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I still love flying but I would say that flying in the military is only about 30% of the fun civilian flying is. I know lots are going to disagree with me on that point but being the sole decision maker and on my own schedule make flying fun. I've ferried two aircraft from Alaska to the lower-48, circumnavigated Australia, flown my own plane to Airventure (Oshkosk), flown seaplanes in Maine, and bounced around backcountry strips in the West. If your only experience with civilian flying is renting a bird to fly to an FBO and get a burger you're missing out on some amazing flying.
I still love flying but I would say that flying in the military is only about 30% of the fun civilian flying is. I know lots are going to disagree with me on that point but being the sole decision maker and on my own schedule make flying fun. I've ferried two aircraft from Alaska to the lower-48, circumnavigated Australia, flown my own plane to Airventure (Oshkosk), flown seaplanes in Maine, and bounced around backcountry strips in the West. If your only experience with civilian flying is renting a bird to fly to an FBO and get a burger you're missing out on some amazing flying.
I have to know how you've done some of this - especially the ferry flights from Alaska. Was the AUS trip work or play?
The Australia trip was interesting. Again, it was with my dad. He had a near fatal car accident where he rolled a suburban into a river during a blizzard and after he had healed up he decided to pursue some of his bucket list items. At the top of the list was to fly around Australia so we rented a 172 in Bankstown and spent a month and about 87 flight hours and flew around the island/continent.
How hard was it to get a ticket down there? Just some paperwork? And how much does a 172 cost down there? Everything else is so expensive, I imagine it was a healthy endeavor.