Speaker BI can do better.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BIt was a problematic fuel system, and it ended up being my fault.
Speaker BSo that actually made it way easier to get back into an airplane.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BIf.
Speaker BIf we didn't know, dude, I wouldn't want to fly those death traps, but it was my fault.
Speaker BLike, these things, the, you know, the safety record of, like, a continental engine well maintained and, you know, it's annual inspected.
Speaker BI have full confidence in these things.
Speaker BAnd yeah, there may be something that happens, but my wife actually said she's more comfortable flying in my bush plane I built myself than in the Bonanza.
Speaker BNot because we crashed, because I replaced the Bonanza with a slightly newer model with the.
Speaker BNot the problematic fuel system, but she.
Speaker BBut it's because she can see me land at 35, 40 miles an hour, which you can put down damn near anywhere.
Speaker BAnd there are times, of course, in our terrain that we're flying over unforgiving territory.
Speaker BAnd you.
Speaker BYou got to take that risk.
Speaker BAnd you do kind of an ops check, as we call it in the Air Force.
Speaker BYou just scan your instruments and look at your gas and make sure, okay, this is a high risk area.
Speaker BWhat are my outs?
Speaker BOkay, there's not many outs right now, so I'm just gonna get as slow as I can and put it softly in the tops of the trees or.
Speaker BBut those are fairly rare because usually you're flying around rivers and lakes and.
Speaker BAnd so.
Speaker BSo those offer opportunities, and some people just don't have the stomach for it.
Speaker BAnd that's okay.
Speaker BI'd say I'm better at.
Speaker BNot better.
Speaker BI'm willing to take a little bit more risk than the next guy.
Speaker BAnd I don't look down at anybody for not being willing to take that risk.
Speaker BThat's what feeds me not exactly being at risk, but mitigating that risk and successfully navigating the challenges of it.
Speaker BAnd then having a whiskey that night and talking about it with the.
Speaker BWith the boys at the fire, I mean, that's just like.
Speaker BThat's what feeds my soul.
Speaker AAll right, so you got to tell what happened with Obviously you said problematic fuel system, but you said it was your fault.
Speaker AWas it.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker BProblematic in the way it was designed.
Speaker AOr what was it?
Speaker BYeah, so it's.
Speaker BIt was.
Speaker BSo it was a J35V tail bonanza.
Speaker BSo 1958, I recall.
Speaker BAnd the ox fuel tank was a straight and level fuel tank only.
Speaker BOkay, so we're going up the.
Speaker BI just gotten back from a deployment near the end of my Air Force career, and it was a beautiful day out on the.
Speaker BIn the Columbia Gorge.
Speaker BTook off at a troutdale east of.
Speaker BEast of Portland.
Speaker BAnd because I was supposed to go get my kiddos across the Cascades the next day.
Speaker BSo I want to do a confidence flight in it ironically.
Speaker BSo put some gas in it.
Speaker BSo I knew I had plenty of gas.
Speaker BWe just go up to Columbia, few miles, turn around at the Dalles and head back west towards.
Speaker BI'm passing this little airport called Cascade Locks to my left.
Speaker BIt's beautiful airport right on the Columbia River.
Speaker BBeautiful day.
Speaker BIn fact, gosh, next week it'll be five years.
Speaker BSo it was May 17th of 2020.
Speaker BAnd I do.
Speaker BI'm like, hey, let's just do a low approach into this, into this airfield.
Speaker BI consider it a VFR alternate, but I've never seen it.
Speaker BAnd so nobody in the pattern.
Speaker BSo we just kind of keep going, same way, same day, downriver and do a low approach.
Speaker BMaking my radio calls, and I see a guy walking around on the Runway, and he kind of looks up at me and kind of realizes, oh, he's in the wrong space and kind of runs.
Speaker BBut I'm like, that's kind of weird.
Speaker BI'm not gonna, like, do a low.
Speaker BI'm not gonna land.
Speaker BI'm not gonna put my landing gear down.
Speaker BTrying to telegraph that, hey, dude, I'm not gonna land on you, but I'm also gonna see what the hell you're doing.
Speaker BSo I kind of slow down, put some flaps down.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker BLanding gears up.
Speaker BAnd he's kind of like, hiding his face from me.
Speaker BHe's got a camera.
Speaker BI think he's just like a plane watcher or whatnot.
Speaker BNot supposed to be on the Runway, but anyway, it's kind of distracting.
Speaker BI.
Speaker BI don't do my full gumps check.
Speaker BI don't put it on the.
Speaker BThe fullest tank.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BBecause I'm not gonna land right, so.
Speaker BAnd I'm distracted by this guy and making excuse.
Speaker BI'm not trying to make excuses.
Speaker BThis is just what's going through my brain.
Speaker BAnd so I push up the throttle to Go around.
Speaker BMeanwhile, I'm feet and 80 knots, right?
Speaker BThe bonanza glides okay at 105 knots.
Speaker BSo a lot faster than what I'm doing.
Speaker BSo essentially not a lot of time to react.
Speaker BSo I push up the throttle and essentially.
Speaker BNo kick in the pants.
Speaker BNo.
Speaker BIt pitches up initially, and then it.
Speaker BAnd then the acceleration stops, and I'm like, okay, so I reach down, I switch fuel tanks immediately.
Speaker BBut I don't have time.
Speaker BI'm looking out in front of me and I see sailboat masts, a big rock jetty off the left was like a ton more rocks and like railroads and bad thing out to the right.
Speaker BBeautiful glassy water, no boats.
Speaker BI'm like, easy.
Speaker BSo I'm starting to stall already.
Speaker BAnd so I'm cleaning off the wing.
Speaker BPut bunt a little bit or push forward on the yoke a little bit.
Speaker BI only have enough energy to turn just about 15 degrees, right, and Ms.
Speaker BThe jetty.
Speaker BAnd.
Speaker BAnd it's time to flare like in.
Speaker BAnd it happened quicker than that, right?
Speaker BAbout probably six to eight seconds.
Speaker BHad I had more time to troubleshoot or do it, if I had hit that boost pump now that I'd switched to a main tank, or even probably now that I'm not, you know, pitching up, I probably would have recovered.
Speaker BSo that's like that.
Speaker BI lose sleep over that overnight.
Speaker BBut I can't really be too hard on myself because I had a handful of airplane and about six seconds to make a life or death decision and put it down in the water and make a survivable landing.
Speaker BSo that is what I try to focus on in that I didn't try to turn back to the airport and stall, spin it in.
Speaker BPlenty of friends that have done that and not live to tell the story.
Speaker BSo I picked a crash site and I flew there.
Speaker BAnd I think about this is you want to extend your deceleration over the longest period of time in a crash scenario, right?
Speaker BIt's the.
Speaker BIt's the rapid deceleration or rapid to zero things that'll kill you.
Speaker BBut if you can go to zero in three seconds, that will probably save your life.
Speaker BAnd so you want to flare as much as you can.
Speaker BThere wasn't much of a flare because I was pretty much out of energy by the time I was able to turn the airplane around.
Speaker BBut I didn't.
Speaker BNot around 15 degrees to the right, but I didn't.
Speaker BBut I got the wings as level as I could.
Speaker BThe right wing hit a little bit first, and then, you know, my.
Speaker BThe yoke Was buried in my belly.
Speaker BAnd then that, with that rapid deceleration, the yoke slams forward, hits the stop, and my hand was on it.
Speaker BAnd then it decelerates with the yoke and crack the bone right there.
Speaker BIt's very common, like, you know, driving injury when there's an accident of steering wheel breaking bones.
Speaker BSo that was the only structural damage to myself.
Speaker BMy wife reaches over and tries to open the door because we didn't have time to crack the door.
Speaker BAs they say, you're supposed to prep the door in a forced landing.
Speaker BWe didn't have time, but she always kind of struggles with that bonanza door.
Speaker BI didn't know the sound was broken.
Speaker BI just reached over and it popped right open.
Speaker BThank goodness, because it was filling up with water really quickly.
Speaker BAnd I look for my phone, can't find it.
Speaker BI'm like, well, we got to get out.
Speaker BWe stand on the wing.
Speaker BThere's a fisherman on the edge of the jetty who just caught a big old steelhead.
Speaker BAnd he's, like, looking at me.
Speaker BHe goes, whoa.
Speaker BAnd I'm like, hey, nice fish.
Speaker BLike, I hadn't quite, you know, my brain hadn't quite caught up with what had just happened.
Speaker BI think the PTSD was definitely coming and the adrenaline was still kicking in.
Speaker BBut he's like, dude, that was crazy.
Speaker BDo you need me to throw you a line?
Speaker BAnd I'm like, I don't think that's gonna help much, man.
Speaker BWe're going out pretty quick.
Speaker BThis is a, you know, 3,000 pound airplane.
Speaker BSo, yeah, I'm like, babe, time to start swimming.
Speaker BBecause that point we're standing on the wing and water's up to our thighs, and we hop in and we start approaching that jetty, and that was like our lifeline.
Speaker BWe were, you know, had we not got out of the jetty, it would have been a much longer swim.
Speaker BAnd, you know, with my background, I was having really no problem swimming.
Speaker BAnd again, I still know my hand is broken, but I'm like.
Speaker BI'm like, babe, pick up the pace.
Speaker BWe're gonna have to swim faster to hit that jetty.
Speaker BAnd she did, and she did a great job, but banged up our knees pretty good on the rocks underneath on the jetty.
Speaker BBut there's some good samaritans that met us with towels.
Speaker BAnd I look down and my hands all swollen.
Speaker BI'm like, oh, that doesn't look good.
Speaker ASo dang, man.
Speaker BBut anyway, yeah, lots of.
Speaker BLots of good lessons learned.
Speaker BI haven't even debriefed that one on My on my channel yet.
Speaker BSo that's kind of.
Speaker BYou get the the exclusive on.
Speaker BOn what happened with with Steven has been bonanza, but I should probably attack that one.
Speaker AWhat does what's the wife say after that?
Speaker ALike, what does she say?
Speaker AWhen you get off the jetty, you guys make eye contact for the first time.
Speaker AShe like, what you want to know?
Speaker BThe first thing she said.
Speaker BShe's.
Speaker BShe goes, that wasn't that bad.
Speaker BLike, you are a badass.
Speaker BShe's like, I'd do that again.
Speaker BI'm like, shut up.
Speaker BShe's like, no, I wouldn't do it again.
Speaker BBut like, that wasn't that bad.
Speaker BLike, she is so rad and I'm lucky to have her.
Speaker BLucky that she flies with me again.
Speaker BIt took.
Speaker BI did a video on like me flying her again in my new Bonanza.
Speaker BAnd it was like a really bumpy day and it was just bad decision because she was a little bit anxious, a little bit nervous.
Speaker BBut now she's pretty good.
Speaker BI mean she's not zero anxiety or zero nerves, but.
Speaker BBut she's just a badass.
Speaker BSo yeah, I'm thankful for.
Speaker AWhat did it take for you?
Speaker AYou mentioned that you knew that it was something that you could have done different.
Speaker AYou kind of understood what you did wrong in the scenario.
Speaker ABut was there any kind of hesitation at all on your end?
Speaker AYou know, the first time you had to do a go around, the first time you had to kind of add power again really quickly.
Speaker AWas there any kind of like, oh, oh crap or was there any kind like pucker factor essentially?
Speaker AOr did it kind of smooth sailing getting back into ga?
Speaker BSurprisingly very smooth sailing back in the ga.
Speaker BAnd.
Speaker BAnd so after.
Speaker BAfter I was a test pilot, I went to the guard and became a safety.
Speaker BWell, actually it was active duty.
Speaker BI went through safety school in the Air Force and became an investigator.
Speaker BAnd so they as well as being an instructor pilot, they really tell you how to peel an onion back and get to the root cause of something because a young instructor CFI will like correct an error, but they wouldn't get to the root cause of figure out was it a perception, a decision or execution or maybe a game plan error and get to the root cause and really help you fix to really help you prevent it from doing it in the future.
Speaker BSo I was able to really peel that onion back with the help of the faa.
Speaker BIt was a guy named Jason with the FAA who.
Speaker BWho kind of discovered what really went wrong because I didn't want to think about it for about a month.
Speaker BThree weeks later he calls me, he's like, hey, you had a J35 or a J35 bonanza, right?
Speaker BWith that ox fuel tank?
Speaker BI'm like, immediately I knew what he was asking.
Speaker BI'm like, yep, I think that's what happened.
Speaker BAnd so and so.
Speaker BBut that does that, that's what happened.
Speaker BBut that doesn't answer the why.
Speaker BWhy didn't I know not to do a low approach on that tank?
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BI was deployed and I, it was, I misprioritized.
Speaker BIf I was going to go fly, I needed to get back in the books.
Speaker BI need to review my emergency procedures, my systems knowledge.
Speaker ASo.
Speaker BBut why?
Speaker BThat still doesn't answer why.
Speaker BToo busy just, just not prioritizing the importance of being a knowledgeable, credible pilot.
Speaker BI didn't emphasize that I had the time, I just didn't.
Speaker BAnd so that kind of appealed the onion back.
Speaker BAnd it was obviously most things are human factors, so it was a human factor of just misprioritization of tasks and general knowledge, studying my general knowledge, studying the book.
Speaker BSo that made me a lot more confident getting back into GA because now I'm again more competent and have really taken that lesson and go through my, my bonanza poh pretty frequently and we'll practice on my own some, some of the maneuvers and whatnot, which I didn't really ever, ever do before that.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker AWhat, what was building your plane like?
Speaker AYou mentioned that your wife's like, I trust you building your own airplane.
Speaker ABut me personally, if I built my own airplane, I'd be like, ah, dude.
Speaker BIt was so rewarding for a while.
Speaker AI ended up flying that.
Speaker BYeah, well, yeah, I mean, but then again, I don't know, but if you ever had that passion or that experience with a neighbor, that kind of introducing you in aviation, like that's how it came to be for me.
Speaker BAnd so this was just like 8 year old Steve just being so giddy and I was such a nerd about this that I learned how to wire avionics and I designed my whole interconnect system.
Speaker BI read the Garmin G3X installation manual cover to cover like 800 pages plus and nerded out on that too.
Speaker BAnd it slowed down the, the build process.
Speaker BAnd because I'm I guess, kind of cheap, I could save $10,000 by building my own wiring harness.
Speaker BAnd dude, it worked.
Speaker BI couldn't believe it.
Speaker BThat was, that honestly was probably the most rewarding thing is powering up the avionics that I like wired for the first time.
Speaker BSo it's for sure it's not for everybody.
Speaker BI like fly fishing, which is to say I like focused but seemingly boring stuff to everybody else.
Speaker BBut the other fly fishers will know what I mean.
Speaker BIt's just like your focus.
Speaker BIt takes your mind off of everything else in the world and you're just focused on this one thing and there's a 0 or a 1 at the end of it.
Speaker BA win or a loss.
Speaker BYou either catch that fish or you don't.
Speaker BThe avionics power up or they don't.
Speaker BAnd they work or they don't.
Speaker BSo that's just the way I work.
Speaker BAnd as far as getting in it and flying was a little bit nerve wracking.
Speaker BBut I did everything by the.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BFirst time.
Speaker BBut I did everything by the book.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker BAnd torqued everything.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BSo I thought.
Speaker BAnd had people check on it.
Speaker BMultiple people check on.
Speaker BOn me doing kind of interim inspections.
Speaker BJust friends of mine.
Speaker BAnd.
Speaker BAnd then the FAA's inspection pass pretty much flying colors.
Speaker BAnd so yeah.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BI have a ton of confidence in the airplane.
Speaker BIt's.
Speaker BIt's good design.
Speaker BCredit to.
Speaker BTo Randy Schlitter, the Designer of the RANS S21 free plug for him.
Speaker AWhat's the same?
Speaker AA year later I reach out to him like, hey dude, guess what?
Speaker AI'm building a Rans too.
Speaker AOr I'm building whatever it is.
Speaker AGive me kind of three tips that you would give to someone that's very new.
Speaker AKind of like what you wish that you would have known the very first time you bought a kit.
Speaker BGood question.
Speaker BI.
Speaker BI would say in my case, I wasn't really.
Speaker BI wanted a backcountry bush plane and this isn't a backcountry bush plane.
Speaker BI'm kind of like turning it into one.
Speaker BAnd you know, I'd say ask more people their opinions on the type of aircraft.
Speaker BIn my defense, this is pretty much a brand new kid at the time.
Speaker BAnd.
Speaker BBut I didn't know backcountry aviation.
Speaker BI really didn't know anybody in it.
Speaker BI was just a viewer on YouTube.
Speaker BAnd so I wish I would have reached out to a couple people to kind of get their opinions and they probably would have steered me away from this airplane.
Speaker BI have no regrets building this airplane, but it's not the most capable.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BIt's light stole and I like, I like how it goes fast.
Speaker BIt's, it's, you know, I can push ahead of all my buddies and their cubs and go, you know, set up camp before they do see you dudes or Catch up to them if I'm lagging behind.
Speaker BBecause we're going to fly to Anchorage in all of our backcountry planes this June.
Speaker ACool.
Speaker BWith a bunch of Cubs, like nine aircraft.
Speaker BSo I can kind of push ahead.
Speaker BOr if I want to sleep in one morning, you know, CFLs, I'll catch up with you and be caught up with them in no time.
Speaker BSo.
Speaker BBut I guess to answer your question.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BJust, just familiarize yourself with the, the, the forums of that community.
Speaker BI mean if you're a Vans guy, there's pretty rich RV forums.
Speaker BThe rans s21 forum is kind of on Facebook, so.
Speaker BBut those aren't going to get you what I'm talking about.
Speaker BThose are going to get you even more hook, line and sinker into that aircraft.
Speaker BIt's people in the community that fly other airplanes.
Speaker BWhat is their opinion of your chosen kit?
Speaker BBut then again, you pull 10 pilots and you're going to get 20 opinions.
Speaker BSo be careful with that.
Speaker BAnd then just go for it and just own it.
Speaker BWhich I've done.
Speaker BDone.
Speaker ACool.
Speaker BHopefully it answers the question.
Speaker ANo, it does.
Speaker AIt's probably something I'll never do, but I want to get back into ga.
Speaker AI want to buy airplanes.
Speaker AYou know, it's just kind of like eventually like buying the airplane, the initial cost, you know, you just look at it, you're like, that is a ton of money.
Speaker AIt's like, why are 182s going for $180,000?
Speaker ALike in my brain I just cannot think about why that makes a good financial decision.
Speaker BBut that's why you got to build one.
Speaker AYou're right.
Speaker ABut I can't build a 182.
Speaker AI don't want.
Speaker AI live in this.
Speaker AI live in North Carolina and they like the Piedmont area.
Speaker ANot even in the mountains area.
Speaker ASo it's like if I got a.
Speaker AIt doesn't make sense for me to have a bush plane.
Speaker BOr like you have young kids.
Speaker AHuh?
Speaker BYou have young kids.
Speaker AI have a three year old.
Speaker AThree year old boy.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BIt's not really the season for you for that.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker BYou know, if you've got at least an interest right now, it'll probably creep back up and then have better.
Speaker BThing is just have buddies with airplanes.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker AI know.
Speaker AI need more friends in North Carolina that have airplanes.
Speaker ACome on guys, where you at?
Speaker AOr girls, whatever.
Speaker AI'm open to whatever.
Speaker AJust give me the plane.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AYou always hear about these people that have like opportunities like these bonanzas or the serious.
Speaker AIt's like where's my opportunity?
Speaker AJoking.
Speaker ADon't really think that way.
Speaker ABut I want to wrap it up here soon.
Speaker AWe didn't really talk too much about your kind of transition from military to civilian flying, but I want to ask, you've done really fulfilling flying, right?
Speaker AMilitary's fulfilling.
Speaker AYou know, I'm sure backcountry flying is fulfilling to you as well.
Speaker AWhat are your thoughts on 121?
Speaker ALike, would you just be happy being a major airline pilot?
Speaker AWould that truly bring, like a fulfilling nature to you?
Speaker AOr do you think you would always be searching for something else to do?
Speaker BWell, I'll answer it like this.
Speaker BI think it could make me happy if I decide if I decided like that I just, for whatever reason, I couldn't fly GA or whatnot because there's so much opportunity within the 121 world.
Speaker BAnd here's what I mean.
Speaker BWe go to Tahiti, we go to Tokyo with my whole family.
Speaker BLike, we love the travel.
Speaker BAnd that's the part that I would really dive into more, right?
Speaker BAnd if I needed more professionally, I would continue on with the instructor thing.
Speaker BI got hired as a.
Speaker BEarly on as a FO instructor pilot for my airline.
Speaker BRight, Right.
Speaker BWhen the international Guard called up and said, hey, come back, we got orders for you.
Speaker BSo I had to.
Speaker BHad to put that aside.
Speaker BBut if I had extra time in this world, which I don't, I would absolutely enjoy going back to the instructor thing in the 121 world.
Speaker BSo, yeah, no, I could absolutely be happy in just the 121 world.
Speaker BBut there's so much in the GA and experimental world and the YouTube world that I made such good friends in that world that it'd be hard to walk away from it voluntarily.
Speaker BBut if I had to, for whatever strange reason, like if I lost my medical and I could only maybe just be a sim instructor, I could be happy with that.
Speaker BAs long as they don't take away my non rev privileges, I'm all right.
Speaker AI know, right?
Speaker AI want to go to Tahiti.
Speaker AAll right.
Speaker AYeah, I hear that, dude.
Speaker AWell, it's been a lot of fun chatting with you.
Speaker AYou know, it's really cool to kind of just share different experiences, hear people why, why they do this, why they do that, how they got in aviation?
Speaker AAnd what's really cool to think about is like that neighbor that.
Speaker ADoes that neighbor have any idea what he influenced by just having an airplane build in his garage?
Speaker AYou know?
Speaker ALike, does he know that, like, now you built your own airplane, you're flying for A major airline.
Speaker AYou flew in the Air Force all because you witnessed him building his plane.
Speaker AI mean, there might be.
Speaker ABurt Rutan obviously is in there as well.
Speaker ABut does that neighbor, that someone that's so close that probably has no idea what he did just by having that build and having you have the ability to ask questions?
Speaker BYeah, I mean, he, he.
Speaker BI'll answer it like this.
Speaker BHe, he.
Speaker BI don't know if that was a question, but he does know that I flew fighters in the Air Force.
Speaker BI don't know if, you know, I moved to Bend, Oregon, which is where Lance Air moved to.
Speaker BOh, by the way.
Speaker BAnd that's a whole nother story, which I won't get into.
Speaker BBut.
Speaker BBut I don't think he knew I built an airplane, which I'd love to follow up with him.
Speaker BBut the way I'll turn that around is think about yourself as that old person mentoring the kids.
Speaker BAnd I take extreme pride in the fact that I'm mentoring three young pilots.
Speaker BOne's not young.
Speaker BHe's actually older than myself.
Speaker BAnd he's just started the journey onto.
Speaker BInto the airline world.
Speaker BHe's like, yeah, like, what did I say, 51.
Speaker BAlmost 51.
Speaker BBut I'm mentoring him and then two very young folks.
Speaker BSo take that opportunity if you can, to kind of pay it forward.
Speaker BBecause I am so appreciative of the folks that have inspired me, especially Ray across the street as a Ray modern, if anybody knows, shout out Ray man.
Speaker BHe was on the COVID of Kit Plains magazine with his beautiful Lance Air.
Speaker ASo last question I'll ask is you mentioned you mentor some people.
Speaker AJust mentorship in general, how important it is.
Speaker ABut.
Speaker ABut what would you say are kind of like three truths or just like three things that you think every pilot needs to be successful, Whether you're ga pilot, whether you're an airline pilot.
Speaker AJust kind of three common facts that are ways to fly airplanes that will keep you safe and keep you happy.
Speaker BHumble, approachable, credible.
Speaker AThat was way easier than I thought that was going to be.
Speaker AYou didn't even like, stand like you were just like, all right, this is over.
Speaker ASee you later, man.
Speaker BThank you.
Speaker BThat's like the Air Force Force weapon school, like that expanded to most fighter pilots to try to.
Speaker BBecause there's an opinion that we're a bit cocky and not very approachable.
Speaker BBut.
Speaker BSo we're trying to change that.
Speaker BBut yeah, humility, being approachable and backing it up with being credible.
Speaker AI love it.
Speaker AI think it's great, great words to live by great things for anyone to listen.
Speaker AIf someone's watching this first time they ever heard of you, drop your socials, let them know what your channel is all about and give them a little hint or a little reason to follow you.
Speaker BYeah, thanks, Justin.
Speaker BSo my main thing is the YouTube thing.
Speaker BSo YouTube.com cleared direct.
Speaker BIt's all one word together.
Speaker BCleared direct.
Speaker BSo two Ds in the middle and then on Instagram that be secondary for me.
Speaker BInstagram.com cleared_direct._youtube.
Speaker BSo I'm sure you'll have links in the.
Speaker BIn the show description there, but thanks for letting me drop those.
Speaker BYeah, YouTube's my goal is to kind of double my subscribers this year.
Speaker BSo give me a subscribe if you.
Speaker BIf you can.
Speaker BLove it.
Speaker AI'll do it right now as soon as I get off because I don't know if I subscribe.
Speaker AI don't watch another country YouTube very much.
Speaker BI'm sorry, you're just gonna have FOMO.
Speaker BYou're just gonna have FOMO.
Speaker BThat's fine.
Speaker AI can deal with FOMO.
Speaker AMaybe I won't follow you.
Speaker ANo, I'm just kidding.
Speaker ASteve, man, it's been great talking to you.
Speaker AIt's been a lot of fun.
Speaker AI appreciate you just waking up.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker AWest coast, east coast, you know?
Speaker BI know, man.
Speaker AOn the East.
Speaker AEast coast is way different than 9am on the west Coast.
Speaker ASo I appreciate you.
Speaker AEspecially when I text you at 11:30 Eastern, I'm like, hey, dude, you want to do it now?
Speaker BLet's go.
Speaker ABut yeah, adversity, man.
Speaker AYou just kind of wake up and go, I appreciate it.
Speaker ACool.
Speaker BAppreciate it, Justin.
Speaker BYeah, thanks a lot for the opportunity.
Speaker AYeah, anytime.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BKeep touch.
Speaker ASee you.
Speaker AAnd that's a wrap on episode 333.
Speaker AJust a saying.
Speaker A333 is just insane.
Speaker AShout out to my wife for making me do this eight years ago, which makes me feel really old now, But I never thought I'd be at 333 episodes.
Speaker AIf you're thinking about starting a podcast, you're thinking about being a content creator.
Speaker ANick, the editor.
Speaker AThis goes to you too, if you're thinking about it.
Speaker AYou told me about those microphones.
Speaker AGo after it, man.
Speaker ALet's see it.
Speaker AI want to be your editor.
Speaker AYou're probably like, absolutely not, but I hope you enjoy these.
Speaker AI hope that you are creating content.
Speaker AIf that's something you want to do.
Speaker AStart the podcast, start the YouTube channel.
Speaker ABad financial advice for me.
Speaker AProbably talk to your airline advisor with Allworth airline.
Speaker ABut buy the airplane.
Speaker AGo have fun.
Speaker AMaybe I should listen to myself and go buy the airplane.
Speaker AAV Nation.
Speaker AI hope you're having a great day and as always, happy flying.
Speaker APilot Pilot LLC is compensated to make recommendations to his or her followers regarding the services of RAA or Allworth Airline Advisors, companies of Allworth Financial LP or Alworth.
Speaker APromoter is not an employee or investment advisor.
Speaker ARepresentative of All Worth.
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Speaker ADue to the compensation arrangement between Allworth and Promoter, Promoter has an incentive to recommend Allworth resulting in material conflict of interest.
Speaker APromoter's role on behalf of Allworth is limited strictly to making recommendations regarding the services of Allworth, introducing or referring prospective clients to Allworth.
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