Airmanship emphasis — the go-around decision and lookout
This lesson's emphasis: the go-around is the default, and today the circuit is busy — every abandoned approach puts us back among other aircraft.
Draw — the stable-approach gates as a checklist on the board: glide path · alignment · speed · configuration · runway clear. Any one missing → go around.
Ask — "When is the latest you can decide to go around?"
Expect — there is no cut-off — on final, in the flare, even after a bounce — but the lower and slower you are, the more demanding it is, so decide early.
Rehearse — walk through the go-around actions aloud together, then the baulked-landing version: full power, don't pitch into the ground, level then climb, flap up in stages, centreline. Rehearsing it on the ground means the first real one in the air is not a surprise.
Ask — "On a go-around, what's our first radio priority?"
Expect — fly first — aviate, navigate, then communicate; climb on the centreline and keep the lookout going before reaching for the radio.
A go-around is a well-flown outcome, not a failure. We'll make it routine today so it's never a shock.