Learning to Fly
My parents, Geoff and Dawn Dibdin, encouraged me to fulfil my childhood passion for flying, by funding half the cost of each lesson while I earned the rest in the school holidays. I started at Griffith Aero Club from age 16, and soloed in 1973 while still too young to drive. Appreciation for my instructors Ron Gibbons and Rob Kuypers and thank you to Mum and Dad.




Above: The Norfolk Island Flight Service Unit, where 3 of us and the radio tech provided communication and traffic information services for flights in and out. Air New Zealand sent 2 B737s per week. East West Airlines sent 3 F28s from Sydney and I think 1 from Brisbane. Norfolk Airlines came daily via Lord Howe Island in a Super King Air. Military flights, ferry flights from the US, the occasional B727 freighter.

































Outback Visits December 2022
From 4-18 December 2022 flying a Piper Archer III from Sydney (Bankstown) to Broken Hill and return, via Dubbo, Coonamble, Parkes, Cobar, Wilcannia, White Cliffs, Deniliquin, Griffith, Orange, Bathurst, Dubbo and Bathurst again. Images and videos here: https://colindibdin.com/outback/

Murray Bridge to Tintinara
7 March 2023 flying a C172P from Murray Bridge to visit a friend in Tintinara SA. Images and videos here: colindibdin.com/tintinara/
Scenic Flights
2 May 2023 With Aiden (from Brisbane), Noosha and Isabella (from the USA), Dalia (from Germany), Parviz (from Vanuatu, now Sydney) and Mona (from Melbourne, now Sydney) taking the group photo. The aircraft is VH-XCW, Piper Archer TX from Sydney Flight College https://www.sfcaero.com.au/





A beautiful day except for the weather
29 May 2023 – Top friend Martin Townsend and I planned to visit the Aviation Museum in Temora but westward from Bankstown Airport was slow going with a 40kt headwind over the Blue Mountains, and then we had to turn back due to a “wall” of unexpectedly low cloud west of Lithgow. Washing the plane (an Archer TX with G1000 panel) on return, the weather back in Sydney was fine.

Cessna 182T VH-MJB
3 June 2023 becoming familiar with this very nice aircraft in preparation for a trip around NSW in July. https://mjbaviation.com/
Outback Visits July 2023
From 14-21 July 2023 flying a Cessna 182T from Sydney (Bankstown) with my cousin Steve to Canberra, Wagga, Deniliquin, Parkes, Dubbo, Lightning Ridge, Walgett, Coonamble, Dubbo, Tamworth, Armidale, Coffs Harbour and back. Images and videos here: Outback Visits July 2023

Harbour Scenic with Pash and Ulviyya
2 September 2023 – Flight from Bankstown to Bankstown via the Baha’i Temple and Sydney Harbour with Pashotan and Ulviyya. Videos and images by Pash. Video playlist here: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLmnJZq1AAyGtE-yWLVLMNQvrmJ9obzh1J . Circling the Baha’i House of Worship, Ingleside, NSW (northern beaches of Sydney) https://www.youtube.com/shorts/Zg5MALfC2ZE




Harbour Scenic with Dalia and Dallas
17 February 2024 – via the Baha’i House of Worship where Dalia and Dallas care for the environment and gardens.

Outback Visits October 2023 – March 2024
From October 2023 to March 2024 I visited friends in Murray Bridge, Tintinara, Whyalla, Rockwood station near Booleroo Centre, Wilcannia, Broken Hill, Parkes, Dubbo, Bathurst, Wagga Wagga and Tumut. Images and videos here: https://colindibdin.com/outback3/

Some flying stories and documents below.
From Steam Gauges To A Digital Flight Deck
Article published in “Sydney Flyer”, newsletter of the Sydney Flying Club https://www.sfcaero.com.au/, describing my conversion on 2 May 2022 to the Archer TX: https://www.sfcaero.com.au/club/news/from-steam-gauges
“Close Call”
Below: Article published in the “Close Call” section of the March 2008 edition of Australian Flight Safety Magazine. The heading “Tanks for Nothing” was not my idea, but makes sense if you read it. Update: The article was re-published in Flight Safety Australia in Issue 152, Summer 2025-26, pp56-57. https://www.flightsafetyaustralia.com/2026/01/tanks-for-nothing/
Licence and Logbook
Commercial Pilot Theory passed 38 years ago. Maybe one day I will finish the practical component:
A souvenir (Diploma) from my former Career as a Flight Service Officer:
Parachute jump and philosphy essay
My one and only parachute jump was in 1985 using a static line (ie not tandem and not free fall.) After exiting the plane (a Britten Norman Islander) the static line pulled the pilot chute out which pulled the main canopy out, which inflated and then I was on my own and able to steer it reasonably close to the landing zone at Wilton airstrip south of Sydney.
Sequel to my parachute experience. Not a “flying” story, but an attempt in 1986 to convince my UNSW philosophy lecturer that I did not jump – I was pushed:





