On Saturday April 4th the weather was great. There was still a bit of a crosswind, but only 8 knots today. I reviewed our training plan with Cameron then I went to the plane and performed the pre-flight inspection myself and I only had one real issue. I broke the key off in the canopy lock! When I was done Cameron came out and we climbed in the Diamond. I got the engine starting list out and performed the steps. Checked the radio and tuned to the AWOS or Automated Weather Observations System and got the wind and altimeter setting, flipped back to the CTAF or Common Traffic Advisory Frequency and we were ready to go. I taxied to the other end of the runway this time and I setup for takeoff on runway 24 after a final engine run-up test and a check for traffic. I advanced the throttle fully and was caught a little off guard by how much rudder it took to keep the plane in the center of the runway. The plane accelerated and at 45 knots I started to pull back and then we were airborne. I held the attitude to maintain a 80 knot speed during the climb. Cameron made the radio call that we were leaving the pattern to the west and soon we were at 3000 feet and turning to the north to get to our practice area. When we got to the Trenton, Ohio area I made a couple of clearing turns to look for traffic and then we began our lessons. The first thing that we did was transition to slow flight. This is where you reduce the throttle and keep feeding back pressure to the stick to maintain altitude. The airplane begins to fly in a nose high attitude and the airspeed drops. We were flying the plane around 55 knots and it took some nose up trim or I would have had a lot of stick pressure to hold back against. The responsiveness of the plane gets very slow and mushy compared to flying at in cruise configuration. The next thing that we practices was setting the plane up for landing. First pull back the throttle to 1700 rpm, let the plane slow down until you are in the white arc and can set the first notch of flaps. Continue to slow until you get to 55 knots, set the flaps to landing position and adjust throttle to maintain a glide toward your target point while maintaining 55 knots airspeed. From this configuration we practiced a simulated balked landing. Just apply full throttle, increase speed to 80 knots and begin a climb switch off one notch of flaps while maintaining 80 knots, then switch flaps back to cruise setting. Our next two lessons were power off stall, or approach stall and power on stall, or departure stall. Cameron demonstrated a power off stall, recovery and climb back to 3000 feet. I took the controls and performed a power off stall. Then Cameron demonstrated a power on stall, and I followed with a power on stall. I was surprised how much backpressure is actually took to get the plane to stall. I was also behind on the rudder because the plane wanted to fall off to the left side as I steepened the nose up attitude. The Diamond was pretty docile in the stall, just a brief buffet and the nose dropped. After the roller coaster rides it was time to head back. Cameron switched the radio to listen for traffic at Butler County regional airport as we were close by and we started heading south. I was able to spot KISZ from a pretty long way off after Cameron pointed out some good landmarks. GE Evendale is a huge building with a black rook and it is easy to spot. Cameron talked me through the entry into the pattern and the steps to remember during the landing pattern. At the end of the downwind leg, add the first notch of flaps and reduce throttle, make the descending turn to base and switch the flaps to landing, make the turn to final and use the ailerons and rudder to keep from drifting and stay lined up with the runway. Maintain a steady glide right toward the runway numbers, throttle to idle at the threshold of the runway and just let it settle, line the plane up with the runway as you start the flare, pull back and hold it. Touchdown! Then just keep the plane rolling straight down the runway with the rudder as the speed bleeds off. Taxi back to the parking spot and go through the shutdown checklist. Here is a picture of our flight track for today in Google Earth.