60. Everyone Arrives at Oshkosh

It’s on almost every pilot’s bucket list: Airventure at Oshkosh. Before you can land on the dot, however, you’ll have to fly a complex arrival procedure and avoid all the other aircraft doing the same. What will you do when the procedure says one thing but safety might dictate something else?

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1. Watch The Overview

2. Evaluate Your Options

3. Make Your Choice

4. Learn From The Instructor

Optional: Download Video

5. Listen To The Roundtable

Listen in as our team of instructors discuss and debate the details of this scenario.

Sarah Rovner
Choice 2
Tom Turner
Choice 2
Richard McSpadden
Choice 1
Dave Hirschman
Choice 1
Kevin Plante
Choice 1
JP Dice
Choice 1
Jeff Van West (Moderator)

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6. Visit The Hangar

The Hangar is an active discussion forum for our Instructors and Mastery members only. Start your Mastery membership now to get full access.

7. Take The Bonus Quiz

In this month’s scenario, as you’re flying into Oshkosh for AirVenture, you’re in the holding pattern flying laps around Puckaway Lake. The moment you’ve turned about 20 degrees into the next lap, the controller announces that traffic at your lake can now proceed inbound. You’re faced with the decision to roll back to fly inbound, or to fly another lap around the lake. Test your knowledge about Aeronautical Decision-Making (ADM) by taking this quiz.

5 Questions

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Sarah is currently a Designated Pilot Examiner, FAA Safety Team Lead Representative, NAFI Master Instructor, Gold Seal flight instructor, and 737 pilot for a Major U.S. airline. Since changing careers as a network engineer, she has obtained her ATP, CFI, CFII, MEI and has flown over 7800 hours. She holds a pilot license in 5 different countries (USA, Canada, Belize, South Africa and Iceland – EASA) and has flown over 150 different types of airplanes in 25 different countries including oceanic crossings in small aircraft. She continues to stay involved in general aviation through ownership of vintage aircraft and mentoring; volunteering at many different events and presenting original seminars on aviation safety and human factors.