Wagondriver
Line Up and Wait
- Joined
- Mar 7, 2020
- Messages
- 661
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Display name:
375Taylor
A few things: 1. There are no trees over about 12,100', that is tree line in the area immediately surrounding Aspen. 2. People fly the mountains in the winter all the time, I am one of them. Sure, there can be winds, but there can be winds ANY time of the year. 3. While I do not fly out of Aspen, I fly out of Glenwood Springs, flying over the continental divide is not forbidden or frowned upon or anything like that. If your plane can climb higher than the terrain, go for it. Brief the weather like you would anywhere else. 4. Leaning is required for all phases of operation. I lean aggressively on the ground for taxi, I lean slightly for take off, I lean aggressively in cruise flight. To not lean is to not use all the power you have available.
The Roaring Fork River valley, the one that leads to Independence Pass, is NOT hard to see, and not really a canyon. Leave the airport, fly over town and you are on your way. The only valley that could confuse someone is Lincoln Creek, but it is fairly wide near the top end, just don't fly up Grizzly Creek or you will likely add your aluminum to the pieces already there.
Back in the 50's, bone stock, heavily loaded 170's and 180's flew skiers from the Aspen airport to the top of what is now Snowmass Ski area. They also flew into many other areas up into the low 12,000's. A few were wrecked on take off, one still remains on the Crested butte side of Pearl Pass, dropped off the skiers, but on takeoff clipped the terrain and wrecked. Others on the Aspen side were left overnight only to be thrashed by the wind, then removed by dogsled teams in pieces. The point is, those planes were loaded with 4 people in winter gear, with skis, and they landed and took off from those altitudes. Planes can and do fly up there, just make sure YOUR plane is capable.
The July 3 crash this year was in a plane with marginal capability. The pilots did not plan their flight, nor plan an escape in the event of not out climbing terrain. That plane could fly in and out of Aspen all year long, just as long as you pay attention to the performance capabilities.
Winter in the mountains can be some of the best flying of the year, with snow cover there is very little differential heating. It is often quite smooth even if windy. I flew a Husky from KGWS to Minnesota in February two years ago, 40mph tailwind over the pass at 13,700, I have had many flights over that pass with minimal wind that were far rougher.
The Roaring Fork River valley, the one that leads to Independence Pass, is NOT hard to see, and not really a canyon. Leave the airport, fly over town and you are on your way. The only valley that could confuse someone is Lincoln Creek, but it is fairly wide near the top end, just don't fly up Grizzly Creek or you will likely add your aluminum to the pieces already there.
Back in the 50's, bone stock, heavily loaded 170's and 180's flew skiers from the Aspen airport to the top of what is now Snowmass Ski area. They also flew into many other areas up into the low 12,000's. A few were wrecked on take off, one still remains on the Crested butte side of Pearl Pass, dropped off the skiers, but on takeoff clipped the terrain and wrecked. Others on the Aspen side were left overnight only to be thrashed by the wind, then removed by dogsled teams in pieces. The point is, those planes were loaded with 4 people in winter gear, with skis, and they landed and took off from those altitudes. Planes can and do fly up there, just make sure YOUR plane is capable.
The July 3 crash this year was in a plane with marginal capability. The pilots did not plan their flight, nor plan an escape in the event of not out climbing terrain. That plane could fly in and out of Aspen all year long, just as long as you pay attention to the performance capabilities.
Winter in the mountains can be some of the best flying of the year, with snow cover there is very little differential heating. It is often quite smooth even if windy. I flew a Husky from KGWS to Minnesota in February two years ago, 40mph tailwind over the pass at 13,700, I have had many flights over that pass with minimal wind that were far rougher.