Well done to you.
I flew around the World just this last Winter in a Diamond DA-42 (Alabeo).
It was wonderful - the PC was blowing cold air and for some of the time I actually had to wear my yachting oilies to keep warm - "As real as it gets"!
It was a great trip. I flew 3-6 hours a day and I kept a paper log and I'll always remember it as an accomplishment worth doing.
p.s: Watch out for India - textures are very repetitive!
Here's my route:
Here's the beautiful aircraft I did it in: Dear Old: "Papa Hotel - Lima Uniform Echo" - my favourite Aeroplane. She and I have flown around the World together and the trust is there. Blindfold me...and I'll fly her by feel and sound. When MIL COMBAT gets jaded I know it's high time to pull this airframe out of the hangar and start her up. On TO she yaws like a broken jib in a storm, and when you bring her in for a short final she flaps about like a glider but she hasn't let me down yet. Every time, you bring her down to a knot or two above the stall and she floats just to give you a sensation of fear and then she settles onto the tarmac and behaves herself.
I've got loads of exotic aircraft in my hangar - this is the one I KNOW I know how to fly. Bless her.
Here's the front page of my log:
And here's the last page of the Log;
Highlights:
Ducking and diving into 80 knot headwinds when approaching Alaska (plain frightening)
Flying into New York and Los Angeles. (Incredible sight)
Chasing the Sunset down to land at Lukla, Nepal as the sun was sinking. (scenery available in library)
Goose Bay to Narsarsuaq, Greenland - and the landing. (Cold, dark, tired and hungry and crap viz on approach - quite real)
Opening a bottle of Champagne when I returned to my home airfield of EGHF (South coast of U.K.)
I had a real feeling of accomplishment, I was tired and worn out, etc, but, more than anything; a desire to do it for real. (It's on the Bucket List, actually, it IS the Bucket List)
And lots of other moments that I will never forget.
And you won't either.
Fair winds!
Jim