Boris Badenov
Fortis Leader
Ahahahahahahhahahahaha. Ahahahha. Ahahahahha. *cough* *wheeze*.
Oh, man, this is better than a movie, and it's FREE.
Oh, man, this is better than a movie, and it's FREE.
He apparently has different volumes of dvds from the desert to other locales. I am going to order this one for fun from Amazon that I saw:With all the discussion going on, I looked up the pilot, Greg Miller, based on the data given on his web page for the "Big Rocks, Long Props" video series.
The pilot has a CPL and PPL priveledges for SES as well. It looks like he built the aircraft he's flying, a Bushwhacker SuperCub variant, serial #001.
According to the kit manufacturer, the SuperCubXP kit with an O-233 has a 1700fpm climb, 100 ft t/o roll, and a 200 ft landing roll.
Seems to me he's operating the aircraft within its limits and within his piloting capabilities/limits.
Oh yeah, he's not Alaskan, and the DVD it came from, while off airport, isn't Alaska.
If we're going to discuss/debate/beat up/judge lets at least get the facts straight so we can deride bush pilots as a whole and not just Alaska aviation.
Everyone is entitled to their own opinion here. Me personally, the clips I've sen of his flying looks more safe than the night IMC A/Rs with Iragi fireworks that we were doing over southern Irag during the opening of OIF.
Those were safe and within our operating limits, too.
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Boris Badenov said:Honestly, Seggy. Has there ever been anything that you're not only qualified to comment upon, but Utterly Right about, to the point of going down in a pyre of burning self-righteousness, however ludicrous your claim? If there has been, please put it on the Internet, next time.
Hahhahaha now that is funny for a myriad of reasons.
I hate you!!! lmao They look wonderful. If you cannot have a little fun, a little freedom and a little adventure, then what the hell is life about?@A Life Aloft: I think Santa is bringing me all five.
I
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Man, talk about pristine. Where us that? Beautiful.I guess I'm dangerous....
Seggy....as for Alaska flying which the discussion evolved to fairly quickly......have you ever watched the tv shows such as Mountain Men, Flying Wild Alaska, Alaska State Troopers, Ice Pilots, Wild West Guns Alaska, Alaska's Toughest Pilots, Buying Alaska, Alaska Wing Men, Tougher in Alaska?? These are shows which air and many have aired around the world and many in several seasons. They have details and examples of the type of flying done in Alaska, the Yukon and in Northern Canada.
Now here you have entire tv shows showing the type of flying in all kinds of wx, conditions,terrain, winds, hell you name it, throughout Alaska, the Yukon and Northern Canada and you are upset over one You Tube video which demonstrates the same thing seen on many of these shows?
You do realize that the type of flying shown in that video happens often up there.......that is just for example for, hunters, fisherman, skiers, geologists, climbers, gold miners, an array of scientists, hikers, goods and supplies, the mail and packages, rescuers, sightseers, campers, the inspections done by fish and game, pipeline workers, remote tiny villages or locations (yes people live out in the middle of nowhere up there where their nearest neighbor might be 150 miles away) that must be serviced, people who must be taken to larger cities for health reasons, and much more are brought to and from remote locations in the state which include the necessity of landing on the sides of mountains, on ice fields, on sand and gravel bars, river banks, on grass strips or fields, on home made runways which can be covered with snow, slipping through mountain passes and valleys,and that there are thousands of locales in Alaska which can only be traversed by air?? And that it has been this way since the first bush pilots flew there?
A pilot who can do what this pilot did with his plane and the skill that he obviously has, will be less likely to have a serious incident IMO, because he can pull something like this off if he has too. It does not mean that he flies like this all the time. It shows what he is capable of doing and how his aircraft can perform when or if he needs it to.
If nothing else, Alaska is the ultimate flight training environment. Many, many pilots there are also airframe and power plant mechanics. They have to be. They know the performance limits, can effect repairs, can modify and maintain their planes far better than most pilots in the lower 48.
According to the Alaska Department of Transportation, there is something like one registered pilot for every 58 residents there! There are 6 times the pilots there than anywhere else in the United States. One has to look at the extreme conditions, the smaller aircraft use, the extreme wx and terrain, and the types of flying done, when looking at accident/incident rates there.
I can bet you that pilots who have flown for years there, have better stick and rudder skills, judgement, and have had to deal with a more wider range of issues and conditions than most pilots in most other locales in the lower 48 have.
It's very disappointing to me that with no experience in the type of flying done in AK, you seem so ready to dismiss the history of aviation up there, the conditions, the aircraft, the nature of the flying there and those members here who do that type of flying for a living whom I admire, respect and enjoy listening to them. I try to learn something from them, and very much enjoy the videos and photos that they post here and their bank of knowledge on the types of flying, the various locations and in the equipment that they fly in AK and the advice, discussions and support they have given me about many things in AK, as I intend to have my own little adventure/life time dream there when I retire.
Take the blinders and the mindset off for a moment.
Oh, don't be coy, you scamp! Dish! Share the hilarity!
What's your excuse Seggy?
So far, I count 5 people that are current or former Alaskan 135 pilots. (I'd say we earned our soapboxes) Each one telling you how it is. Not just someone who watches the discovery channel.
You have a safety background, fascinating. We don't talk about safety as a paid member of a union at a conference, we live it on a daily basis.
What is unsafe about that specific video?
What ifs/ semantics don't validate debates, so have at it.
What is dangerous about an 1800lbs plane hydroplaning, that a 180,000lbs 737 does on a hourly basis around the world?
What is unsafe about landing on rocks, which he rolls over easily?
Like I said earlier, take a cruise to Alaska. You'll enjoy it. But don't go on any aerial sightseeing tours. You'll have a heart attack.
Seggy, the aviators on the shows I mentioned above, aren't flying the way they fly for anyone's entertainment.
They have no need to do that. It's the way they operate there. I cannot believe that you think otherwise. It is also incredibly off balance and mind boggling that you judge all of them as not being professional because they are in some tv shows? Really? Compared to who? These are highly skilled, valued professionals. I am very experienced, have decades of hours and have flown internationally in all sorts of wx, conditions, had emergencies and flown in and out of some the busiest of airports on the planet and I consider myself to be a pretty skilled pilot. I believe I have very good hand skills. Those guys could most likely fly rings around me in the type of flying that they do and in the conditions and circumstances that they fly in. Without the training, mindset, and experience I could never attempt what they do. (plus I'd need to be a lot younger lol)
And you then have missed all the dialogue that they have spoken in regards to the conditions there, the equipment, their experience, safety and more then because that is a large part of many of those shows.
As for Chief Pilots, apparently you have not seen the very well respected, very experienced and beloved, (RIP) Arnie Schreder CP at Buffalo Airways, fly.
And you are dismissing, not willing to listen, too recalcitrant too learn plus being disrespectful to the pilots on this forum that fly for a living in AK. I find this the most bothersome. You can dismiss me, as I have never flown there (yet) , but they have and do. Are every single one of them wrong?
I am going to repeat something from my earlier post in this thread....something that I do not believe you will ever be able to really comprehend/understand.
In an age of electronic marvels, we tend to look to technology to solve our problems. When it stands in for expertise, however, it puts itself between us and the world around us. It mediates and insulates. At its best, technology can empower. There is no one freer than a pilot in Alaska with an airplane. When you take off, you can have thousands of square miles entirely to yourself. There is no mediation. It is a matter of you, your machine and the wilderness. And that's pure freedom.
Oh, man, this is better than a movie, and it's FREE.
A Life Aloft said:You met a guy who worked at Buffalo......and?????
Also you are now assuming that pilots there would have issues in a crew environment as well.
Further, you believe now that you could do all the different types of flying that pilots in AK do.
Oh Lord. Help me. Really, this conversation has gotten more pathetic by the moment. Your responses are just ridiculous. I give up.