Definition
A fixed, visible feature on the ground used by the pilot as the center of a maneuver, such as a steep spiral, around which the airplane is flown in a constant-radius path while compensating for wind.
Plain English
A spot on the ground you pick to circle around. You keep flying loops around it while adjusting for the wind so your circles stay the same size.
Context Anchor
Seen in ground-reference maneuvers such as the steep spiral, where the pilot uses a point on the ground to judge the airplane’s path during the descending turn.
Derivation
Reference comes from an older word meaning to carry or bring something back. That helps here because the pilot keeps bringing attention back to the same ground point to judge where the airplane is.
Why Pilots Care
Allows consistent control of turn radius and descent path, which is essential for safely executing emergency descents or traffic pattern entries over a chosen area.
Grounding Statement
Picture picking one obvious spot on the ground and using it as the center of your visual attention while the airplane circles down around it.
Intuition Check
Do not read this as just any landmark you happen to notice. In this context, it means a fixed ground point deliberately selected to guide the maneuver.
Example Sentence 1
Before entering the steep spiral, the pilot selected a road intersection as the surface-based reference point.
Example Sentence 2
By keeping the surface-based reference point at a constant distance off the wing, the pilot maintained a steady radius while descending.