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-   -   What hobbies on overnights? Just a fun convo (https://www.airlinepilotforums.com/regional/124178-what-hobbies-overnights-just-fun-convo.html)

rickair7777 09-19-2019 07:14 AM


Originally Posted by Swakid8 (Post 2889752)
I usually will workout durning the good time of the years, go running to see different trails and explore the city/town I am in.


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

Yeah work out first and foremost... if your financial plan includes flying after age 55.

Then might as well do your other job if you have one, or personal development, college or other learning interests.

I never watch much TV, and over the years that adds up to thousands of hours that I didn't waste.

jonnyjetprop 09-19-2019 07:59 AM

Just think of all the time you spend on APC. I’m just as guilty.


Originally Posted by rickair7777 (Post 2889780)

I never watch much TV, and over the years that adds up to thousands of hours that I didn't waste.


metalfeather 09-19-2019 11:43 AM


Originally Posted by rickair7777 (Post 2889780)
Yeah work out first and foremost... if your financial plan includes flying after age 55.

Everyone loses their first class medical eventually, it's preferable to lose it at 65 versus 45 or 55. What are the most frequent causes for loss of medical prior to 65?

I would like to know in order to take preventative action. I don't want to end up on that list, I doubt anyone intentionally sabotages their own health.

I would suspect diabetes, cancer, or heart conditions, but what are the real-life circumstances that have ended 121 flying careers?

KCaviator 09-19-2019 11:48 AM

Check in some uniques on Untappd.

rickair7777 09-19-2019 08:44 PM


Originally Posted by jonnyjetprop (Post 2889807)
Just think of all the time you spend on APC. I’m just as guilty.

Yeah, but that's at least interactive and possibly enlightening. And if I'm here, I'm usually doing one of my other gigs in another browser.

rickair7777 09-19-2019 09:05 PM


Originally Posted by metalfeather (Post 2889917)
Everyone loses their first class medical eventually, it's preferable to lose it at 65 versus 45 or 55. What are the most frequent causes for loss of medical prior to 65?

I would like to know in order to take preventative action. I don't want to end up on that list, I doubt anyone intentionally sabotages their own health.

I would suspect diabetes, cancer, or heart conditions, but what are the real-life circumstances that have ended 121 flying careers?

Most typically in my observation, in no particular order...

Cardiovascular (arrhythmia can often be treated quickly with pacemaker/beta blockers, back to work in a matter of weeks, clogged arteries obviously more problematic).

Cancer. Get all the checkups you're supposed to. Healthy lifestyle. Sunblock.

Diabetes. Monitor your blood sugar, if you fail the AME's test you're waaaay far gone. If you catch it early, you can usually completely reverse it with exercise and diet. If it's in the family may want to go ahead and get started now. You'll need to lose a lot of weight by typical standards... google your ideal weight, you're probably way over it unless you run marathons. Most (not all) adult diabetes is totally preventable, and even reversible. I'm nowhere near ideal weight, but it's mostly muscle mass. That's better than fat but still extra work for your pancreas. I'm prepared to quickly transition to a distance runner physique if needed.

Back Problems. The AME doesn't know how much it hurts, so folks usually quit aviation of their accord rather than keep suffering. Some airplane seats don't help, but the root cause is either/both:

a) Extreme sports/military duty as a kid.
b) Excess weight, no exercise, and age.

Maintain a good core routine, assuming you haven't already jacked it up.

Loss of Consciousness. This is more likely as you age and HAS to be explained. if no explanation, you'll be grounded for 3+ years. No biggy if obviously caused by illness, exertion, extreme environment, or even fatigue/hunger. If due to impact injury, expect 3+ years off... so helmets for risky outdoor activities.

Vertigo. Inner problems are common as you age. Usually a quick fix but there's a common inner ear cancer which causes vertigo so get it checked out asap.

EnyFlyr 09-20-2019 02:49 AM


Originally Posted by metalfeather (Post 2889917)
Everyone loses their first class medical eventually, it's preferable to lose it at 65 versus 45 or 55. What are the most frequent causes for loss of medical prior to 65?

I would like to know in order to take preventative action. I don't want to end up on that list, I doubt anyone intentionally sabotages their own health.

I would suspect diabetes, cancer, or heart conditions, but what are the real-life circumstances that have ended 121 flying careers?

This should be a thread of its own. Interesting to know

Csy Mon 09-20-2019 04:20 AM


. Vertigo. Inner problems are common as you age
Bingo: Happened to me 4.5 years ago. Loss of License and LTD, still
out, but fairly painless compared to some of the LTD horror stories out there. :(

Used to read on layovers also internet surfing and if 3-4 days, go to town bar-hopping. :cool:

Burt123 09-20-2019 02:05 PM

Study another language. Makes the time pass quick, especially on long overnights, long legs or sits and you feel like you actually accomplished something in the end. Plus it’s a great add on to the resume.

dera 09-20-2019 03:05 PM


Originally Posted by Burt123 (Post 2890596)
Study another language. Makes the time pass quick, especially on long overnights, long legs or sits and you feel like you actually accomplished something in the end. Plus it’s a great add on to the resume.

It adds one line of text to your resume, but nothing else.


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