Saturday was given over to an IMC lesson. Sunday's weather was promising to be CAVOK with a slight risk of fog in the morning. I had planned my next session in the Muale to consist of solo consolidation. You know how it goes. Someone sits in the right-hand seat to make sure you are not flying like a complete idiot and then you do a bunch of circuits solo in the hope that you can self-impove your ability to land the b*****!
However up to now has been a super cautious approach. Spurred on my fellow co-owner, former instructor and now Virgin A340 pilot Steve, I thought I might as well sort myself out properly. Swallow the butterflies and go do something useful. As it happens, fellow colleague Phil (see earlier in the blog posts) was available and provided excellent moral support. Having examined the likely wind direction for the day, a flight from the strip seemed feasible with a landaway at Leicester Aero Club to meet some mates from the FLYER Forum who had also flown in.
So at 11am we met in excellent CAVOK conditions and wheeled the bird out of the hangAr...

A thorough pre-flight ensued. Here we see yours truly in the P1 position with Phil on the right.

This gives an indication of the panel fit inside the Maule.

The landing at Leicester was a bit of a heart-stopper and my inexperience shone through. Not elegant but any landing you wlak away from... Having had a few cokes and sandwich, we found ourselves at a loss of what to do next with 4 hours of daylight remaining. Despite assurances from a contact at Bicester, the gliding club wouldn't let us visit. We did contemplate a tour around Birmingham's airspace, but time was not really on our side. So we decided that Derby and its grass airfield would be a good prospect for the Maule.
Here is a photo of Derby. Doesn't stand out too well does it?

Derby offers a cheap landing fee and cheaper fuel than anywhere else I know of. The airfield is also a rather special place housing a rather special aeroplane. If we go back to 1934, there was an air race from England to Australia in which three identical British aircraft entered, of which two polled first and fourth. These aircraft were built in 9 months by deHavilland and are considered the precursor design to the WW2 DH Mosquito twin-engined fighter-bomber. I am of course referring to the DH.88 Comet. Whilst Old Warden is home to the winner, G-ACSS Grosvenor House, Derby houses Black Magic seen here below at Mildenhall from where the race commenced. (Photo courtesy of the flightcollection.com)

After the race, G-ACSP Black Magic pioneered the air mail industry from Portugal from where it was rescued in 1980 as a basket case. There have been some efforts since to restore her, with the current project sadly lacking money, willpower and manpower. The fuselage is largely complete however there is still much to do. I would still recommend at least a virtual visit to their website http://www.cometracer.com/
You may have noticed that the shot of Derby showed that the weather was closing in. Eager to shoot off, we chased the good weather southward, dodging showers and returned safely back to the strip despite another bouncy landing! All in all, a mini-adventure and a worthwhile day out. Those conquering-the-Maule-blues have almost gone. :)