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Seggy
So while you do bring up some valid concerns about safety culture in Alaska, you are not qualified to give your expert opinion on the "cub driver." Statistically, yes, this video is more "risky" than "ILS-to-ILS" in the flat-land. That said, this is a "Risk Management" topic, if you wanna get to "gravel bar X," how do you do it safely? Here are a few ways to mitigate the risk in this scenario:
Have a skilled experienced pilot with excellent aircraft control.
Wait until the conditions are such that they won't create an overly taxiing environment.
Have the proper equipment for the job.
They have certainly done all of this in these videos from what I can see. Seggy, I'm in the "management" world of Alaska 135 now, and there are some concerns you mention that bear repeating. There are endemic cultural issues in the state - most notably being the quest for money being put above the safety, and the blatant disregard for safety at some companies. Things, however, are actually changing. The culture is moving towards a "safer" generally more risk-averse point-of-view. The companies that are real "cowboy" operators are going out of business, getting shut-down, or just generally changing the way they are because safety is more profitable than the alternative.
Still, I can without a doubt say that little airplane flying up in Alaska is the most consistently difficult flying I've ever done. Everything is against you. There's no radar, no RCO, and most of the time, no IAP. The runway isn't paved, lighted, or in some places, there. The summer has frequently terrible weather, the spring and fall have slush contaminated gravel runways, and the winter has glare ice and -40 below. There's no FBO, no terminal, and
any alternate can be more than an hours flying time away.
Where I work, in order to mitigate the risks associated with this sort of work, we have a formal "risk-assessment" process, shared responsibility for dispatch, and quantify and manage risk that we expose ourself to. We do this formally, on paper. That said, most companies leave this to the pilot to do in his head on the fly. I cut my teeth in an environment where I had free-reign to decide when I thought it was safe to fly, I made some mistakes, I made some bad decisions, but I learned. This sort of environment, with lots of potential threats, lends itself to a high accident rate. This is changing as the infrastructure improves, but there are still a lot more real, tangible, and dangerous threats that aren't there in the lower 48.
Keep learning, keep humble, and learn when it's appropriate to "get creative," and when it's better to throw in the towel. Combine that with good SRM, and a good company culture (and if it isn't there, create it), and you'll stay safe.
That said, this isn't dangerous in the cowboy sense of the word. These guys know what they're doing, are proficient, and are well trained. That doesn't mean things won't still get bent occasionally, but getting a prop during a ground loop at 5kts is different than CFIT (which is still the primary killer in the state up here and has already gotten a couple of folks this year). I recommend you come up north on vacation, give me a shout when you do, I'll try to get you on a flight out someplace, you'll see some of the challenges we're up against, and how operating in the same way as they do at the airlines sometimes is the "less safe" option.