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Planning an Air Adventure: Alaska Summer 2005

Planning an Air Adventure: Alaska Summer 2005. Ilan Reich COPA 3 rd Annual Migration Duluth, MN June 3, 2005. Factors to Consider in Planning a Long Distance Trip. The Big Picture: Time of year: weather, weather, weather Alone or with one or more buddy planes?

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Planning an Air Adventure: Alaska Summer 2005

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  1. Planning an Air Adventure:Alaska Summer 2005 Ilan Reich COPA 3rd Annual Migration Duluth, MN June 3, 2005

  2. Factors to Consider in Planning a Long Distance Trip • The Big Picture: • Time of year: weather, weather, weather • Alone or with one or more buddy planes? • Select activities enroute and at the destination • How many flight hours in a given day? • Allocate enough time to avoid “get there-itis” • Develop contingency plans for weather or mechanical delays

  3. The Devil is in the Details • As private pilots, we’re responsible for route planning, weather analysis, maintaining an airworthy plane, customs & visas, as well as contingency planning • We also need to arrange the lodging, transportation and activities for a trip, both enroute and at the destination

  4. First, overcome the psychological impediments to a long-distance trip It’s a sequence of many two to four hour cross country trips, spaced out over several days Visualize covering a comfortable distance each day Plan activities and stops along the way that will relieve stress and fatigue for both you and your passengers Develop an EffectivePlanning Technique

  5. Develop an EffectivePlanning Technique

  6. Develop an EffectivePlanning Technique • Second, scope out the broad outlines of the trip: time commitment, locations to visit, activities • Third, collect information and talk to others who’ve been there: COPA website is a great resource

  7. Use a Planning Tool • To keep track of the myriad of details • “Stress is directly correlated to the number of last-minute tasks” (Confucius) • “The more you rush around just before a big trip, the more you forget” (Chicken Little) • To split up responsibilities in planning the trip and making all the arrangements • To ensure a safe journey, need to keep track of: • Pilot proficiency • Airplane readiness • Trip-specific details • Detailed daily itinerary, for both flying and non-flying days

  8. Case in Point: The Alaska Adventure for Summer 2005 • Alaska Flying Guide for Cirrus Pilots posted online several months before the trip • Contains information on how to get there, places to visit and things to do: also accessible to non-COPA members • Includes suggested routes, approach plates, lists of equipment and charts, links to lodging and activities • Volunteers enlisted to lead the east and west coast segments: travel with many buddy airplanes • Regular email communications from the group leaders, as well as among participants, with ideas about activities, lodging info, etc.

  9. Screen shot of Alaska Flying Guide home page (www.cirruspilots.org/public/alaska)

  10. Alaska Adventure Planning Tool • Sent by email to each participant four months before the trip, so that they could block out their own itinerary and keep track of group activities • Designed to serve as a checklist of issues that are common to every long-distance trip • Pilot and airplane preparedness; trip details • Daily itinerary for both flying and non-flying days • Timeline covers the months preceding the trip, with target dates to be filled in for completing each item • Another timeline covers each day of the trip as an aid to plan routing, lodging and activities

  11. Screen shot of Planning Tool home page Click here to open and save the full Excel spreadsheet (Yes to open macros)

  12. Section One: Pilot Factors • Keep track of proficiency and set deadline dates to update any deficiencies (day, night, IFR) • Update personal minimums for the trip • Flight hours per day • Frequency of stops • Consider unfamiliar terrain and airspace • Incorporates FAA’s PAVE checklist and COPA’s Critical Decision Making analysis

  13. Screen shot of Pilot Checklist page

  14. Section Two: Airplane Factors • Keep track of when updates are due (Garmin, Avidyne, Jepp, VOR checks): get them done before the trip • Take care of maintenance issues before the trip • Open squawks, SBs • Oil change/50 hour/annual inspection • Obtain extra consumables (oil, TKS, oxygen) • Bring along current charts: track expiration dates • Don’t expect to find charts at FBOs in Canada or Alaska • Assemble all necessary survival equipment, clothing, travel documents • Complete a projected Weight & Balance

  15. Screen shot of Airplane Checklist page

  16. Section Three: Trip Details • Set deadlines for making reservations (e.g., lodging and transportation enroute and in Alaska) • Obtain legal documents (e.g., U.S. Customs sticker, passport, invitation letter & visas for Russia) • Who minds the house while you’re away? • Pets & plants • Suspend newspaper delivery • Pay bills before the trip • Compile a contact list of buddy airplanes, group leaders, emergency numbers

  17. Screen shot of Trip Checklist page

  18. Itinerary for Each Flying andNon-Flying Day • Details for flying days: • Departure city/time, stops, alternates • FBO at each stop, transportation to reach hotel • Details for non-flying days: • Hotel and transportation details • Activities planned (e.g., fishing, glacier watching, hiking) • Group activities (Mt. McKinley/Talkeetna fly-in, farewell dinner) • Dining arrangements: join group activities or go out alone?

  19. Screen shot of Daily Itinerary page

  20. Enjoy the Trip • Planning Tool is available online for download and included in the package of materials on CD-ROM distributed to M3 participants • Your comments and suggestions are welcome: contact Ilan Reich (COPA username: ireich, or at ilanreich@nyc.rr.com) • Bring your camera and take lots of pictures!

  21. Homeward bound: Scenes of glaciers enroute to Yakutat, Alaska

  22. Planning an Air Adventure Case Study • Summer 2004 • Boston – Europe – San Francisco • Curt Sanford, SR22

  23. Used the SRM Framework for Planning • Plan • Plane • Pilot • Passengers/Payload • Programming“It is a beautiful trip. But if things go wrong,they go very wrong.”

  24. Pretrip – Planning • Weather – July / August for best conditions • Route • Publications – Jepp E. Canada, Transatlantic, European tripkits, Flightstar Worldwide update ($1500+) • ATC Communications – Satphone in lieu of HF • Fuel – 674nm on longest leg (but 250nm to nearest alternate)

  25. Pretrip – Plane • Annual – Feb’04 • Full 100 hour – June’04 • Garmin European updates (cards) • Avidyne Terrain update (flash card) • Avidyne Airports update (zip disk) • Jepp update delivery to Euro address • Critical spares, consumables

  26. Pretrip – Pilot • Coursework: • “Flying the North Atlantic” – Ed Carlson • Primary Aviation Survival School – Anchorage,AK • Weather or Not – Scott Dennstaedt • Currency • IPC, BFR • Flight Simulator – key approaches

  27. Pretrip – Passengers/Payload • Outbound – w/Torben Kiese, experienced Cirrus ferry pilot • In Europe – Touring with the family • Return – Solo • Full Maritime & Arctic survival kit • Winslow 4-man Island Flyer Raft • 10,000kcal preserved food/person

  28. Outbound – Canada to Greenland • Planned – Goose Bay to Narsarsuaq • Departure – As planned, with live COPA coverage! • With two way internet:

  29. Outbound – Greenland Arrival • 300nm out Narsarsuaq goes below minimums (per cellphone conversation with tower); 1500’ ceiling, 1800’ mins • Diversion to Nuuk (800’ ceiling, 375’ mins) adds 100nm • Approach to Nuuk as fog rolls in, 400’ ceiling:

  30. Outbound – Crossing the Icepack • Issues: • Low ceilings at departure airport • Multiple layers aloft • Freezing level 6000’ • Possible ceilings at destination • Strategies • Alternate at Sondrestrom • Pireps enroute on clear altitudes • Air Greenland pilots on same routes • Fuel Mgmt to keep options

  31. Outbound – Kulusuk Greenland • Climbed enroute staying on top • Descent to warm air over water • Off-field NDB approach to gravel runway • Fuel by the barrel • Up-hill soft-field takeoff

  32. Outbound – Greenland-Iceland-Scotland-London • Uneventful by comparison • 60kt headwinds on departure Reykjavik • Reentering controlled airspace in UK

  33. Travel in Europe • IFR • Straightforward to fly • Difficult to file • Questionable equipment requirements • VFR • Varies dramatically by country; eg: • France – like US (cardinal + 500’ altitude) • UK – No VFR in controlled airspace. Period. • Costs • If you have to ask….

  34. Return • Get the family on the way home • Prop repair, Oil change • Reorganize charts, survival gear • Take a deep breath • Pick some routes

  35. Return • Holland-Scotland -Iceland • First leg a struggle with the system • Getting the clearance • Avoiding London • Getting back into controlled airspace • Diverting when Wick below mins

  36. Return Iceland-Greenland • Fuel in Kulusuk or Sonderstrom Direct

  37. Return – visiting Ilulissat (68˚N)

  38. Return – Greenland – Canada • Iqualuit options: • ILS/DME35 w/200’ mins • BC/LOC17 w/600’ • METAR 35035 4OVC

  39. Return – Hudson Bay • Rankins Inlet • Rwy 13T/31T 5000x150’ • Metar 040T25G30 • After landing forecast 90km/h gusts • No tie-downs or hangars available • Interesting fuel

  40. Return – The Road not Taken • Rankin Inlet – Cut Bank, MO • Flightstar suggestion: • Lynn Lake(CYYL) • Has AvGas • Confirmed by phone • Rankin feedback: • NOT SAFE! • La Ronge (CYVC) • Fine choice

  41. Return – Cut Bank, MO • Civilization at last!

  42. Lessons / Reflections • Dwight D. Eisenhower: • “Plans are nothing. Planning is everything.” • No substitute for local knowledge • Interview everyone you meet! • The return is as challenging as the outbound • Avgas is a scarce & perishable resource

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