So this morning I had what was probably the MOST important flight so far. More important than my GFPT, and even more important that first solo or my PPL test when it comes up. I took Mrs Solmanic up for the 
first time!:o
What a glorious morning. Clear skies, light winds, CAVOK and the possibility of some whales off the coast of North Stradbroke Island.
SWMBO was quite nervous. More nervous than she expected. She has only been in a light aircraft once before, and never actually landed in one. The first time we jumped out! I left her in the "lounge" while I did my pre-flight. My regular instructor was not there to sign me out so he lined up one of the others. After plenty of paperwork and a thorough check over the plane we were ready to go.
I retrieved said wife from the lounge and escorted her to the plane. As required I did the mandatory passenger briefing - no smoking, exits etc etc. Then we strapped in and I ran through the pre-start, after-start, taxi checks and all that. Despite the perfect conditions there was hardly anyone else out. I saw only one other plane in the circuit.
We took off like a rocket. SWMBO doesn't weigh much and I didn't have full tanks so we were at 500ft before we even crossed the end of the runway! We tracked out to the bay over Macley Island then climbed up to 3000ft with a clear view all the way down the coast and up. Had some interesting chatter from Brisbane radar. They wanted me to confirm my altitude to "test" their radar? I confirmed I was at 3000ft and they said thanks and advised there was other VFR traffic in the vicinity. SWMBO then spotted a Qantas turbo-prop about 1000ft above us and I said I didn't think that was who they were talking about - but it was. Apparently the Qantas plane was on an unusual flightpath and must have been getting some discrepancy in reading our altitude and BNE radar wanted to confirm it.
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Look at those instruments. 3000ft, 100KIAS, like a machine with my eyes looking where they should be - outside!
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We then tracked up along the coast looking out for any whale activity. SWMBO spotted one spout but couldn't actually see anything else. I didn't want to stray too far outside the training area to find out and it was high tide so the beach would have been interesting if we needed to do a forced landing. Brisbane radar then made contact again to thank me for listening on channel and helping out with the traffic. He then proceeded to start talking about how nice the weather was?!? Obviously the guy wanted to be in the blip on his scope, not just looking at it.
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Looooong final to 28L. Easy-peasy Japanesy.
We then turned left and headed back in via the Target inbound reporting  point. A straight-in approach with a nice 12kt headwind made for a beautiful, easy touchdown on 28L.  All in all it couldn't have been a better introduction to flying for  SWMBO and positive justification for all the time and money spent ;).
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Dipping the tanks at the end. 1hr flight - 30l used. Pretty economical.