Aviation Tour 2004
What?
The third year Providence
College/Harv's Air students
2004 California cross country
The story:
For the third year running the second year aviation students from
Providence College, in association with Harv’s Air Service, embarked on
the cross country of a lifetime. All of the Providence students are
Private Pilots who are building time towards their Commercial licences.
A very long cross country (over 3000 miles or 10 times the required
Commercial requirement) is a fantastic way to experience different
terrain, busy airspace, high altitude airports, and the decision making
that can only come from planning flights out in the “real world”. Along
the way they flew over the Grand Canyon, into some of the busiest
airspace in the world, and underwent a transition of seasons from
winter, to spring, and back to winter in the span of a week.
Experience was one reason for the trip. A second reason for the trip
was the stops the group made at Tribal Air (New Tribes Mission) and
United Indian Mission (UIM) in Arizona, and Mission Aviation Fellowship
(MAF) in California. All twelve of the flyers have some level of
interest in mission aviation, and this was a good chance for them to
meet the agencies and get an inside look at how they operate.
Pilots: Adam Taylor,
Richard Wiebe, Ian Torrie, David Reader, Chris Carter, Christine
Cerrilli, Lance Penner, Lee Giesbrecht, Ryan Unger, Ryan Bert, Daniel Loewen-Rudgers, Jon Epp
Aircraft: Cessna 172’s
C-FIIK, C-GHXS, C-GDJO and Piper Cherokee 140 C-GOMI
Day 1 February 26
Departure was planned
for 8:30 local on February 26 from Steinbach South airport. Low
ceilings and chance of freezing precipitation changed our plans for us,
and by the time we actually departed we had flight planned to three
different possible destinations. The final decision was to clear
customs in Piney, with the thought that once border crossing was taken
care of we could at least land at the nearest airport if we ran into
worse weather.
Out of Piney the low
ceilings lasted for only an hour before the sun began to show itself.
Just past Thief River Falls we left the clouds behind and climbed up to
6500 where the headwind component was much less. There was still a
headwind though, and both the blue skies and the headwinds were to stay
with us for the majority of our southward journey.
Fergus Falls,
Minnesota, was our first US stopover. Already at this point we had left
most of the snow behind. While this was exciting for all of us the flat
brown landscape didn’t leave much to look at. We were, however, treated
to a beautiful sunset on the next leg. The red, pink, and orange added
some colour to the otherwise dull view. But who could complain? We
were on our way to California! We fueled up in Mitchell, North Dakota,
and were up again to 8500. 20 knots headwind at that altitude, the best
we could do, but the air was smooth and the frequency was ours, which
allowed for some inflight discussion. Only IIK (with a laptop on board)
offered an inflight movie. Despite our best efforts the FBO in North
Platte, Nebraska wouldn’t let us stay on the airport for night, so we
resorted to the Quality Inn..
Day 2 February 27
The many shades of
brown and the round fields of Kansas and Nebraska were our companions on
this leg. We stopped in Hugoton, Kansas, for fuel and the warmest
weather we were to encounter the whole trip. Those who weren’t flight
planning for the next leg took the time to lounge on the apron and enjoy
the warmth. We ran into a slight problem in Hugoton when the pumps ran
out of fuel after filling only two of our planes. We planned for
another fuel stop and were again on our way. Unfortunately, even this
destination proved too far as the headwind was stronger than expected.
Two planes had to divert while the others continued on. Our final stop
that night was Portales, New Mexico, where we experienced true southern
hospitality. We arrived at 20:00 local and our hostess for the night
came to meet us and fuel up our planes. She allowed us to spend the
night in the FBO and even provided us two courtesy cars to head into
town for something to eat.
Day 3 February 28
This day marked the
beginning of what we came for. It was our first encounter with terrain,
and the first encounter with the associated turbulence. The headwind
coming over the first serious ridge we encountered gave us a groundspeed
of 40 kt. At times it was even lower as we climbed or at least tried to
climb back to altitude after being carried lower by a downdraft. It
gave us some concern in regards to our fuel situation, but on passing
over the ridge the groudspeed picked up once again. Picked up all the
way to 70 knots! The contrast of ridge upon ridge and different shapes
and sizes of the hills was incredible. We flew directly over Roswell
Air Center, beside the Sacramento Mountains, and skirted the edge of
Area 51. To remain clear of that restricted airspace we headed south
through El Paso’s Class C airspace, the highest class for many of the
pilots so far, before proceeding west.
Throughout this entire
leg we could see a cloud bank to the west of us associated with a cold
front. Our paths finally met just west of El Paso. Our next stop of
Santa Teresa lay just on the other side of a 6000 foot ridge. The
lowering cloud left us a 500 foot gap from the top of the ridge – just
enough for us to make it through. Our timing couldn’t have been
better. Looking back ten minutes after landing the entire ridge, only
five miles away, was completely obscured. Our stop in Santa Teresa was
extended due to the rain and snow showers associated with the cold
front. To pass the time some of us found a warbird museum right on the
airport, while others found a flight school with internet access from
which they were able to get a bigger picture of the weather ahead of
us. Their conclusions were a go. There was a possibility of snow
showers and lower visibility so our plan was follow roads into McNeill,
AZ, where NTM Aviation has its base. This would keep us away from the
higher terrain as well as provide a little more confidence in navigation
should we encounter lower visibility. Furthermore, there were two
suitable airports along the route should the weather prove too bad.
Five minutes out of
Santa Teresa we flew through the heaviest snow showers some of us had
ever flown in. This is five miles from Mexico! Ceilings were down to
1500 feet AGL with about a mile of visibility. This only lasted for
about five miles before it opened up into a scattered layer of
stratocumulus and even some towering cumulus. The clouds added their
own beauty to the landscape. It was nice to see cumulus clouds again
when all you’ve seen is low stratus all winter. The moving clouds
provided a constantly changing picture of billowing white against many
shades of blue. The sun filtering through and highlighting the rock
formations made for a spectacular flight.
After passing that
early snow shower the view looked clearer ahead so we picked up a more
direct routing. Yet we still had three higher ridges to cross before
reaching McNeill. Approaching those ridges we quickly realized our
direct routing wouldn’t be possible as the tops of the ridge was
obscured. We diverted to the town of “settlement” to pick up the road
that would lead us around and between the last two ridges and to our
destination. As we turned into the final valley cloud still obscured
the way. At this point get-there-itus was starting to become a factor.
Our destination was ten miles away, just on the other side of that
mountain! This is where having twelve pilots in four planes was
beneficial. We had twelve heads to think of all the options; what one
person didn’t consider another one would and remind us all on the
radio. On top of that four planes spaced out over eight miles allowed
us to scout ahead while still keeping track of the weather behind.
While DJO in the lead was checking if we could make it around the cloud
ahead of us, HXS in the back was starting to notice that another cloud
was moving in and blocking our exit. Just as we were about to turn
around the blue sky began to show itself above that final ridge and in
the direction we wanted to go. Above was a very defined stratocumulus
layer. We climbed up to 8500 and headed over the ridge. HXS with its
moving map GPS was there to help confirm we were clear of the MOA, and
we came over the ridge into the beginning of a beautiful sunset over the
far hills. New Tribes’ gravel strip came into view and we joined a
straight in downwind for 17.
Day 4 February 29
We had the day off with
New Tribes to relax and recuperate. We were given a tour of their
facility, drooled over the 206’s with STOL kits, and in the afternoon
piled in the back of a pickup to go climb some of the hills we had flown
over the night before.
Day 5 March 1
Despite all our efforts
to be airborne as soon as possible we were delayed due to a nice layer
of frost covering three of our planes. The sun should have melted it
off soon enough, but it was hiding behind a thin cloud layer. We were
ready for liftoff at 7:45 but didn’t actually do so until 9:00. Our
destination today was Redlands, California, just 40 miles east of L.A.
Our track took us over Tucson, directly over Davis-Monthan Air Force
Base and the B-52 graveyard. Looking below us we could see quite a few
A-10’s doing circuits.
The majority of this
flight was over dry desert terrain so it was quite something to come up
on Blythe, CA, our fuel stop, and see such an oasis of green dropped in
the middle of the desert. We fueled up, switched pilots, and continued
on. Approaching Palm Springs the visibility began to lower to 8-9 miles
in haze. Flying through the Banning Pass the ceilings forced us down to
5500’ which gave us a nice close up view of the hundreds of wind mills
in the valley. Unfortunately we only caught fleeting glimpses of the
10-11,000’ peaks that were only a few miles on either side of us.
26 in Redlands was our runway of choice.
This allowed us to experience first hand the illusions and looooong
flare that accompany a downslope runway. We had a short tour of MAF’s
hanger, more Cessna 206’s to look at, and then divided up into small
groups and went to stay with an MAF family for the night. Once again a
homecooked meal was a very welcome change from McDonalds.
Day 6 March 2
We had another day off
from flying. We spent the morning with MAF learning more about their
goals and visions as well as entry requirements. In the afternoon we
met up with some of the pilots friends and relatives who volunteered to
be our chauffeurs for the day. We headed out on I10 straight past
downtown LA and the Hollywood hills and on to Venice beach. Only one of
us was brave/crazy enough to go swimming. It might be warmer than
Winnipeg, but the water was still frigid. The rest of us were content
to enjoy the view of the ocean with the sand between our toes. From
there we headed to Hollywood Boulevard and walked the length of it.
Wasn’t all that impressive but we can at least say we’ve been there.
Far better things were to come the next day.
Day 7 March 3
The Grand Canyon! We headed back out the
Banning Pass and then northeast to Kingman, Arizona. We had lunch and
rechecked the weather, which was clear all the way to Las Vegas. Once
airborne the first veins of the canyon appeared almost right away,
leading us on. The Dragon Corridor was our first route over the
canyon. The start of the corridor took us past the Grand Canyon Airport
and then over the edge. Seeing the canyon from the ground is awesome.
Seeing it from the air is indescribable. You can see every little
canyon and have an unparalleled perspective of the surrounding ground
drop away into layer after layer that goes down, down, down. You can
watch the Colorado River as it winds its way around and through the
glowing red rock formations cut out of the earth. Essentially, you can
just see so much more. The 45 minutes that we were over the canyon were
not nearly enough to soak it all in.
We headed back south, through the Fossil
Canyon Corridor, and followed the length of the canyon west into Las
Vegas. By this time the sun had set and the lights of Vegas came into
view. Class B airspace here we come. It wasn’t nearly as scary as we
thought, although we did discover the controllers wanted an absolutely
perfect readback. They vectored us directly over the strip, just past
the “space needle”, to join a right downwind for runway 12R at the Las
Vegas North airport.
Day 8 March 4
Getting into Las Vegas was one thing.
Getting out was quite another. Especially when you have one controller
who is clearance delivery, ground, and tower. It took us twenty minutes
after start up to just make initial contact. Someone always beat us to
the mic to ask for clearance. It was only when the cavalry (the
controllers own words for his coworkers) showed up that we were actually
able to get our taxi clearance. We departed 30L, got handed off to
McCarran approach and before long we were cleared en route.
Ryan Airfield in Tucson was our
destination. We passed just west of Kingman, AZ on our way south and
intersected our route from the day before. It was neat to actually
start recognizing towns and features that we had already flown over on
other flights. Gila Bend was planned as a flyover point only, but we
decided to land and check the weather into Tucson. Turns out it was
good we landed as at least one pilot was in dire need of a washroom.
The weather looked passable in Tuscon and we headed to Ryan Field. Flew
through a few showers but it was a great flight at fairly low level over
the rugged Arizona desert.
United Indian Mission was our reason for
returning to Tucson. We parked our planes in one of their hangers and
then talked with the director about UIM’s goals and pilot requirements.
They lent us two vehicles for the evening and we were able to head into
town for a movie.
Day 9 March 5
Poor visibility and
thundershowers along our proposed route gave us an excuse to spend time
at the Pima Air Museum in Tucson. This was right next door to the Air
Force Base we had flown over a few days earlier. The museum consisted
of 270 planes spread throughout 750 acres. It took us a good three
hours to just walk past all of them, never mind spending time to really
look at them. F-16’s and A10’s continued their circuits right beside us
as we walked.
Back to Ryan Field to
check the weather, which had cleared up, and we were off on our long
journey back home. We flew from Ryan to Dalhart, Texas, via Truth or
Consequences, NM. Our stop there was brief; it’s only worth mentioning
because of its name.
Day 10 March 6
Having twelve pilots
was again an asset on this day. We flew approximately 9 hours from
Texas all the way back to Steinbach, arriving at 21:30 local. We were
happy to be home, but none of us would hesitate to do it all over again
if given the chance. We flew a total of 214 hours between the four
planes, flew into eighteen airports and covered a distance of about
3500 miles.
Much thanks goes to the
mission agencies we visited for hosting us, to the FBO’s who allowed us
to spend the night at their airport, and to all those American
controllers who had to deal with the sudden onslaught of four completely
foreign callsigns. Three calls per plane was probably the average
before all the phonetics were sorted out. Even then “zero mike india”
and “one one kilo” were common. Finally, a big thanks to Harv’s Air
Service for having the confidence to let us embark on such a journey and
allowing us to fly away with four of their planes for a week and a
half. More pictures from our trip as well as details from previous
trips can be found at their website www.harvsair.com.
Pictures:






Why?
A chance of a life time! All of the Providence students are Private Pilots
who need to increase their flight time. A very long cross country (over
3000 miles or 10 times the required Commercial requirement) is a fantastic
way to experience different terrain, controllers, airports, high altitude
airports, and the decision making that can only come from being on your
own. Along the way they will fly by Mount Rushmore, the Grand Canyon,
some of the busiest airspace in the world, and undergo a transition of
seasons from winter, to spring, and back to winter in the span of a week.
Who?
Chris Carter
Christine Cerilli
David Reader
Lance Penner
Lee Giesbrecht
Richard Wiebe
Ian Torrie
Adam Taylor
Ryan Bert
Daniel Loewen-Rudgers
Jonathan Epp
Ryan Unger
Airplanes:
Cessna 172 C-FIIK
Cessna 172 C-GHXS
Cessna 172 C-GDJO
Pa-28-140 C-GOMI
Route:
Steinbach South, Manitoba (February 26, 2004 left at 11:10 am)
Piney, Minnesota (5-6 miles visibility in haze)
Fergus Falls, South Dakota (20-30 knot headwinds)
North Platte, Nebraska (overnight) Departing morning of February 27, 2004)
Roswell, New Mexico
Hugoton, Kansas
Dalhart, Texas
Portales, New Mexico
Santa Teresa, New Mexico
Tribal Air, Arizona
Blythe, California
Redlands, California
Kingman, AZ
over the Grand Canyon
Las Vegas, NV
Gila Bend, AZ
Tucson (Ryan Field), AZ
Truth or Consequences, NM
Dalhart, TX
North Platte, Nebraska
Aberdeen, SD
Piney, MB/MN
Steinbach South, Manitoba (March 6 21:20)
Updates:
February 26 11:10
They have departed! The weather was a little scuzzy departing, but
rapidly improved just south of Steinbach.
February 27, 08:35
Jon says "so far so good", everybody is excited, today's destination is
Roswell, New Mexico. Battled continuous headwinds 25-30 knots so progress
was slow. Weather cleared just south of Grand Forks, North Dakota. Weather
is clear along the route
February 29 18:00
Hi guys,
We're in Arizona right now at New Tribes Mission Aviation headquarters.
We
got in yesterday late afternoon after having to divert around some rain,
cloud, fog, and mountain ranges. As we got closer, the weather turned
beautiful and we flew in over the last ridge in bright sunshine and dead
calm conditions. So far we have been averaging about 20 knot headwinds
all
the way from Piney to here. On a couple of legs we were routinely
seeing
groundspeeds of 65-70 kts. HXS's GPS showed 28 kts groundspeed during
one
enroute climb. Anyway, tomorrow we leave for Redlands in the morning,
then
Wednesday we'll start heading back home.
-Jon
March 1 23:00
Adam Taylor here, in
not so sunny California... The temperature is between 5 and 10 degrees,
but we don't mind. We just punched through into Redlands before the
ceiling got too low... Flew through mountains today, we also flew over
an air force base in Tucson Arizona. Our Groundspeed picked up a bit
today, which was encouraging, and we could see about 95-100 kts. A great
sight compared to our usual 60-70. Right now the weary travellers are
separated, all at different MAF workers houses. Tomorrow we are getting
a tour, and a presentation in the morning. We are all looking forward to
being let loose on Los Angeles. We'll leave here on Wednesday morning,
probably stopping by the Grand Canyon. This whole trip so far has been
full of great flight experiences, and I'm excited to see what will
happen next. The scenery is beautiful, and the weather has held, and
God's hand has been on us the entire way. Signing off, Adam Taylor
March 2 18:30
Hi guys,
I guess a couple of guys emailed you last night already, but I haven't
had
internet access, so I'll do it today. We're in Redlands, arrived
yesterday
evening (Monday) after tailwinds (or at least no headwinds) all the way
from
Tribal Air. Tomorrow morning we leave, weather permitting, for the
Grand
Canyon. After that we're a little undecided, except that UIM invited us
to
stay in Tucson for night, so we'll try to work that in on our way home.
-Jon
March 3 16:45
Right now we're in Kingman, Ariz, flight planning for the leg over the
Grand
Canyon. We left Redlands this morning just before 10:00 California
time.
The plan is to overnight in Las Vegas, then bright and early tomorrow
morning head down to Tucson to UIM. The winds have been fairly
cooperative
today so far. Hopefully that will continue for the next few days.
-Jon
March 5 14:30
Phone update from Jon, about to leave Tucson, the goal was to make it to
Kansas.
March 6 11:00
Phone update from Jon, leaving North Platt Nebraska for Piney,
Minnesota.
March 6 19:30
They are home!! A very tired bunch of pilots snuck in under some low
clouds to make it all the way home!









History:
2003
Providence Aviation Trip
2002 Providence Aviation Trip

Contact Harv's Air Flight School
Harv's Air Service
Steinbach South Airport
Box 1056,
Steinbach
Manitoba
CANADA
R0A 2A0
Ph: 204 326 2434
Fx: 204 326 4182
Toll free in Manitoba
(800) HARV-AIR
E-Mail adam@harvsair.com
MSN Messenger: adam@harvsair.com
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In business since 1972!
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