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  • #31
    Re: mtn crossing planning

    Larry if you need any help passing through the desert north of Los Angeles, from Daggett to say Tehachapi or Bakersfield, I will be glad to offer any assistance if I'm not on work-travel. Phone 818-701-6801, victorbravo (at) sbcglobal (dot) net

    As you pass Daggett airport (DAG), please say hello to the ghost of my Ventus racing glider that burned up in a hangar fire in 1987... you'll see several big long "shade" hangars and one of them in the row will be missing.

    When you get out into the desert following I-40, remember a few things. First, don't try too hard to maintain a specific cruising altitude... you probably won't be able to if it is in the middle of the day. Just keep it within 500 feet of your desired altitude and roll with the ups and downs. Fly on your oil temp or CHT gauge first, all other instruments second.

    Second, fly on the right side of I-40, and DON'T fly any further from the highway that you would want to walk among the rattlesnakes. Look up "Mojave Green" rattlesnakes on Google for a wake-up call.

    Third, don't try to cut the corner and squeeze through the tiny gap (Trona) between the Edwards AFB and China Lake NAS restricted areas. Go the extra 25 miles around south of Edwards, through Palmdale and Lancaster. You cannot track directly outbound from DAG VOR to Lancaster WJF, it will run you into the corner of Edwards airspace.

    Do NOT land at Palmdale (PMD), it is legally a civilian airport but it is also a government installation and you will be met with M-16's. The SR-71 airplane parked there should give you a clue. Mind their airspace the same as you would Edwards. Lancaster General Fox (WJF) 5 miles away is a nice little civilian airport with gas and a pilot lounge.

    Apple Valley (APV) southwest of DAG is a good stop, if you have any trouble you can ask around there for my friend Ross Briegleb who is a Taylorcraft expert.

    When you go through Tehachapi, the municipal airport has gas. If you don't need gas but have any mechanical problems, the glider airport is less than 2 miles south of there and I know enough people there to get you some help. Have Jane Barrett contact me or put you in touch with Les King, Mark Grubb, or any one of the other locals there.

    Before you leave the Tehachapi area, check in with Flight Service or whoever (radio or phone) and see what the visibility is in the San Joaquin Valley. If the valley has poor visibility it will have poor visibility for a long long way.

    Bakersfield Airpark (L45) has a big EAA chapter based on the field with about 50 RV series homebuilts. It is the home of the "Harmon Rocket" RV on steroids. Bakersfield Meadows (BFL) is a tower controlled regional airport with some airline service and probably more expensive fuel.

    Shafter Minter Field (MIT) north of Bakersfield is an OK place to stop, if you have any airplane trouble find my friend Pete Plumb of Wood Wing Specialty. He is one of the last olde tyme wood airplane specialists.

    If you want a really great fly-in restaurant/steakhouse, with avgas available, go to Harris Ranch airport near Coalinga, CA. Pilots fly in there from hundreds of miles around for their restaurant.

    After that, you're up in Darryl (FlyGuy)'s territory and he knows the area far better than me

    Have a safe flight.
    Taylorcraft : Making Better Aviators for 75 Years... and Counting

    Bill Berle
    TF#693

    http://www.ezflaphandle.com
    http://www.grantstar.net
    N26451 (1940 BL(C)-65) 1988-90
    N47DN (Auster Autocrat) 1992-93
    N96121 (1946 BC-12D-85) 1998-99
    N29544 (1940 BL(C)-85) 2005-08

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    • #32
      Re: mtn crossing planning

      Thanks much! I'm looking at all this on the sectional now.
      Thanks also for the Palmdale info. That's the reason I ask such questions. Good info.

      LKT

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      • #33
        Re: mtn crossing planning

        Brie:
        I'm planning my third time ever pilgrimage to Arlington this summer. (via camper)

        Maybe because of the smaller scale, Sharon and I actually enjoy the Arlington experience more than Oshkosh.

        I'll look for you there and a chance to introduce myself!

        Bob Gustafson
        Bob Gustafson
        NC43913
        TF#565

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        • #34
          Re: mtn crossing planning

          Bob,
          I won't be able to make it this summer, but I WILL be there in 2007. I will be looking for any tribe members when I'm there. By the way, I agree. I went to Sun-n-Fun for several years in the eighties, and THAT was the limit in the way of crowds that I want to endure. Brie

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          • #35
            Re: mtn crossing planning

            To any who might be waiting on a phone call from me.
            My Tcraft and I didn't go anywhere!!
            Last look at the weather along the route from AL to CA turned me off. Saw a low pressure ridge coming in to CA just like the one that is dumping lots of rain on the northeast right now. Would have had to wait on the mess to pass somewhere in NM. Then if the predicted winds held true my three/four day flight would have turned into six or seven.
            SO!
            Jumping on a commercial bird tomorrow: destination Sacramento.

            Will try again. Still have vacation left!

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            • #36
              Re: mtn crossing planning

              I would add one small change. Instead of Gorman pass I would turn north at Palmdale and go through the Tehachapi pass then a straight line to Sacramento.

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              • #37
                Re: mtn crossing planning

                I am looking at mid July now for another attempt. May decide to go north and down the Columbia River Gorge just for the temperature difference. I've spent some quality time with my grandkids so now can afford to take my time flying the Taylorcraft cross-country.

                to Rick Utley: I did visit NutTree. Met Duncan Miller. Spent several hours there. Well worth the visit! I was fortunate to visit at a time when there was someone on the field that knew all the history of the photos. Fascinating visit.

                To all: If anyone is planning a trip to northern CA. Don't miss NutTree airport. There's more history there than I thought possible.

                The museum on Travis AFB is also worth a visit.

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