I can’t afford to fly anymore

Posted by CantDecideOnUsrnm@reddit | flying | View on Reddit | 145 comments

So I know a lot of young pilots are probably dealing with this so consider this a general thread for affordability advice.

The only reason I was able to get my PPL in the first place was because my dad owns an airplane and my instructor was 50$ an hour. My dad paid for him too because I was the only one of his children who wanted to follow in his, my grandfathers, my grandmothers, and my great grandfathers footsteps and fly. I love to fly. I am sure everyone here can relate to the liberating feeling of being in the air. Getting that maneuver *just* right. There’s an art to it that’s absolutely addictive. I don’t want to make a career out of it because while I love flying I don’t want to go through the whole hullabaloo of hours building and whatnot. Besides, I love my job as an environmental scientist. The problem is, I can’t rely on my parents to fund my flying addiction anymore. I live in a completely separate state. And I’m a whole adult now and it would feel wrong to keep relying on my folks.

Here’s my problems:

- renting an airplane is not affordable with the budget I’m working with (I’m not the kind of environmental scientist that makes bank, I’m scraping by with two roommates in a two bedroom apartment)

- I work full time and the weekends always end up full of other things (seriously, how does anyone have the time? Am I just being a winey baby about this?)

- I moved from an area in central Alaska (pretty much just class G airspace with a few exceptions, basically free to go wherever you want as long as you’re not a cowboy, communicate over the radio, be vigilant, do your w/b calculations, have physical sectionals so as not to solely rely on one’s iPad (I actually only used sectionals for most of my training, now my dad has a dynon in his airplane I can use when I visit)) to Southern California where the airspace is PACKED. I am not stupid enough to go flying around it by myself before going through the airspace with an instructor and getting comfortable with ATC communications. But instructors cost money because they, too, need to eat.

There are just all these barriers to flying and I feel myself getting more and more rusty and I don’t want my skills to wither away.

I am sure these are common barriers, so I was just wondering what advice other pilots have to overcome them. I make decent money but I live in SoCal so it’s expensive to exist and I have student loans, car loans, debt from the move, and I’m saving as much money as possible so I can afford to have kids and a house someday. How do other pilots balance this? It went from being so easy to fly in Alaska where I could use my dad’s airplane and avgas and take a quick flight to look for herds of caribou, see a glacier, or even fly to our family friends cabin with a little grass airstrip, to feeling like it’s almost impossible to get off the ground. It’s jarring to say the least.