Fund Raising Update

April 20th, 2010

Dear friends,

It is time for an update on the fund raising effort to date.

One month ago I finished my case for support letter. Several people downloaded the .pdf version from www.kellyandellen.org/flightblog or read it on the INFO section of this group. And, by the end of this week, everyone should have received one in the mail if I have your address.

As of today, I have received 27.5 hours per month in commitments and a one time gift. Thank you very much to those who have responded thus far. At the current level of commitments I can start working right away for about seven hours per week. I will put in those hours nights and weekends until I am ready to adjust my work schedule.

Ellen and I have decided to wait a few more weeks to see how much more financial support comes in before asking for any adjustments to my work schedule. Of course, the goal is to be able to quit the job entirely and work full time for Wings for Christ, as there are lots of projects that need to get started there.

If you are considering joining us in this work as a financial supporter, please let us know your intentions in the next few weeks. I’m sure tax season wasn’t the best time to launch a fund raising effort, but this is the right time to partner with Wings for Christ.

As I said in the support letter, it doesn’t take much to help. A fifteen dollar a month commitment will support one hour of my 160 hours of work monthly. If we averaged two hours per month from every one in the group now, Wings for Christ would have a full time development director working to build the support necessary to prepare the next generation of mission pilots.

Please help if you can. Definitely be praying for this time as we gather our support and don’t forget to drop a line of encouragement on the group wall from time to time. It is nice to know that you are thinking of us!

Peace,

Kelly and Ellen

Current!

April 11th, 2010

Gracie is back in action after a long break to get her carburetor overhauled and an annual inspection completed. I took her out for a run and she is purring nicely. I had lost my currency in the three months of not flying, so it was time to get it back.

First up, we headed to the practice area for some much needed refreshing on basics. Steep turns (always fun), stalls (never fun at first) and basic heading/altitude holding. A lot of rust can build up in three months, but I felt comfortable pretty quickly. Gracie can be very very tough to stall, especially with power on. Just hanging there with your nose about 35 degrees in the air and sinking at nearly 500 feet per minute with hardly anything on the airspeed indicator is not really a great feeling. Add in the complete lack of aileron control and a sluggish rudder and you get the idea of what it is like to fly a damp brick. After backing off the power to about 60% I gave up and pushed the nose over and tried again with less power. A few nice stalls later I went back for some touch and goes at TSTC. My favorite tower controller was on duty. She is very professional, but also very nice with the occasional “Good job,” or “Nice landing,” after a tricky move. I think she gets tired of all the TSTC pilot students and likes to see a fresh plane now and then.

I did about five landings, maybe three of which I thought would be good enough to have a passenger in the plane with me. The other two were OK, but not very clean. I put Gracie back in the barn and came out the next morning for gas and a few more rounds and then came out for a little night flying later.

Flying at night is fantastic. You just have to ramp up your trust in the instruments a great deal when you can’t see the trees at the end of the runway. But physics works just as well at night, and climb means climb and you don’t hit the trees. The country is all inky black with little man made stars are shining down there in the darkness. I buzzed over to TSTC for three full stop landings after asking for permission from the tower. Same nice controller again and no problems with the full stops on the runway. Usually you aren’t allowed to do that and you would have to turn back on the taxiway and reposition for a takeoff. TSTC’s main runway is really huge and I could probably take off and land twice on it, so no problems for me. Flying at night means there isn’t much other traffic, so the controller let me play on the runway. The runway looks amazing at night, all lights and blackness. You can’t see the pavement until you are almost on the ground, so it looks like you are about to fly into a stargate or a black monolith or some other great sci-fi image.

I got my three full stops, said good night to the nice controller lady and went to put Gracie to bed for the night. I tried to make a short final to the runway, but was way high and too fast by the time I could see over the trees at the end of the runway to the end lights. Any time you don’t like the set-up for landing, you should go around, but doubly so at night. You are a lot closer to the ground than your eyes tell you so pulling the flare to land needs to be under control. I didn’t like it at all, so I called a go-around and got a very nice set up the second time. Cool night air also gives you lovely control, so the landing was as smooth as silk. Or as smooth as silk on a bumpy grass strip, anyway. I rolled her into the hangar, gave her the customary kiss on the spinner and said good night.

Thanks for being a good airplane, Gracie! It is good to be current again.

Case for Support

March 21st, 2010

Dear Friends and Family,

I am happy to present my case for support letter to you electronically. Just click the link below and you can download a .pdf file of my letter.

I will be mailing a hard copy out soon. If you don’t receive one in the mail, let me know so I can make sure I have your current address.

Thank you for your interest in my ministry work at Wings for Christ!

Kelly

CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD THE LETTER: Kelly’s Case for Support

Working for Wings for Christ

March 16th, 2010

Hooray! The Wings for Christ board of directors has approved my proposal to start working for WfC as their development director. Now to raise the necessary support! Currently I am editing my support letter and preparing to send it out.