rframe
pǝʇɹǝʌuı
You're about 3,000' AGL over remote terrain in a fixed-gear single when you engine fails, producing no power. The picture attached is what you see out your wind screen.
You are carrying no flotation gear and have very basic survival gear (small first aid, space blanket, lighter).
The large lake below you is deep (200-1,000' deep) and cold 50°F water, there are no boats currently in the immediate area (at least none that you have seen) that you might count on for assistance. The shore is a steep rocky drop off right into the lake with the steep bank and cliffs rising 500-2,000' feet.
The terrain surrounding the lake is all alpine mountains heavily forested. No discernible clearing other than rocky outcrops. There's an occasional view of old overgrown logging roads but are twisty and mostly covered by forest canopy.
Just over the ridge you know there is a large high voltage transmission line cut through the forest, the kind with large towers holding a dozen cables 100' off the ground. Below the line is brush and jeep trails but the lines run very close to the tree canopy making it difficult to access the ground below them.
Do you:
1. Ditch along the lake shore, knowing your fixed gear will dig in, hoping to exit the airplane and to swim to a spot where you can pull yourself out onto the steep shore.
2. Make a descent into the forest canopy and hope you can do some last second yawing to put the fuselage between trees and let the wings take the impact.
3. Attempt to clear the ridge and "thread the needle" to get under the power lines and land in the brush below.
4. Something else?
You are carrying no flotation gear and have very basic survival gear (small first aid, space blanket, lighter).
The large lake below you is deep (200-1,000' deep) and cold 50°F water, there are no boats currently in the immediate area (at least none that you have seen) that you might count on for assistance. The shore is a steep rocky drop off right into the lake with the steep bank and cliffs rising 500-2,000' feet.
The terrain surrounding the lake is all alpine mountains heavily forested. No discernible clearing other than rocky outcrops. There's an occasional view of old overgrown logging roads but are twisty and mostly covered by forest canopy.
Just over the ridge you know there is a large high voltage transmission line cut through the forest, the kind with large towers holding a dozen cables 100' off the ground. Below the line is brush and jeep trails but the lines run very close to the tree canopy making it difficult to access the ground below them.
Do you:
1. Ditch along the lake shore, knowing your fixed gear will dig in, hoping to exit the airplane and to swim to a spot where you can pull yourself out onto the steep shore.
2. Make a descent into the forest canopy and hope you can do some last second yawing to put the fuselage between trees and let the wings take the impact.
3. Attempt to clear the ridge and "thread the needle" to get under the power lines and land in the brush below.
4. Something else?