@skypilot6 I see what you mean by working a lot. I just didn't understand from the CFI perspective. TransPac has always sounded like a good gig to me but many people think that they work more than they're actually paid because their salaried. I can see how you could feel that way. The colleague told me the two toughest parts there was the language barrier
@bc2209 and the airspace was pretty congested. I did my private in the 30nm radius of SFO so I know what it's like to be busy but then all the rest of my training was in BIL (Montana) where a 3-4 airliners and some company traffic was a huge rush. I can't say that I'd make that language barrier easier by any means but the amount of hours I'd be building make it tempting to give it a shot and stick with it.
I fell a class short due to some transfer credits so my rATP qualifies for 1250 hours. I'd like to get on with the regionals/121 world when I get my hours. I also was hoping (but not making it a huge priority) to do the Skywest bridge program...which was another reason I want to go to TransPac.
I haven't thought about going back to a University to flight instruct really but I've talked about it with some people. Only downfall is that I'll be done at AF around the end of Sept with a CFI/CFII in hand. At that time it might be tough trying to get a CFI job when the school is in semester already. You guys have a lot worse winters than I do over here in Montana but UND was my second school of choice. Supposedly, ND is a pretty "awful" place as the Montanians like to say. Do you get a lot of flying in the winter? Lots of students? My school is small and winters still suck for flying. Instructors here battle the break even and build about 250 a semester, even working their ass off. I'd stay here since we have a Skywest program but like I said, it's not a priority and I'd like to go somewhere to get hours to be hire-able by someone.