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#1
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![]() I made it to the airport for the first time since my son (first child) was born in May. I did a little PAO-WVI-E16 loop by myself. I couldn't help but notice that a lot of the Sunday flyers were father/ son or father/daughter teams. Perhaps that's how it's always been, I just hadn't noticed it before. ![]() It made me wonder, how long did you parental pilots wait to take your kids up on their first flight? In any case, I've got years to wait! In the meantime, I get to dress him in airplane themed baby clothes -- of which he has many. Dave J PS -- I guess its heartening that I saw mostly father+youngster rather than grandfather+youngster teams -- but then again, this was Palo Alto -- the planes were late model Diamonds, Columbias, and Cirri, too. Sigh. I wonder how excited my son will be to go up in a 1970's 172 with funny mechanical instruments! |
#2
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In article ,
Dave J wrote: It made me wonder, how long did you parental pilots wait to take your kids up on their first flight? In any case, I've got years to wait! In the meantime, I get to dress him in airplane themed baby clothes -- of which he has many. My son has been flying since he was few months old and my daughters since they were a few years old. My son (now 9) loves flying, one of my daughters (6) is ok with it, and the other (6) doesn't like it at all. My sister steals one of my kids on the weekends I have them, so when she takes the one that doesn't like flying, I usually take the other two up. PS -- I guess its heartening that I saw mostly father+youngster rather than grandfather+youngster teams -- but then again, this was Palo Alto -- the planes were late model Diamonds, Columbias, and Cirri, too. Sigh. I wonder how excited my son will be to go up in a 1970's 172 with funny mechanical instruments! My kids have been plenty excited to go up in 1970s Cherokees, but after awhile started asking to go up in a Cessna for something different. The 1970s 172 was a big treat for them. The funny mechanical instruments makes it easier to introduce one instrument at a time to them. John, also at PAO -- John Clear - http://www.clear-prop.org/ |
#4
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It made me wonder, how long did you parental pilots wait to take your
kids up on their first flight? In any case, I've got years to wait! In the meantime, I get to dress him in airplane themed baby clothes -- of which he has many. My son went up with me for the first time when he was four years old. My daughter was 18 months old. They've each flown with Mary (my wife, also a pilot) and me over 1,800 hours since then. Fast forward 14 years, and dozens of wonderful flying adventures later. My son, now 18, earned his Private last fall (and flew into -- and camped at -- Oshkosh this year), and my daughter will be taking flight lessons in the summer of '10. Enjoy them while they are little. I know you'll hear this a lot (and it'll seem hard to believe), but the time really does go by in a flash, so enjoy the journey with them! -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 Ercoupe N94856 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
#5
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Jay, I thought both of them both went up with you while they were still in
liquid form? {;-) Jim -- "It is the mark of an educated mind to be able to entertain a thought without accepting it." --Aristotle "Jay Honeck" wrote in message news:G5Ksk.314184$yE1.92939@attbi_s21... My son went up with me for the first time when he was four years old. My daughter was 18 months old. They've each flown with Mary (my wife, also a pilot) and me over 1,800 hours since then. |
#6
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"RST Engineering" wrote in message
... Jay, I thought both of them both went up with you while they were still in liquid form? So you heard about him giving the UPS guy a ride also. |
#7
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That one went right over the top of my head.
Jim -- "It is the mark of an educated mind to be able to entertain a thought without accepting it." --Aristotle "Mike" wrote in message news:%dWsk.847$lf2.697@trnddc07... "RST Engineering" wrote in message ... Jay, I thought both of them both went up with you while they were still in liquid form? So you heard about him giving the UPS guy a ride also. |
#8
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"RST Engineering" wrote in message
m... That one went right over the top of my head. Why am I not surprised? Jim -- "It is the mark of an educated mind to be able to entertain a thought without accepting it." --Aristotle "Mike" wrote in message news:%dWsk.847$lf2.697@trnddc07... "RST Engineering" wrote in message ... Jay, I thought both of them both went up with you while they were still in liquid form? So you heard about him giving the UPS guy a ride also. |
#9
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Dave J wrote:
how long did you parental pilots wait to take your kids up on their first flight? A couple months after I'd passed my checkride, after doing a lot of solo flying and gaining lots of confidence, I took up my then-12-year-old son. He had an amazingly steady hand at the right-seat controls, kept the altitude and heading completely on track...and found it only mildly interesting, especially since I wouldn't do any stalls or stunts. The girls went with me once or twice when I took a friend to summer camp, but found it boring as well...just another internal combustion vehicle, like riding with me to the grocery store. Still, that was my attitude as an adolescent, and a long time later it reawakened as the urge to learn flying -- so who knows? Stella |
#10
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I asked the greybeards in the EAA chapter I belong to for their advice
on when to take my first born up. The advice was to wait until they could understand verbal instructions. I purchased two DC 10-13.4Y's to fit their small heads. I took my first one up in the Champ when he was two. It made for an interesting photo of a child in a car seat in the front seat of the Champ. My second child got to fly at about 18 months when my wife's father died and I had to fly her to be with her mother. I flew home with both kids in the back seat of the Musketeer. Each had a grease pencil and drew on the side windows to amuse themselves during the 1.5 hour flight. Following that trip, whenever we drove past the airport, the second child would always ask, "Are we going flying?" 13 years later, the second one likes to fly with a camera in hand. Some of the first pictures she took were of the Chicago skyline as we flew the shoreline coming home from Oshkosh. |
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