I'd guess those little, wiggly fingerlings have a terminal velocity closer to 30 mph....Just hitting the surface at 100 mph could be a little ‘stunning’.
Not to worry - the FAA has required each hatchling to have a parachute.With terrain around the lakes one can’t get right near the surface, then the lakes are kinda small. I’d expect maybe some to end up on the rocks, possibly the video isn’t an accurate portrayal of events. Of course much easier than ATV’ing the fish up.
Just hitting the surface at 100 mph could be a little ‘stunning’.
Cool. I’d have guessed they’d have used smaller planes for that.
that gives added definition to the word “planting”They had a Helio for planting fish back in the '80s. I always wanted that job!
that was my initial thought too, followed by some "tax dollar" snark. BUT, thinking about it more.. I'm not sure there's anything smaller that (A) has the useful load for it and (B) has the power to maneuver at very high density altitudes. The Sierras are high... several of the lakes I've camped by are located at 10K or higher with surrounding peaks in the 12K-14K range. I think King Air is the only real option tbhCool. I’d have guessed they’d have used smaller planes for that.
I think the Colorado DOW uses a 185. High mountain lakes dine by air have no roads to them. Only way is horse or airplane.
Would that be fly fishing?I want to see the follow-up to this:
Aerial trout fishing
In Alaska, we planted saplings from a Cherokee 6 with the doors off.
Those baby trees were in a biodegradable cardboard dart and we threw them out by the hundreds into the sides of mountains that were too difficult to access by foot.
We used the same airplane for tracking deer and bears. The critters had transmitter collars and we had directional antennas. That was fun!
I want to see the follow-up to this:
Aerial trout fishing
Let's not forget Idaho's (remarkably successful) experiment with parachuting beavers into the backcountry. After numerous practice jumps by one beaver named 'Geronimo', a total of 76 were dropped into the backcountry (75 survived and established breeding populations).
https://time.com/4084997/parachuting-beavers-history/ (with video)
https://www.boisestatepublicradio.o...nto-idahos-wilderness-yes-it-really-happened\
https://blogs.scientificamerican.co...to-skydive-into-the-idaho-wilderness-in-1948/
So let me see if I get this. A farming state trains amphibious rodents as paratroopers, with a 98% success rate. Meanwhile, city schools give participation trophies to children who simply manage to show up part of the time.
Source?
Meanwhile, city schools give participation trophies to children who simply manage to show up part of the time.