CROSS-COUNTRY FLYING
When a pupil has finished his flying
school tests, and has received his certificate from
the Royal Aero Club, he is in a stage of proficiency
which means that he has learned to control an aeroplane
when above an aerodrome and in conditions that are
favourable, and that he may be relied on to make no
elementary mistakes. But as to cross-country
flying, with its greater hazards, he is still a novice,
with everything to learn. And so it is to flights
from point to point, generally between neighbouring
aérodromes, that he next devotes himself.
Aviators have been commiserated with,
often, on what is thought to be the monotony of a
cross-country flight. The pilot, raised to a lonely
height above the earth, is pictured sitting more or
less inertly in his seat, with nothing to do but retain
his control on the levers, and look out occasionally
so as to keep upon his course. But the beginner,
when he first attempts cross-country flying, will have
an impression not of inactivity, but of the necessity
to be constantly on the alert. He will be engrossed
completely by the manipulation of his machine, with
no time to sit in idle speculation, or to analyse his
feelings as the country passes away below.
When preliminaries on the ground have
been gone through, and the pilot is in the air, there
will first be a need to gain a height of several thousand
feet. Altitude is essential in cross-country flying.
The higher a pilot flies, within reason and having
regard to the state of the atmosphere, the better
chance will he have of making a safe landing, should
his motor fail suddenly and force him to descend.
So the first concern is climbing and in
doing so the pilot must remember the teachings of
his instructor, and not force his craft on too steep
or rapid an ascent. He may prefer, in his early
flights, to remain above the aerodrome while he is
gaining altitude, watching his height recorder from
moment to moment so as to note his progress upward.
He will be occupied also with his engine, listening
to its rhythm of sound, and keeping an eye on the
indicator that tells him how many revolutions per
minute the motor is actually making, and which will
warn him at once should it begin to fail.
Granted his motor is running well,
a pilot should soon gain altitude. Then, assuming
the air is clear as it should be on his
early flights he will note some landmark,
away on the line of his flight, and set off across
country towards it. Fixed conveniently in front
of him will be a map, of a kind devised specially
for the use of aviators. A pilot’s view,
as he flies high above the ground, is bird-like.
Landmarks fail to attract his attention, at this altitude,
which would be clearly seen if he were on the ground.
Hills, for example, unless they are high, are so dwarfed
as he looks down on them that they scarcely catch
his eye. What is done, by the designer of air
maps, is to accentuate such details of a landscape
as will prove conspicuous when seen from above.
A river, or an expanse of water, is clearly seen;
so also are railways and main roads; while factory
chimneys, and large buildings which stand alone, may
be identified from a distance when a pilot is in flight.
So on an airman’s map, made to stand out by
various colourings in a way that catches the eye, are
railways, roads, rivers, lakes and woods, with here
and there a factory chimney or a church, should these
be in a position rendering them visible easily from
the air. That such maps should be bold in their
design, and free from a mass of small details, is very
necessary when it is remembered that the aviator,
passing through the air at high speeds, has no time
for a leisurely inspection of his map.
With a good map, and aided when necessary
by the compass that is placed in a position so that
he can see it readily, a pilot has no difficulty as
a rule, once he has acquired the facility that comes
with practice, in steering accurately from point to
point, even when on a long flight. On a favourable
day, when the land below is clearly visible, he will
glance ahead, or to one side, and after observing
some landmark, look on his map to identify the position
he has just seen. Under such conditions steering
is easy, and the compass plays a subsidiary part.
But it may happen that, while he is on a long flight
and at a considerable altitude, the earth below may
be obscured by clouds, or a low-lying mist, and all
landmarks vanish from his view. Sometimes too,
he may find himself flying through mist and cloud,
with all signs of the earth gone from below.
Whereupon, robbed for awhile of any direct guidance,
he must fly by aid of his map and compass, holding
his machine on its compass course, and noting carefully
the needle of his height-recorder, so that he is sure
of maintaining altitude. A risk exists under
such conditions, when there is no visible object by
which to judge a course, that an airman may make leeway,
unconsciously, under the pressure of a side-wind; and
so he must be ready to note carefully, immediately
that a view of the earth is vouchsafed him, whether
he has actually been making leeway, either to one
hand or the other, even while the bow of his machine
has been held on its compass course. There is
a risk also, when a pilot is flying in fog or at night,
that, having no visible horizon from which to gauge
the inclination of his craft, it may assume gradually
some abnormal angle, without his own sensations telling
him what is taking place. The craft may, for
the sake of illustration, incline sideways, imperceptibly
to the pilot, till it begins to side-slip. But
science can meet this danger by providing inclinometers,
fitted within the hull so that the aviator can see
them easily; and by means of these instruments, which
are illuminated at night, it is possible for a pilot
to tell, merely by a glance, at what angle his machine
is moving forward through the air whether
it is up or down at the bow, or whether its position
laterally is normal.
The beginner, on his first cross-country
flight, need not be troubled by such intricacies.
He is flying, one assumes, on a fine day, with the
land spread clearly below him. So as he moves
through the air, listening always to the hum of his
motor, he need have no fear, granted that his observation
is ordinarily keen, of losing his way.
Naturally, being a novice, he will
feel the responsibility of his position. His
eyes will rove constantly from one instrument to another;
as indeed, from habit, do those of a practised flyer.
He will glance at the height recorder; then at the
engine revolution indicator; then at the dial which
tells him what his speed is relative to the air.
There is a dial, also, showing the pressure in his
petrol-tank; while there will be a clock on his dashboard
at which he will glance occasionally, after he has
marked some position away on the land below, so as
to determine what progress he is making from the point
of view of time.
Besides these preoccupations, and
the ceaseless even if almost unconscious attention
that he must pay to his engine, there is the need
to bear constantly in his mind’s eye the lie
of the land. Should his motor fail suddenly,
or something happen which necessitates an immediate
descent, it is imperative that he should be able, without
delay, to choose from the ground that is visible below
him some field or open space that will provide a safe
landing-point. And this is easier said than done.
The earth, when viewed by a airman who looks down
almost directly upon it, is apt to be deceptive as
to its contour. A field that is selected say,
from a height of several thousand feet, may not prove as
the aviator nears it in his glide to be
at all the haven he imagined it. More than once,
seeking to alight on a field which appeared to him,
as he was high above it, to be level as a billiard
table, a pilot has found, when it is too late, that
the ground has sloped so steeply that his machine,
after landing, has run on downhill and ended by crashing
into a fence or ditch.
It is very necessary for an airman
to learn to judge, by its appearance, the difference
between an expanse, say, of pasture land, or a field
which is in green corn or standing hay. It has
happened often that a pilot, descending after engine
failure towards what he has reckoned a grass field,
has discovered when too low to change his
landing-point that his pasture land is actually
a field of green corn; and a landing under such conditions,
with the corn binding on the running-gear of the machine,
may end in the aircraft coming to an abrupt halt,
and then pitching forward on its nose; with a broken
propeller and perhaps other damages in consequence.
In choosing a landing ground, as in
other problems that face the novice in cross-country
flying, experience will prove his safeguard.
He will learn for instance that cattle or sheep, if
they can be discerned below in a field, go to show
that this field is one of pasture and not of crops.
If no cattle are to be seen in a field, and the aviator
is doubtful about it, and yet if it happens to be the
only suitable one he can locate, then he may look
closely at the gateway which leads into the field.
If, in this gateway, he can detect such scars or markings
on the ground as are caused by the feet of cattle as
they walk daily in and out, he may feel satisfied the
field is one of pasture.
When cattle or sheep are seen standing
in a field so that they face in the same direction,
this may suggest either the existence of a slope,
or the presence of a strong ground wind; while a stream
or brook at the edge of a stretch of open land, or
a belt of woods, may suggest a sloping of the ground.
It is amusing for a pilot or
it was so, rather, in the days when few aeroplanes
were in existence to note the astonishment
which his descent, made quite unexpectedly perhaps
in some quiet and rural country, will occasion amongst
the inhabitants. Sometimes, under the stress
of such an excitement, people appear to lose for the
time being their power of coherent speech. A
pilot in a cross-country contest, not being sure whether
he was on his right course, decided to make a landing
and ask his way. He noticed, after a while, the
figure of a man in a field below. Planing down,
and alighting in the field, he shouted questions to
this man, switching his engine off and on, while he
did so, in order that his words, and those of the other,
might be audible. But the man in the field, demoralised
by the advent of this being from the air, and gazing
at him and his machine with an expression of blank
amazement, was unequal to the task of giving even
the simplest directions. He waved his arms, it
is true, but no words that could be understood issued
from his lips. The pilot repeated his questions,
but it was no good. The man waved and mouthed,
and rolled his eyes, but when he tried to speak intelligibly
he could not. So the aviator, loath to waste
further time, accelerated his engine again and continued
his flight.
As a contrast to this, there was the
experience of a pilot who, after a long flight from
England to the Continent, landed at length near a
small village. In the next field to that in which
he alighted there was a labourer, digging patiently.
The aviator expected that this man would fling down
his spade in excitement, and run wildly towards the
aeroplane. But such was not the case. This
labourer, a marvel of placidity and unconcern, merely
raised his head slowly and looked across at the aircraft,
and then went on with his digging.
In his first cross-country flights,
being concerned chiefly as to the manipulation of
his machine, and having so many things to think of,
the novice may feel tired after even a short journey
by air. His chief sensation, as he switches off
his engine to descend towards the aerodrome he sees
below him, will be one of relief that he has escaped
engine failure, and that he has been able to find his
way from point to point. The joy of flight, of
passing swiftly thousands of feet above the earth,
will have made but a small impression upon him at
any rate consciously. It will not be until the
handling of his machine becomes less laborious, and
he has time to accustom himself to his unique view-point,
and the strangeness and beauty of the scene below
him, that the novice will realise some of the fascinations
of aerial travel; fascinations that it is difficult
to describe. The sensation of having thrown off
the bonds of earth-bound folk; of soaring above the
noise and dust of highways; of being free from the
obstructions of traffic; of sweeping forward smoothly,
swiftly, and serenely the land stretching
below in an ever-changing panorama, with the drone
of the motor in one’s ears, and a wine-like
exhilaration in the rush of the air: these, and
others more obscure, are among the sensations of cross-country
flying.