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  • Alaska to Tennessee

    I know I should have written this up sooner, but I've spent the last week with my husband, and doing more minor things like trying to reclaim my house after leaving the men to turn it into a bachelor pad for three months.

    Quick summary: Three weeks and one day, 4048 miles, and I refuse to count how much in avgas later, N69V is now at her new home in Lebanon, TN.

    After several shakedown flights to work out wing rigging (and install a new starter - at least it bit the dust before I left!), the weather turned lousy while I was trying to get practice cross-countries in. Here are the great days:




    Finally, I was happy with pilot's performance as well as airplane, and weather cooperated. I took off with a friend escorting me to the border in his 182. (He'd had an annual lasting a year while I'd been rebuilding the plane, and set flying with me as a dream and goal for when his plane was done.)


    Gassed at Gulkana, dodged a couple eagles on a thermal, a thunderstorm, turbulence and some rain through Mentasta pass. At Tok, got the phone number for one of my buddies in ground school who made it through commercial and is now flying for 40-mile air. Unfortunately, he was out getting groceries with no phone on him, so I only got to catch up with his lovely lady.

    Landed at Northway and filled the tanks from Jerry cans, hugged goodbye to friends, filed a flight plan, and took off inbetween rain showers and rainbows to Beaver Creek.

    The ceiling came down over Beaver Creek, and the airport was buttoned up for the night, but Customs was surprisingly friendly and easy to deal with. Set up my tent under my wing, though I couldn't get any perchase for the stakes in the hardpacked ground. Learned that the new wings make great drums with every raindrop.

    The next morning, waited on weather, and on the advice of the local community airport radio service guy, took off down the highway despite a rather unpromising drizzling ceiling. It got lower and lower, and I kept a wheel right over the highway as I planned to land on it if things got too bad for me. I'm not sure how far above the construction workers I was, but it was low enough that they looked up and waved... Then about twenty miles out, the rain stopped and the ceiling shot up to 4000 as I came out of a wall of bad weather.

    Landed at Burwash and poured in the last of my reserve fuel, then headed into Whitehorse as my radio battery was running out of steam. So you know: there is a pilot gazebo where you can camp on the Whitehorse airport. Not knowing that, I hung around the terminal and recharged my GPS and radio, then slept at the Robert Service campground down in town. Hey, it had hot showers, so I'm not complaining.

    Took off late the next morning, as a friend showed up with his son in tow. After a little turbulence on the last flight with Daddy, someone was scared of airplanes and trying to fling himself away from it - but after long enough, curiosity won out. When I finally left, he had to be pried out of the cockpit.


    Heading south past Marsh Lake,


    Refueled at Teslin, and stopped to chat with a currently wingless mechanic who had hustled across the highway when he'd heard my plane coming in. Rain started closing in as I made it to Watson Lake, bringing gusty winds to the airport. I skipped the five-star camping at the gazebo by the lake in favor of the mosquito-free pilot lounge couch, though I did spend time that evening with two wonderful gents in their 182 who were camped out there.

    The next day, I refueled and got out just as another rain storm sent a strong gust front across the airport (run-up was interesting.) Once away from the mountains in the middle of the valley, life was much better.

    When I got to Liard Hot Springs (busiest-looking "closed" airport I've ever seen), I decided to press on and take the Liard River Canyon instead of stopping or following the highway to Fort Nelson, as the former path was clear and the latter socked in with rain clouds. (If you think you're noticing a weather theme here, just wait. It gets worse.)


    Canyon was impressive, but I was pretty busy managing updrafts and downdrafts, and not much free time for pictures. Then I broke out of the mountains along the toad river, and had to dodge heavy rainshowers and come into Fort Nelson from the south.
    Last edited by Dot_AK; 08-02-2011, 03:06.
    N69V (Formerly NC36462)
    1941
    BL12-65

  • #2
    Re: Alaska to Tennessee

    I think I need to adjust the picture size. I shall work on that when insomia isn't keeping me up. At Fort Nelson, the FBO has a really comfy couch, a shower, a little kitchen, free wireless, and I used it all as I spent a day weathered there.


    The gents from Watson Lake took off in their nice IFR-equipped 182, but came back with a bad mag. We pooled tool kits and managed to get it out, diagnosed, fixed the obvious problem, back in, tested, pulled and replaced when it turned out to have multiple problems. Then they left, and I spent another night. The next afternoon, I followed the railroad tracks to Fort St. John, as the highway was still socked in. That consisted of a lot of working between rain showers, but I got there.

    At Ft. St. John, I spent another day weathered out, waiting on a low to move. It was being decidedly contrary, stationary, and rainy. On the afternoon of the second day, I finally made it out, under low indistinct ceilings, to Grande Prairie. Half an hour after I landed, a Maule came in that had left Watson Lake that morning, and made excellent time until running into the weather front I was running into. I split a hotel room with the couple - awesome folks - and the next morning we decided to try a flight of two down to Red Deer.

    There's enough of a difference between cruising at 95mph and cruising at 100 knots that we both had to work really hard at flying together under the low hazy ceilings. After that exhausting day, we split another hotel room and agreed we both had awesome airplanes and were wonderful people, but we wouldn't try that again.

    As we were finally out from under the low, they raced on ahead and I dropped to a more comfortable cruise of 85mph, with its better fuel burn. Gives more time to enjoy the canola fields, anyway.

    They radioed back that Lethbridge had nasty winds and they were diverting toward Medicine Hat, but at 85mph, I figured there was no point in me diverting until I saw what the weather was like when I got there. The wind dropped to 18G24 by the time I got there... and the diversion airport was just as bad. So I picked the runway straight into the wind, and made like a helicopter.

    Filed EAPIS, got gas, waited two hours until the winds died to 15G22, then carefully took off and headed into Whetstone Intl, a 4000-foot grass strip on the border. (First grass strip of the trip). Dealt patiently with Customs, as the people are good but their bureaucracy is idiotic. Then paced off the strip, and took off, fighting a heavy (but normal for the area, I'm told) headwind.

    Made it into Choteau, Montana, where the folks are awesome, and the gas amazingly inexpensive. (Second-lowest cost gas of the entire trip). Camped under the wing rather than deal with thunderstorms building in the pass, and slept like a baby.

    The next morning, headed south past Helena, down to Bozeman.





    Made it into Bozeman, where a good friend lives, and promptly claimed his spare bedroom. Somehow, in the three years since I've seen her, his leggy malamute puppy has become a fat, laid-back adult dog. Still managed to spoil her rotten anyway, and she left a good cubic yard of fur on me like old times. I spent two days there, and went with him and friends out to a local theater production of steampunk radio plays being done live on stage, for a decidedly odd and fun time. Also took him on a flightseeing trip, as he hasn't been in a T-crate since his father sold their plane (Chitty Chitty Bang Bang, for those of you laughing at how small a world it is).

    The T-crate climbs like an exhausted dog when fully loaded, in the mountains, on a hot July morning. Not that the numbers weren't honest and what I expected, but the experience was a little amazing.

    Leaving Bozeman, it finally wasn't raining for once. On the other hand, I had a heck of a headwind to keep me company. Landed in Columbus, MT for gas and for finding an IA, because my oil temperature heights and oil pressure lows, on a fresh oil change, were alarming. The IA assured me that those numbers were pretty normal, and my pressure was even a bit high for a C90.

    While talking to the IA, a DeHavilland Chipmunk on a ferry flight landed with a very sick carburetor that intermittently starved the engine. The pilot needed to get to Billings to fly commercially to Idaho and pick up a new carb - and I was headed past Billings anyway, so why not stop in?

    Fortunately, he was a smaller gent, so the climb performance on the Tcrate wasn't quite so alarming. Unfortunately, not having planned on going into a class C airport, I was uncomfortable and feeling behind the plane - or at least, well behind the radio. I dropped him off, and found a nice quite spot at the FBO to cool off in the air conditioning and relax for a bit. When I went back out to the plane, I saw some great examples of thunderstorms to the north and the south, east, and west. Time to call it a day.

    The next day, I got out, did a thorough preflight, and started to untie the plane... and the wind started kicking up. By the time I had the plane untied, it was 18G34. I tied her back down, and went back into the FBO. Eventually, I borrowed the crew car and ran a couple errands - the wind didn't die down to reasonable until after 5pm. I took off into the long afternoon, and headed southeast. About twenty miles short of Gillette, WY, I noticed a distinct line of haze forming ahead - the smoke trail still lingering from a contained wildfire. In flight visibility was still decent, but I was pretty hypervigilant for traffic until I landed. Camped behind the wing, and slept like I was on the best mattress ever.


    The next day, had a tailwind that became a crosswind, then a headwind as I headed to Wall, SD (Wall Drugs is not a drugstore, it's a tourist trap. And it's darned hard to find sunscreen there.), then called it a day at Chamberlin, SD.


    The next day, I found myself on the other side of a line of thunderstorms from my destination - headed east on I-80 until I found a thunderstorm in front of me, and diverted to Mitchell, SD. Then headed south behind its passage, only to find lowering hazy ceilings and worsening visibilities. Landed at Sioux Center, IA, where the ramp was crowded with ag pilots also waiting out the weather. From there, when weather lifted, I made it south-southeast inbetween storms to Carroll, IA (Neu Field), where I gave up for the night.



    The folks at Carroll Municipal's FBO are awesome, the fuel relatively inexpensive, the crew car freely available, the couch comfortable and air conditioned, the airport cats friendly, and they even offered laundry machines. Seriously, if I'd known what a great place it was, I would have planned for there instead of lucking into it.

    The next day, I worked my way around thunderstorms until I finally made it out the other side of the band, and landed at Galesburg, IL. Found a lot of pilots waiting there, circling the weather computer and trying to get through the same band up to Oshkosh. Took off, and made it into Graham Field, near Indianapolis, where I stayed with friend for two days.

    Finally, early enough that it wasn't quite miserably hot and muggy, I called for a weather briefing full of doom and gloom, talked to the ag pilots who gave a really accurate weather picture of haze, patchy low level fog, and a fine clear morning, and took off almost straight south to home. Stopped once at Tell, Indiana, then finally made it home and landed at Lebanon, TN, where my husband was waiting for me.

    So, I guess I've now completed my commercial long cross-country requirements. Guess I have no excuse not to finish the rating now!
    Last edited by Dot_AK; 08-02-2011, 04:02.
    N69V (Formerly NC36462)
    1941
    BL12-65

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: Alaska to Tennessee

      Dot,
      Really neat trip(adventure)! Those pictures make me want to fly north and escape another week of 100 plus temps.
      Buell Powell TF#476
      1941 BC12-65 NC29748
      1946 Fairchild 24 NC81330

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: Alaska to Tennessee

        Dot,

        Absolutely awesome pictures and story. And here, I felt like I had accomplished a lot just going out to Alliance and back. You must have come fairly close to Springfield, IL on your trek home. I noticed not a lot of pictures of the Midwest, hmmmm, I wonder why? Not much beauty in corn and beans..... I understand. Thanks for sharing and glad you made it home safely!!!
        Cheers,
        Marty


        TF #596
        1946 BC-12D N95258
        Former owner of:
        1946 BC-12D/N95275
        1943 L-2B/N3113S

        Comment


        • #5
          Re: Alaska to Tennessee

          Dot,

          Absolutely beautiful!
          MIKE CUSHWAY
          1938 BF50 NC20407
          1940 BC NC27599
          TF#733

          Comment


          • #6
            Re: Alaska to Tennessee

            Marty,

            It has honestly very little to do with "not much beauty in corn and beans", and a whole lot to do with not taking any pictures when I've got my hands busy, or my attention peeled outside. Across most of Iowa, Illinois, Indiana, and Kentucky, I was lucky to get 10 miles of visibility - sometimes it was a whole lot more like *cough* five *cough*. And when I'm really busy with one hand on the yoke and the other following my latest diversion to the diversion on the map as well as handling throttle, mixture, carb heat (sure used a lot of that in thick haze!), looking up airport info on the next diversion in the A/FD, etc, while my eyeballs are peeled for traffic and towers and trying to keep on the newest course, check the newest diversion info, monitor my CHT's, oil temp, and oil pressure, as well as fuel levels per tank and remaining battery life on the radio and GPS... Not much free time or brain power for fiddling with the camera.

            I missed lots of breathtaking photo opportunities, and any time I had a phone to call my husband, there were usually "And then there was [insert beautiful thing here], but I was too busy flying to take a picture and show you." Fortunately, he's quite understanding, and firmly stated, repeatedly, that he'd much rather I fly the plane than take photographs. I'm too low time to be able to really relax at the controls like some folks I've seen.

            Things I learned on this trip include: if you are flying at, ah, a thousand feet off the ground or so, and there's a stiff wind... fly UPWIND of the confined feed lot.
            N69V (Formerly NC36462)
            1941
            BL12-65

            Comment


            • #7
              Re: Alaska to Tennessee

              Great pics and I love these flying stories. You should be proud of your flying and navigation skills.
              TF# 702 Don't be afraid to try something new. Remember amatuers built the ark, professionals built the titanic!

              Comment


              • #8
                Re: Alaska to Tennessee

                Hi

                Thanks for sharing your adventure!!! I Have thought of making an Alaska Trip Often.

                Glad you had friends in INDY.

                My wife and I would have enjoyed sharing our hospitality if we knew you were so close.
                (my T Craft is at Eagle Creek)

                I haven't noticed the forum being used too much for the purpose but it seems that it would be a good place for people to use while on extended trips.

                They could put their itinerary on the forum so others could see their route and offer a place to stay, meal, etc.

                Anyway, Congratulations on a great flight and a once in a life time experience!!

                Craig

                Comment


                • #9
                  Re: Alaska to Tennessee

                  Enjoyed Dot's pictures...she did a great job of making that long trip safely...gave herself the freedom to "wait it out" when that made the most sense, but wasn't afraid to fly when the wx wasn't perfect.
                  Sorry to lose her and her Taylorcraft to the Lower 48...hopefully she'll be back! We need more pilots like her!
                  Per Craig's previous entry and suggestion re: traveling Taylorcrafters...Had opportunity to spend a few hours with Flyer1 (Mike Hustak) this last Sat., when AKbrew (Jim Bishop) flew him down to the Kenai from Anchorage. Mike said it was his first flight in a floatplane. (Mike's cowboy boots were almost tall enough to serve as hipboots!) The last time he was here we saw to it that he got his first ride in a skiplane...this trip we fed him some smoked salmon and blackbear pepperoni sticks.
                  Enjoyed spending time with the fellows and did a bit of driving around visiting some typical Ak. strips. Once again, Jim put out the "Welcome to Alaska" mat!

                  Dick
                  Attached Files
                  Last edited by Dick Smith; 08-02-2011, 15:23.
                  Dick Smith N5207M TF#159

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                  • #10
                    Re: Alaska to Tennessee

                    Dot,

                    I can attest to the haze, it has been terrible this year. You should be very proud of yourself for accomplishing this. I would definitely not be up to what you had confronting you in Alaska. And I still stick with the fact there is nothing much to photograph around here. Thanks again for sharing the photos you took, just absolutely beautful country.
                    Cheers,
                    Marty


                    TF #596
                    1946 BC-12D N95258
                    Former owner of:
                    1946 BC-12D/N95275
                    1943 L-2B/N3113S

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Re: Alaska to Tennessee

                      Dot, GREAT job chronicling your adventure south. Congratulations on a successful (and beautiful) long cross-country. Just one question...what are you going to fly to the Skwentna fly-in next year?

                      Dick, thanks for posting the pics. It was a blast visiting with you and flying Mike around. We stopped at Vogel Lake on the way home to check on the firewood supply. See you again soon!

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Re: Alaska to Tennessee

                        Dot, was the IA in columbus Alan Rickman? Short guy with a bushy mustashe? He is a good friend of mine. Knows small Continentals well, Tim
                        N29787
                        '41 BC12-65

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Re: Alaska to Tennessee

                          Sorry I missed you. My T is based at Gordon Graham (a.k.a. Hendricks County). Great story and great job.
                          Mikeg
                          NC29804 (BC12-65)

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            Re: Alaska to Tennessee

                            Tim,

                            It was Alan Rickman! Small world...

                            Mikeg,

                            After the last cross-country, flying up to Indianapolis doesn't seem to far away - if I get up there again, I'll try to drop a note!
                            N69V (Formerly NC36462)
                            1941
                            BL12-65

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              Re: Alaska to Tennessee

                              A very nice trip report, Dot; a pleasure to read it! I'm sure it's rare for US pilots to have to deal with Border/Customs folk too often.

                              As an aside, Alan Rickman (not yours, the other one) is a good ol' British Actor with a few films to his credit; the best one of course being in Robin Hood (playing the evil Sheriff of Nottingham), where he stole the show from Kevin Costner.

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