JetBlue and ALPA has an AIP!

I enjoyed flying three workdays between Christmas and May 1

A couple of questions on this.

Didn't you guys get into this profession because, for the most part, your love of flying and aviation? Seems the opposite if you fly 3 times in 5ish months.

Also, after not flying for such a long stretch don't you become rusty in your skills? I get the recurrent training etc, but is that comparable?

Thanks
 
I enjoyed flying three workdays between Christmas and May 1

A couple of questions on this.

Didn't you guys get into this profession because, for the most part, your love of flying and aviation? Seems the opposite if you fly 3 times in 5ish months.

Also, after not flying for such a long stretch don't you become rusty in your skills? I get the recurrent training etc, but is that comparable?

Thanks

Flying for work is by far better than sitting at a desk but it is still work.
 
A couple of questions on this.

Didn't you guys get into this profession because, for the most part, your love of flying and aviation? Seems the opposite if you fly 3 times in 5ish months.

Also, after not flying for such a long stretch don't you become rusty in your skills? I get the recurrent training etc, but is that comparable?

Thanks

I think of it this way. Yes, I love flying and aviation.

Because of that, I am planning on airline flying for another ~30 years as long as I am legally/health able to.

With the above timeline in mind, if September-October-January-February-March-April can result in a total of one week of work on reserve (in base), then why not enjoy a month of being on call and let the lineholders move the airplanes!

One's category may not always be properly staffed so I think of it as a 'make hay while the sun shines' type of thing.

Plus, for me anyway, I've bid back to having a schedule until August has passed since the reserves will be flying more.

And as far as skills go, I don't know what other people do but I do pickup the tablet and go through some memory items and limitations when I periodically download newsletters, must-read bulletins, etc. After a month and a half round-the-world trip where I didn't even think about work, I actually did sit down and review my procedural flows.
 
Didn't you guys get into this profession because, for the most part, your love of flying and aviation? Seems the opposite if you fly 3 times in 5ish months.

Not really. I got into flying because it pays well, has pretty good scheduling flexibility and lots of time off to do other things. Yes, I enjoy it more than other jobs I've had, but it's still a job.

Also, after not flying for such a long stretch don't you become rusty in your skills? I get the recurrent training etc, but is that comparable?


I checked out in a new plane in January and have only flown 5 times since then, and because all the captains I've flown with are sub 100 hours (it's a new fleet type) I haven't been able to be PF on any of them. It's been hard to remember what I'm supposed to be doing and brandhave actually bid a line most months (although I keep getting pulled off trips due to them doing IOE) just to get familiar with the plane.
 
A couple of questions on this.

Didn't you guys get into this profession because, for the most part, your love of flying and aviation? Seems the opposite if you fly 3 times in 5ish months.

Also, after not flying for such a long stretch don't you become rusty in your skills? I get the recurrent training etc, but is that comparable?

Thanks
I love flying but I also love time off. Flying a little while getting paid a lot is the dream. Right now I’m flying a lot but only getting paid a decent amount.
 
Here’s the thing on proficiency as I’ve seen it. Flying ~100 hours a year is fine for proficiency iff you have substantial time in type and operation under your belt, which most of the senior guys playing the reserve game do. I flew ~100 hours a year as a maintenance manager at my last job and it was fine even single pilot IFR in a high-workload airplane because I started with a few hundred hours in type flying 25 minute legs and over a thousand flying into the same airports. New job pace is 250ish and definitely don’t have the same level of comfort and proficiency flying more than twice as much because I just don’t have as much time in the airplane. But that’s just me, and I’m a pretty terrible pilot so probably summa y’all don’t have the same issue.
 
It just shows the difference in mentality. At the purple menace, reserves are to be abused because they’re junior fodder. At real majors, reserve is just a legitimate lifestyle bid.
Out of interest is there an airline other than Airtrain that you would work for?
Hee hee...flying with a former Tranny right now. He explained a lot to me about the said person. All makes sense now.

Sent from my Moto G (4) using Tapatalk
 
I wouldn’t work for any airline now. I’m quite happy to be out of the industry. But had you asked me over a decade ago when I got hired at the Tran, I’d have told you every major except Southwest.

Even American, with them being APA, and not ALPA. Not trying to flame, I always thought being at an ALPA carrier was important to you.
 
Even American, with them being APA, and not ALPA. Not trying to flame, I always thought being at an ALPA carrier was important to you.

I'm the guy who got ALPA at AirTran. We had an independent union when I got hired. I was an elected officer in the independent union we had. Being at an ALPA carrier was never a requirement for me, just being at a union carrier. Granted, I prefer ALPA, obviously. But I would have absolutely loved a job at UPS, and there's virtually no chance that they'll become an ALPA carrier at any time in the near future.
 
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