Murdoughnut
Well sized member
Not really. The pattern is repetitive and consistent.
Doesn't even require a Cirrus to become someone who gets pulled out of our mountains in a body bag every year.
The weather doesn't care what you're flying. Nor do the rocks. Night VFR in marginal VMC and high winds and thunderstorm remnants in the mountains is suicidal.
So I dug around and see that the "large debris field" is on Baxter Peak... and the crash was around 10PM local.
Baxter is nearly directly north of the town of Glenwood Springs and is a slightly higher hump in the ridgeline there. Very rugged terrain on that ridgeline.
Baxter is also on a GPS direct path between FNL and CNY.
One might think they'd follow V-8 which is slightly north of that line by about a mile and, of course, can give a specific amount of terrain clearance if you're at 13,400 on the airway, minimum.
The peak is shown as 11,188 on the sectional and I bet the megenta line is right where they hit, and I bet that's how the search folks found it that quickly, launching out of GWS. Track search.
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
Maybe they did wait long enough that the thunderstorms that delayed the GWS high school football game Friday night had ended. Maybe not. I don't have any historical radar data available.
But Rifle shows an overcast varying from 7500 - 10000 pretty much all night, once the winds calmed at the surface, which would put the broken layer at 15,000.
It appears the pilot was freshly certificated as a Private pilot with no instrument rating in March 2017. And whether confirmation of the previous theory about personality types, or not, was a successful owner of an HVAC company in Ft Collins.
There's at least three no-go items for that flight in my mind now that I have a time of day and the weather. Nope. This sort of accident statistic and shattered lives is almost always the result of breaking those.
Don't know if he had attended the Colorado Pilot's Association Mountain Flying course in the late summer, but if not, I sure wish he had.
Ran out of altitude, distance to the clouds, visibility, and options for an "out"... breaking the number one rule of mountain flying... always know what your "out" is. If you don't know your "out" in that airplane you could climb... but non-instrument rated, he had nowhere to climb to.
The mountains demand respect. When they're not respected they often exact their toll in fatalities.
RIP and condolences to the family.
Situation sounds strangely familiar to a simulation I did for FAA CAMLS several years ago. I responded to an ad in Flying and was flown out to OKC twice as a part of an experiment.
Simulated flight was Amarillo to ABQ in one of the bigger Piper piston singles (can't remember which one). At the time I was VFR and asked to fly a VFR route. Along the way the overcast layer began to sink, and sink ... and sink. As I approached the mountains outside of ABQ, it was clear I wasn't going to be able to get in through the victor airway I had chosen.
The purpose of the experiment was to see what you'd do based on material they had you review in the previous visit (I was in the placebo group and didn't get the material). I chickened out and opted to land short of the mountains and call it a night. Apparently there was a pass in the mountains that would have provided clearance to get through south of ABQ, but I didn't notice it in the hurry to come up with a solution.
Funny (or not) note - one person who participated in the experiment ended up slamming into the mountain VFR while having his head buried in charts. That guy was apparently a gold seal CFII.