
Bad weather on the move from the North Sea has been a repeating story this summer. Notice to Airmen are normally issued by the aviation authorities to inform pilots of new or changed aeronautical facilities, services, procedures or hazards, temporary or permanent. This one is a plane blog.

Bad weather on the move from the North Sea has been a repeating story this summer. 
Professor Høyer and I flew to the Nordmedia09 research conference in Karlstad, and managed to return a few minutes before the bad weather hit Kjeller. I was prepared to divert for Arvika in case we did not succeed in our rain shower slalom.
Ten flights in two days among beautiful mountains, fjords, and islands of Western Norway from my holiday base at ENOV: The C172 LN-FAG of the local flying club are back from major refinishing in Balitcum, and I colud take family and friends for great trips to Kristiansund (top right), Runde, Stadt (bottom right), and Hakallestranda.
My brother Erlend joined me for an early summer morning splash-and-go in LN-AEG, touching down at Håøya, Drammens-fjorden, and Holsfjorden, before returning to Kilen. Then it was time for coffee.
Ulf the teddy bear (left) and his friend Pilot Bjørn are family members, and joined us for our first GA vacation. Today Ulf had his first flight in LN-ULF. Tomorrow he will meet Pippi at Astrid Lindgren's World.
Low pressure, low sky base, and thunderstorms. Not my favorite weather prognosis for flying VFR. Tonight's booking is cancelled, and I am looking forward to the return of summer.
Tor needed a few pictures of Nittedal, and I needed to get back in the air after a month without flying (busy preparing my Ph.D. Thesis defense).
Einar fueling at Kjeller before our first visit to Hagfors. ESOH is only a 50 minutes flight from ENKJ, but the mental distance to this destination over the Swedish boarder has obviously been longer, since it took us more than ten years from getting our PPL certificates to making the journey.
Kjell Meum explains the flying pattern at Kilen Seaplane Base after my season checkout in LN-AEG. He is head of the seaplane school and a true flying legend. The former fighter pilot and SAS captain got his license in 1948, and have more than 21.000 hours in his logbook, including quite a few crossings of the North Pole on transatlantic flights. Today we crossed the Oslo Fjord to do five landings at Håøya for me to be current for my 5th season on floats.
Tore doing DI on LN-NAG before our return from EKRK to ENKJ. I attended a MAF Nordic Board Meeting while my co-pilot explored Copenhagen.
In my 582 hours of flying in 49 aircrafts (7 different types) to 92 destinations, I have had 906 day landings and 34 at night. Statistics are easy to generate from my new digital LogTen Pro logbook. Transferring all the 579 flights from my 3 traditional logbooks (Norwegian, American, and Australian) took a few hours, but represented a great travel in time with lots of good memories of fun flights coming back to me as I typed.
Anita joined me on a flight to ENTO for the MAF Norway annual meeting, where I was re-elected to the board of directors. Mission Aviation Fellowship is providing air transport in places of deepest human need – remote places where flying is not a luxury, but a lifeline.
Back from Sunny California to the Winter Wonderland, I decided to fly-in for a lunch at Oset Hotel in the mountains of Southern Norway. This turned out not to be a totally safe venture.
Flying right over the tower at San Francisco International Airport to avoid a midair with a B747 from Japan Airlines is tons of fun and definitely business unusual for pilots like me.This animation of the US Airways 1549 Hudson River landing is a great example of storytelling by news animation.
I had more action on the ground before flying the Hudson River Corridor in 2004... :-)

Knut Helge at ENGM, joining me on a myth busting operation on a great day for flying.I have to admit being one of the people wining about the lack of airports to visit and hence low variation of landing practice for pilots operating from ENKJ. Today, after flying ENKJ-ENGM-ENEG-ENKJ (3x15 minutes), I admit being wrong.
FZFG above and a runway filled with snow below, made hangar flying the safest option for the bachelor party I had promised to fly over Oslo in LN-NAG today. The TAF promised 'FEW010 SCT080', but the fog never left.
LN-TFQ (P28A) got lost in snow and bad visibility tonight. After failed attempts at ENKJ and ENGM, a police helicopter escorted the lost pilot to a safe landing at ENHA. The webcam picture was grabbed short before the landing. The METAR at ENGM indicated overcast in 500 feet and 7 km visibility.
One week ago I had dinner at Real Aeroclub de Grand Canaria Restaurante, and the temperature was +23C. Today I had lunch at Røros in -27C. I was afraid of freezing my nose off, but the aircraft engine stayed warm, with a blanket on top and the heater plugged in. The GPS, however, needed a few moments of body contact to get back to life after take-off for Kjeller.
Flying 350 NM over Southern Norway in CAVOK is a remarkable experience. It was chilly at Kjeller as Tore removed the ice accumulated in the hangar, and it got colder by the minute as we headed north.
At Vermundsjøen an ultralight trike had landed for the fly-in season opening of the local Diner, but we had not received confirmation of the ice condition on the lake, and kept on flying. Røros was cold but dry. Back at Kjeller the wings immediately froze as we pushed the plane back in the hangar. Tomorrow it is supposed to be snowing again. However grounded, I will still be elevated by today's experience.
Watch me land LN-NAG on a busy day at Kjeller.
Ok, I do have a love affair with the iPhone. And this great little gadget are now giving me current and precise weather conditions (METAR) as well as weather forecasts (TAF) from worldwide airport weather stations. Planning my own trips or just dreaming about future expeditions to distant fields, I can read the data in its original format or fully decoded into easy understandable texts. AeroWeather is a great widget for iPhone/iPod touch.
Fire fighters and other good helpers saving LN-HOE at the dock in Sandefjord after the first storm of the fall season. 50 trees and one seaplane was hit hard in Vestfold. More images taken by Jim Vold at Flightsim.no.