Well it's been a while since I updated this thread...
GFPT - done!
It took me a while. Up until this week I had only been for three flights since last December 

. This has been due to the dodgy weather (lots of it - and always strategically on the days I booked for flying 

), floods and holidays - both mine and my instructors. I did my first flight since early March only Friday a week ago, then a standards check, then we discovered I was still short on required solo hours - by 
10 minutes! So I did an hour of circuits on Wednesday and booked the test in for yesterday.
So the big test was yesterday and my brain is still fried. 10am - 5pm, straight through. Missed lunch.
For those familiar with RQAC, Don Mitchell administered the test. It was a strange experience as I can't quite work out whether he went easy on me, or he just likes to make all students feel as though they only scrape in by the skin of their teeth. There were a lot of little and some major things he wanted me to do differently to what I had been taught. A lot of the preliminary briefing questions were very much Don giving his take on regulations, beyond the information contained in all my learning material. All good and informative stuff, but it certainly got me feeling like I really didn't know 
anything by the time we went out to the aircraft.
We conducted the majority of the flight OK, but he caught me out a couple of times with an emergency landing drill where I picked an enormous (and perfectly adequate in my opinion) field just below the aircraft when we were actually within gliding range of the local training strip. Doh! He had me do it again and glide to the strip for a glide approach. After my attempt he undertook to show me how he would do it. I was amazed at how differently he handled the aircraft to my regular instructor. The evidence of many, many more years experience was obvious. He flung the Cessna around with what bordered on reckless abandon doing a limit turn at 300ft back towards the airfield to demonstrate just how far you could glide even when you thought you were just about in the weeds.
Then we did a precautionary search & landing drill where I did the routine number of passes over the field with radio calls etc etc, then assessed the field as OK to land - given the scenario he had described with minimal visibility and deteriorating weather. Wrong decision. He took me back for a super-low pass over the field and pointed out water in the cow tracks on the field and said he wouldn't land there. I wasn't going to argue but thought the scenario required a decision to land.
We then returned to Archerfield and I did three of the dodgiest landings. Two were meant to be short field approaches so I set up as I had been taught but he said I was too fast and high both times. Then an average flapless approach which I thought was OK until I got a viscious nosewheel shimmy after touchdown. That was something that routinely happens in the particular plane I was in so not really my fault. I pulled back to fix it but each time I put the front wheel down again off it went like a shopping trolley!
He then demonstrated 
his low level circuit and short field approach. All his approach speeds were 5kts 
less than what I had been taught. Again I was amazed at how he handled the aircraft at speeds so slow my regular instructor would have been reaching for the throttle. I then did two more copybook landings which I guess were enough to prove to him that I could actually fly.
So in the end he signed me off but with plenty of advice. He also called my instructor in to the debrief because I think he wanted to let him know there were things I was being taught that he didn't necessarily agree with. Point taken and I shook his hand as he handed me my log book but I can't help feeling somewhat less capable now than I did going into the exam.
Time for navigation flights but I think I will be doing a lot of solo circuits just to sharpen up on what he taught me. I also plan to do about a million emergency landing drills as Don informed me that so far in his career he has had 
seven emergency landings but never scratched an aircraft. As Don and I agreed, they are inevitable and Murphy was an optimist.
The training continues...
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