I start watching the weather a few days out on a trip. The forecast for Friday had been for rain along the North South Carolina border. It was supposed to start mid day and I had contemplated whether we needed to leave earlier than noon but the morning forecast said no rain before 7 pm so we stuck with our planned 1130 departure. I had a class to attend Saturday and part of Sunday. Class was scheduled to end at 1300 Sunday so ideally we would arrive around 1500 so we could avoid an extra day of car rental.
Our departure was interesting. We took off runway 14 with a right turn to 280. On course was 20 degrees. This roundabout path was due to some slow moving traffic inbound from the North. On a positive note once we checked in with departure, we were given an immediate climb to 9000. Passing 3000, we were cleared on course. Always fun to make a 240 right when a 120 left would have done. We did confirm that two rights can make a left though…
Other than wasting a few minutes and some gas, I couldn’t complain too much. Weather was good and we only had a slight headwind. We cruised up to Savannah and made a gentle right to head for Lumberton, NC, our fuel stop. We didn’t need gas but I couldn’t turn down a cheap fill up and it gave us some more options for the later flights.
CC and I had first stopped at Lumberton in 1995 on a trip to Bar Harbor. We had not intended to stop there but heading North the intended airport was low IFR under a storm and Lumberton was clear. We were met with friendly service and since then I have used the airport as a fuel stop multiple times.
Arriving on the ramp, I called on Unicom for gas and soon after shutting down the truck was pumping away. We took a quick break, payed for the gas and fired back up. While on the ground I had checked the weather and during our short stop some storms had started popping. If you believed the forecast, they were both in the wrong place and time.
We were soon cruising at 7000 with a 7 knot tailwind. All was good but we did have some rain ahead. It didn’t look like much on the satellite but the active radar showed some strong activity. Luckily our path took us North of the weather and we just got a nice view. The sky was a bit hazy as we approached Chesapeake but at about 15 miles we saw the runway and made an uneventful approach. Tie downs were not the best but I got the ropes on the plane and headed in to get our car.
They have a local car rental and I had booked it weeks ago and confirmed it Wednesday. Even so, the car was not there as they had a slight scheduling SNAFU. Luckily, they had a slightly more expensive car which we took. They were very nice and waived our parking fee which was a bit more than the additional cost of the car. After grabbing some food, it was time to sleep and head to class.
Everything checked on preflight and the weather as far as South Carolina looked stellar. While it was clear, it was not smooth. We started at 6k but soon I was ready to try 8k. 8k took us just above the clouds and increased the tail wind but as we headed through North Carolina the clouds melted away and the tailwind became a 14 knot headwind.
I decided to try 6k again and we picked up a small tail wind netting us about 20 knots but the ride was less than smooth. We discussed the ride a bit and over time it smoothed out. Our fuel stop was Allendale, SC. We have stopped there before, it is known for friendly service, cheap gas, good candy, clean facilities and a slow gas pump.
All the way down we had been watching the remnants of the tropical storm. There had been a line of rain from Savannah to St. Augustine, but it had been moving West and had started to diminish. The Savannah controllers were quite helpful letting us deviate around some heavy rain and then putting us just offshore. As is typical in the afternoon, the land side was dark and foreboding and the sea-side was pretty clear.
We had an uneventful arrival home and soon had the plane away.
Thanks for sharing. Always a good read from you.
ReplyDeleteEnjoyed the description so much. Thank you for the great photos too. As a new Baron 58 owner this is the kind of weekends I am very much looking forward to.
ReplyDeleteGlad you enjoyed. We have had lots of great trips with both our Baron and Bonanza. Welcome to Baronhood. If you have not joined Beechtalk yet (free), now would be a great time.
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