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    Why Learn to Fly?
    Learning to fly will unlock a world of possibilities and give you unparalleled freedom to see the world. It is a truly unique experience-one of the last great adventures in our modern life...
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    Finding a flight school is the first step towards earning your license. So how to find one? Our flight school database is a good place to start—it shows over 1,000 flight school locations in the US...
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    Learn To Fly Here Blog

    Prohibited vs Restricted airspace

    February 01 2012 by Matt Meyer

    A few weeks ago I got a panicked call from a friend of mine who is a corporate pilot for a local company. He was worried about a possible airspace penetration violation that had happened to him that day. He and the other pilot were approaching their destination airport, Manassas VA (KHEF) from the west, when they were asked by the tower to make a 6 mile left base for 34R.

    They needed him to make space for two departures out and an inbound all ahead of him. However, this clearance would put them in a restricted area south of KHEF.

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    Goin to the Islands Mon? 5 Things to Keep In Mind.

    January 18 2012 by Charlie Masters

    May 23, 2004. "N44647, Miami Center, radar contact turn left heading 090 vectors to Freeport climb and maintain niner thousand."

    That was the clearance for a couple of firsts for me.  My first flight over any water wider than Cave Run Lake near Morehead, KY and my first international flight.  It is 29 degrees as I am writing this and there is a light dusting of snow on the ground.  I guess that is why my thoughts take me back to that warm vacation 8 years ago.  If you need to take a trip to the islands let me tell you a few lessons I learned from mine.

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    Get the Most Out of Each Lesson

    January 08 2012 by Bret Koebbe

    I was recently reminded of what it's like to be a student again last week after attending the first of a series of guitar lessons. Everything about it was foreign to me, from feeling like an outsider at the music shop to opening a book of sheet music that looked like it was written in Greek. Each lesson is only 30 minutes, and takes place one on one with the music instructor in a very small room. The first lesson was over before I knew it, and on the drive home it got me thinking of how similar this was to when I took my first flight lesson 12 years ago. I considered myself a good student...

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    6 flight training resolutions for 2012

    January 01 2012 by John Zimmerman

    It's a new year, which means it's time to make an optimistic list of resolutions that you'll probably end up ignoring. But while promising to exercise more or eat better may be a lost cause, it's worth considering what your aviation resolutions might be for the year ahead. Becoming a better pilot--whether you have 5 or 5,000 hours in the logbook--is all about setting goals and working towards them. In this sense, the new year is a great time to take stock of where you are as a pilot and where you want to go.

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    You've Heard About the Pre-Flight - What About the Post-Flight?

    December 26 2011 by Eric Radtke

    A great deal of time, effort and thought (appropriately so) is invested in the time-honored tradition of the pre-flight inspection.  The time to check fuel, oil, flight controls, tires, etc.  After all, the PIC does have the final say as to whether the flight will go.  And even if you're not acting as PIC yet, you certainly have the final say as to whether you'll get on board.  [As a side note, I strongly encourage you to be an active participant early on in the go/no-go decision.]  So quite literally, the preflight is the most crucial inspection to take place.

    But...in the interest of convenience, safety, less headache and less disappointment, the best time to discover that your airplane needs oil, air in the tires, a light bulb or something more serious that will involve your maintenance shop, is the...

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