Cryptonomicon was a good read. The Baroque Cycle is an incredible trilogy.
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Cryptonomicon was a good read. The Baroque Cycle is an incredible trilogy.
Aviation Instrcutors Handbook, Principles of Helicopter flight, Bell 206L3 Pilots Operating Handbook, and The AS350/355 Book. Sigh... Someday I'll read for fun again.
Ugh dude I feel your pain! I've done all of those plus many more airplanes I've had to learn... Now I'm reading The Target by David Baldacci. Number 3 in this series of characters. Great book so far!
JBPilot what do you fly? I've got my commercial check ride in the Bell 206L3 long ranger in a few weeks.
Right now I'm in a LR45. All my time is fixed wing. I've been to school on a couple different a/c though so I get what you're going through. I've also got my CFI/MEI/CFII so I get the instructor stuff also!
"Seven Pillars of Wisdom" by TE Lawrence.
I am at the back end of book 9 where everyone is starting to converge before they enter the Wastelands. I am excited to finally finish the saga, but plan to reread the entire series in chronological order which I guess starts at Midnight Tides. Gardens of the Moon felt impossible to start at first, yet I imagine the second go round will be far more enjoyable since I will pick important pieces I must have missed on the first read. I love how everything in this saga is connected!
That's a pretty nice little plane! How long have you been at it? I used to do contract security work for the DOE. Stopped doing that almost two years ago to pursue a career in aviation. I love the versatility of rotorcraft, but I'm addicted to being in the air, by any means neccesary. I have one more semester here at Southern Utah University until I start getting paid to fly. But I still have a few flight labs left to take while instructing. Specifically the mountain and utility (long line/external load) in the Bell 407 and a medium transition in the Huey. Still don't know what I want to do after instruction, but if 250 hours has taught me anything, it's that I know almost nothing :-). I'm sure in 1,000 hours or so I'll begin to figure out where my niche is.