Given the NDB at Arlington,
Had to look - This would be the NDB or GPS 34 into AWO:
http://204.108.4.16/d-tpp/0809/00795NG34.PDF
I had a discussion with someone about approaching for landing from RITTS. He suggested you'd cross WATON making a left turn outbound
LEFT turn?
109 degrees until you intercept R339
A 307-degree left turn?
I would think that unless the wind was really strong out of the east, you wouldn't need to make a 50-degree cut towards the course if you're making a teardrop type of turn. Also, if the wind was strong out of the west, you might not even make it back onto the desired course if you turned all the way around to 109.
This is the first part that makes sense to me.
[/quote]If you made the airport visually planning to land on RW 34, 860' (or 960' if using Whidbey NAS), you could circle to land all the way back to 34 by following a normal upwind, cross, downwind, base and final. This would allow you to use up the altitude without any dramatic manuvers.
Sounded okay to me, but what do I know.[/QUOTE]
Personally, it sounds like a LOT of dramatic maneuvers to me! I'm not sure why you'd need to circle all the way around to 34 anyway, even if you stayed at 2000 until FAF inbound, you'd only have to descend at a bit over 600 fpm (at 90 knots GS) to make it down to the runway.
If I were flying the approach, I'd take a right to about 189 (133 degree right turn) at WATON. From the start of the turn, it'd take about a minute and a half to intercept the desired course. I'd turn to 159 and see how the wind affected me. After a minute, PT to the right. Established inbound, down to 1500 and after crossing the station, a nice easy 500fpm descent to minimums (unless I had a tailwind) should result in a stabilized descent the whole way down to the runway, assuming I spot it at MDA.