3 solo flights, one pilot's license — all before the sun set on her 16th birthday

FORT PIERCE — When Ava Shelly took to the skies to get her glider pilot's license, she needed a ride from her parents to the airport.

That's because the Port St. Lucie high school sophomore didn't yet have her driver's license.

Ava Shelly, 16, of Port St. Lucie, sits with her instructor Christian Clark, of Treasure Coast Helicopters, as she pilots a Robinson R44 helicopter off the ground at Causeway Cove Marina on Thursday, Feb. 8, 2024, for a flight above Fort Pierce. Shelly received her helicopter pilot's license  for helicopters  —  along with her licenses for gliders and airplanes  —  all on her 16th birthday, Jan 21. "It was nice to get back into it after my little break after by birthday, and it was a good assurance I am doing very well and staying proficient," Shelly said.

Will she be a certified world record holder?

Ava received her private glider pilot's license Jan. 21, her 16th birthday. The same day, she took her first solo helicopter flight and a solo airplane flight — an accomplishment that might make her a world record holder as the youngest female to do all three in a single day. The Shelly family is in the process of sending documents and verification to Guinness World Records to record the claim.

She now has her student pilot licenses in helicopter and solo airplane — the equivalent of a learner's permit — but needs to wait until she turns 17 for a full helicopter and airplane pilot's license.

Ava Shelly, 16, of Port St. Lucie, talks with her instructor Christian Clark, of Treasure Coast Helicopters, before she prepares to fly his Robinson R44 helicopter at the his launch/landing field at the Causeway Cove Marina in Fort pierce on Thursday, Feb. 8, 2024. Shelly received her pilot's license for helicopters, along with Flying gliders, and airplanes all on her 16th birthday on Jan 21.

At 5 a.m. — about the same time she was born 16 years ago — Ava left home house for her birthday celebration, first to West Palm Beach for her 7 a.m. solo airplane flight. By lunchtime, she and her family were at New Hibiscus Airpark in Vero Beach for her private glider pilot test. By sunset, she was taking her first solo helicopter flight.

"I was more just excitement and butterflies" said Ava about her birthday solos. "I knew I was going to be safe. I was confident in my abilities. My instructors explained and reassured me that they were confident in my abilities. No one was really worried for me. That helped to boost my self-esteem. I felt I was confident, I was ready and I knew what I was doing."

She passed her driving test four days later.

While conducting her preflight checklist, Ava Shelly, 16, checks the engine oil level, then adds a quart of oil before finishing her check of the Robinson R44 helicopter for her flight above Fort Pierce on Thursday, Feb. 8, 2024.
While conducting her preflight checklist, Ava Shelly, 16, checks the engine oil level, then adds a quart of oil before finishing her check of the Robinson R44 helicopter for her flight above Fort Pierce on Thursday, Feb. 8, 2024.

Spreading her wings at age 10

Ava has been flying since she was 10, when her late grandfather, a former Eastern Airlines pilot, gave her a Discovery Flight experience for her birthday. She was hooked, making sure her father, Mike Shelly, signed her up for another flight before they left that day.

Then came flying lessons at 13, along with a dream to accomplish solo flights and a glider pilot's license all by 16. She made her first solo on a glider — an aircraft without an engine — on her 14th birthday.

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Working with a teen pilot has its advantages, said Ava's helicopter instructor Christian Clark, with Treasure Coast Helicopters.

"She didn't have any bad habits," said Clark, who has been working with Ava for about a year. "She had flown all her approaches really well, she held her hover extremely well, she had done all her emergency procedures and simulations. When I hopped out, she was ready to go," Clark said about her helicopter solo.

In fact, he aid, he was more nervous that she was.

"My heart was leaping through my chest," he said. "She did phenomenal. She was laser-focused. She was calm, she was relaxed."

Seated with her instructor, pilot Ava Shelly, 16, sits with her instructor Christian Clark, of Treasure Coast helicopters, while bringing the rotors of his Robinson R44 helicopter up to speed before her flight above Fort Pierce from his launch/landing field inside the Causeway Cove Marina on Thursday, Feb. 8, 2024, in Fort Pierce.
Seated with her instructor, pilot Ava Shelly, 16, sits with her instructor Christian Clark, of Treasure Coast helicopters, while bringing the rotors of his Robinson R44 helicopter up to speed before her flight above Fort Pierce from his launch/landing field inside the Causeway Cove Marina on Thursday, Feb. 8, 2024, in Fort Pierce.

As a helicopter mom in the literal sense, Alexandria Shelly admits to being a little jittery watching her oldest child flying through the air by herself.

"Every time she's in the air, I feel like my heart stops," she said. "As much as we're fearful for everything that they do, I just want them to enjoy life to the fullest. I never want to get in the way of their dream. She's known since she was 10 what she wanted to do. My job as her mom is to give her all the tools she needs to be successful."

As for career goals, Ava wants to attend the U.S. Naval Academy after high school and become a naval aviator. When she's not up in the clouds, Ava is a varsity cheerleader at Tradition Preparatory High School, and is part of the Naval Sea Cadet program. She also scuba dives and does competitive clay shooting.

Colleen Wixon is the education reporter for TCPalm/Treasure Coast Newspapers. Contact her at Colleen.Wixon@TCPalm.com.

This article originally appeared on Treasure Coast Newspapers: Pilot before driver: PSL teen sails through solo flights on 16th birthday