Flight Training in a Legend Cub
While early airplanes were equipped with a tailwheel or skid, pilots learned to tame these aircraft using both their hands and feet, i.e. stick and rudder. And the thrill of landing tailwheel aircraft on unimproved fields led pilots to places thought few and far between.
Today, pilots fly tailwheel aircraft with the same, endless sense of adventure. A pilot with a tailwheel endorsement is one who has endured the challenges of flying on unimproved fields and one who truly understands how to tame an airplane.
At American Legend Aircraft Company, we believe the tailwheel pilot to be one who possesses an exceptional set of piloting skills. In the same way pilots in the 40s and 50s learned to fly in Cubs and similar aircraft, today’s pilots are finding the enduring Cub to be among the best training platforms around.
These classic aircraft inspire an acute sense of airmanship that cannot be learned in a contemporary nose-wheel design or taught in a simulation environment. Yet tailwheel skills are the most essential elements of safely and precisely controlling an airplane of any type.
Legend Cub pilots are an exceptional group of individuals who possess a set of stick and rudder skills that today remain admired among pilots of all experience levels and from all reaches of the globe.
Where to Train in a Legend Cub
FL – Wrong Brothers Flight Training Wing, www.fergusonairport.com or wrongbrosftw.com, David McCartney
FL – Daryl Hickman of CubFlying.com in Flagler Beach, Flordia
NC – Charles Lewis at South Oaks Aerodrome in Winterville, North Carolina
OK – David Koehn, Tulsa Oklahoma / david@destinationsefc.com
TX – Big Q Aviation, www.bigqaviation.com, Carol Walker
TX – Danny Goggans – Sulphur Springs, Texas
TX – Gideon Jones of Sport Wings Enterprises in LaPorte (Houston), Texas
TX – John Wisdom of Aviation Wisdom in Sulphur Springs, Texas
Seaplane Training – Jack Brown’s Seaplane Base in Winterhaven, Florida
“The Legend Cub is the best trainer ever built.”
– Bruce Bohannon. Click here to watch the interview