OK, here's another way to think about it.
If you are travelling in a circle directly about 28 N, you are constantly accelerating around a point on the earth's axis, which is r*sin(28) (argument taken in degrees, make the appropriate conversion for radians) north of the centre of the earth. Earth's gravity is constantly accelerating you towards the centre of the earth.
So to maintain this "orbit", you need to be constantly applying acceleration which is equal to the vector pointing towards the axis north of the earth's centre, minus the vector pointing to the centre (i.e., the difference between the acceleration you need and the acceleration you get for free from the earth). This difference needs to point north, but it could also point "inward" towards the earth, or "outward", depending on how fast you are going.
I think the minimum acceleration needed to maintain this trajectory is probably parallel to the surface of the earth, i.e., along a great circle pointing from your present position towards the north pole. However, I haven't done the calculations to support that yet, so it might be wrong.