7 months: 560Hr ASEL, 328Hr 135 XC, 259Hr 121 XC, 1.3 in a Redbird, Company paid for my IPC in a sim before instrument currency expired. The 121 XC could have been more but I was just counting 135 time so I let a bunch of it slide. Sim time is reimbursed at the end of the season. You don't get it back if you quit on them. You can get night time with them but they want it pre-dawn.
This was in a C6 rig. I saw online that folks were getting more time in the N5 but I think I was pretty lucky. I did sit over a week in some places waiting for weather to clear. With the 50 Gal tanks I would fly about 5.5-5.8, quick turn and fly another 3-4 hours when the window would permit. A lot of folks did not have the ass to do that. The bosses were not driving for us to fly that long either but I liked getting the work done.
Bob and Simon are both great to work for. They have both been doing this a very long time and are extremely helpful. One gripe you will hear is that they micromanage. By this I mean you call them before you take off and then when you land. If you are in a group, it is just one person calling for the group. Why on God's green Earth do people bitch about that? Maybe it is my military background but if I was in charge, you'd be calling me. And, they are both extremely pleasant to talk to, so, BONUS!
There is no push to sleep in a crappy hotel. I stayed in places like the Drury or Residents Inn and got free dinners. Some folks like the Candlewood but to me that was a small step up from a Value Place. I'm in a hotel, I shouldn't have to pay extra for daily housekeeping. I tried to keep it in the Marriott chain and have 250000 points now.
I've spoken with Nick at Northerstates and Bryan at Skylens as well has employees from both companies and I don't think you could go wrong with either of them as well. Landcare gave me an offer first and I accepted right after the interview. Besides, I think the lodging situation fit me better with Landcare but I'm 49 and a 22 year vet, I'm not doubling up!
Would I go back for a second season? No but I'm married and old. If I was single and young, maybe. Would I recommend working for them, Hell Yes.
One piece of advice I would give is always be honest. If they ask you "will you fly the whole season" and you tell them yes but you know you are going to walk as soon as you reach some hours milestone, you just suck. As Tony Montana said,
"All I got in this world is my balls and my word and I don't break either of 'em for nobody!"