John & Anne Wiley

2010/08/02

Burns Out

We almost reached our goal of Smithers today, but a wall of storms rose to meet us at Burns Lake so we’re settling for the night. Here’s our track West so far:

Track West to Burns Lk

Track West to Burns Lk

This has been quite a day, and it seems impossible we woke yesterday in Regina! We slept in the deserted Jasper Hinton airport with permission, and woke early. Since the mountain pass entry into the Jasper park had patches of low cloud beneath a high solid overcast, we rode into town for a delightful breakfast with Pete & Nadine. Not only do we share a love of adventure and flying, but we talked psychology with former therapist Nadine. After a fruitless search of Hinton for the “archetypal cafe” where locals go, we relented and chose Smitty’s (Canadian equivalent of Denny’s) where it turned out there were lots of locals mingling with a biker group that stopped in. Despite the forgettable food, the company was fabulous. Our next stop was a supermarket where the gals got supplies while the guys tapped into an open wifi hotspot and my main focus was online weather info. Back at the airport I filed the daily flight plan and got a weather brief to supplement what I’d seen online and was about to experience first hand.

0198 Climber's Challenge

0198 Climber's Challenge

Minutes after our fond farewell, we became Jasper gaspers. The sheer enormity of the features is truly astounding. I didn’t get many good pix due to the lingering clouds and the smoke from myriad regional wildfires, but I hope you can get some sense of how amazing this place is. I’d been through on the train once, but flying it is orders of magnitude more astounding. Having only heard about it, poor Anne was even more unprepared.

0204 Bird's Eye

0204 Bird's Eye

At the edge of the village the road near a small pond framed a perfect blue bird’s eye.

0221 Unseen Falls

0221 Unseen Falls

High up the steep slope is a raging waterfall that few other than aviators ever see.

Anne’s blogging right now so I’ll close by briefly describing our passage to Burns Lake. We decided to stay high across Prince George and stop at Fraser Lake. Then we noted that the GPS said nothing about fuel or other services there, so we diverted toward Vanderhoot. Descending to land, another pilot kindly informed us that though there was plenty of fuel the only two people who could pump it for us were not available for at least four hours.

Now my personal choice is to always have at least an hour of reserve fuel. Climbing back on course I calculated 90 minutes’ fuel remaining. While that could have carried us beyond our goal of Smithers, it wouldn’t work for me. I asked our friendly local pilot about Burns Lake and he assured us it has services including fuel. It left me right at the edge of my hour reserve and there were plenty of alternatives within half an hour, so we pressed on. Now we started noticing rain showers ahead. Dodging between those while constantly checking and triple-checking fuel burn against time and distance remaining (and reassured by cross-check with my recently fine-calibrated fuel gauges) we hugged closer to the road and at last made it into Burns Lake. With exactly an hour of fuel remaining. After looking at the sky and the internet, talking to the Flight Service weather briefer, and looking at each others’ haggard faces, we decided to accept the kind hospitality of the airport angels here. We’re snug in a borrowed room, typing away as our eyelids droop ever lower ahead of the 9pm sunset. So all this by way of context on how tired we’re feeling right now. Happy tired. 😉

Into Alberta

Filed under: Flying,Happiness,Has Photos,NxNW Adventure,People,Random — John @ 17:21

Every day is different, every day divine. Yesterday there was something special about the way sky reflected in water.

0141 Bird's Eye

0141 Bird's Eye

Many times a small pond next to a farm house would shimmer with sky as we passed, creating a powerful illusion of the portal of pond revealing another world beyond. Though I saw that effect many times, it was so mesmerizing and fleeting there are no better photos. Even video could probably only capture a hint of it anyway I guess. So much of what we experience flying is impossible to capture or even describe.

0143 Lost Home

0143 Lost Home

An old abandoned farm house on the Saskatchewan prairie miles from any other structure seems to whisper stories of struggling families and improvised repairs.

What would explain these circles? Was there something in the center of each that attracted milling cattle? Were they deliberately carved by a tractor for some reason?

0146 Evidence Of?

0146 Evidence Of?

Approaching Edmonton we noticed what seem to be massive parks and green areas along the river.

0163 Approaching Edmonton

0163 Approaching Edmonton

With all the fires in Western Canada, the air is very smoky in places but the views are still spectacular.

0168 Window On Edmonton

0168 Window On Edmonton

As we descended to land at the downtown airport, our small room provided a grand view of the skyline. We heard that there had just been a car race on one of the runways, and the viewing stands were still there. We also heard that some in the city would like to close this airport. The property must be very tempting to developers, but it would sure be a big loss.

After a brief stop we flew on to Hinton, just outside Jasper, where we stopped for a night of “camping” inside the empty terminal building. Maybe Anne will post some photos, because I didn’t get any here. We met Pete and Nadine, who have explored in their own plane and are now exploring with a small camper and bikes. Thus ended another day of discoveries and delights. Today we hope to make it through the pass to Smithers, though weather may bring other plans.

2010/08/01

Civilized life above…

Filed under: Aviation,by Anne,Flying,Has Photos,Nature,NxNW Adventure — Anne @ 17:45

Recently I thought about what luxury it feels to eat avocados from our tree and chips from TJs over the skies in Montana, Wisconsin, and Ontario in the plane. Our afternoon appetizers – which have also turned into being dinner. We brought a few along, in various states of hardness and have waited until they ripen. They have spread out their ripening quite nicely, and we now have one left, and it needs to be eaten today. We spoon the avocado out and eat it with what are now crushed chips. The chips at the beginning of the trip were whole, but the bag is now is pretty crushed from everything around and on top of it, but still adds that nice salty taste to the avos. I thought how surprising it would seem to people to realize what a civilized life we have at three thousand feet in the air.

0066 Circles, Yellows, blue, brown

0066 Circles, Yellows, blue, brown

Today I sewed – a purse needed a repair as the zipper was getting stuck.  I started it while waiting in the terminal, and then needed to leave with the needle & thread still stuck in the purse. So when there was a quiet time I completed the job in the air. Most often we are looking at the sights. We also listen to air traffic or look at maps & charts, or weather. I thought about people below hearing a plane overhead, not guessing the woman in the plane (me) was sewing!

0069 Circles - Yellow
0069 Circles – Yellow
0077 Regina park & gov't bldg

0077 Regina park & gov't bldg

by ~Anne

Prairie Part One

Filed under: Flying,Has Photos,Inner World,NxNW Adventure,Random — John @ 05:25

Terrain is changing, and weather might be too. Looks like if we’re lucky tomorrow will see us reaching at least Edmonton. Today we droned across Manitoba and some of Saskatchewan, to land in Regina. The landscapes just west of Winnipeg offered an interesting mixture of shapes, colors and textures.

0126 Manitoba Twist

0126 Manitoba Twist

Vistas gradually changed, and some time after crossing the provincial border we saw lots of bright yellow in some of the fields.

0133 Sask Watch

0133 Sask Watch

Descending into Regina the city impressed us. Maybe we were expecting some desolate prairie hamlet, but it’s a pretty cool little city.

0136 Regina

0136 Regina

We saw lots of stuff that would be right at home in Santa Barbara: health food stores, college kids, arts and culture, and a magnificent urban park (the tip of which is visible lower left). Lots of evidence that civic leaders envision a sustainable future for generations.

We briefly considered camping next to Tripp at the airport, but a new rule prohibited that. Next we were offered a great new minivan for a cruise around town and out to a campground. By the time we found dinner and reached the campground our resolve had weakened considerably, so after noting the campground is next to the highway we opted for another hotel. Along the way we had noticed this 70,000 seat stadium filled with a roaring crowd.

0078 Rough Riders Rule

0078 Rough Riders Rule

Turns out this was a big game, and Regina won. People had come from miles around, so of course every hotel was booked. By now it was getting late for setting up the tent, and mosquitoes were forming into large squadrons. We finally found one room, in a hotel that’s still being built. We parked on the frontage road and lugged our stuff across an obstacle course with bugs dive bombing us to the door. I fully expected them to follow us in, but somehow they respect the lobby and our room as a sanctuary.

Now hopefully we can catch up on sleep, and bolster our courage for camping tomorrow.

2010/07/31

Win A Peg

Filed under: Aviation,Flying,Happiness,Has Photos,NxNW Adventure,People — John @ 06:39

Having lived in Canada for a time, some names have a far off and romantic association for me. Winnipeg is among those. We met some great people and had some great fun walking here. Leaving later than hoped from tBay (too much fun there too, including some time chatting with newlyweds whose honeymoon was flying a 2-seat C-150 across Canada), we dodged some dodgy weather. Getting to Fort Frances on our first leg we got down to 1200 AGL in light rain following the highway for a time. I thought it would be cool to see International Falls just across the river. We did, and it wasn’t (cool that is).

0084 Dam Falls

0084 Dam Falls

Very industrial, and it seems any falls were made into a dam long ago. Wonder what it was like before. On the Canadian side where we landed to avoid customs mania, Tom at the airport was exceptionally helpful and friendly. From there up to Kenora was easier, so rather than stop we turned West to Winnipeg. So many fascinating Ontario wetlands and Manitoba farms along the way.

0092 Manitoba Farm

0092 Manitoba Farm

The city itself is interesting from the air too, with what Anne calls a “cobbled” skyline. There’s a bridge downtown that people seem especially proud of. That’s it on the left with the white web of suspension cables. Looks like some great waterfront parks in the area around the stadium.

0108 Winnipeg

0108 Winnipeg

So having been out late tonight, an early start tomorrow is unlikely. We’ll probably just make the relatively short and easy (if weather cooperates) hop to Regina tomorrow, then Calgary and up to Edmonton. We’ll see how it goes, as always on our flexible adventures. 🙂

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