Lower your definition of "safe".How does one safely fly low like this? I have some unpopulated area near me where I'd like to meander down a river for fun, but I'm always concerned some sort of power lines or something I can't see is going to kill me.
How does one safely fly low like this? I have some unpopulated area near me where I'd like to meander down a river for fun, but I'm always concerned some sort of power lines or something I can't see is going to kill me.
Fly where you want to go at 500 ft 1st to make sure there aren't any gotchas then go have fun.How does one safely fly low like this? I have some unpopulated area near me where I'd like to meander down a river for fun, but I'm always concerned some sort of power lines or something I can't see is going to kill me.
This is the type of flying I'd love to do one day. I'd really like to take a bush flying course...there was a great course at Pleasant Valley, but he has since moved to Kidwell, which is a lot further away
McCall, ID. Just do it right the first time.
Is there a guy who teaches it there or something?
A whole school that specializes in it.
No. I have a life.
Pure prevarication. Proof: you post here regularly.No. I have a life.
Doesn’t take much “life” to notice he posts his videos regularly here. LOL.
Agreed, looked like some fun and good flying, nothing more, nothing less.Looked like fun, but if he really had balls he would've gone under the bridge...
I felt nose shimmy for the first time on a landing yesterday at a paved airport, then went to a backcountry strip and nothing (you dont feel shimmy in the grass or gravel), then landed again at the paved airstrip and no shimmy.
Wonder what caused the shimmy on the first landing.
When I fly, the only time I hear the stall horn and feel that good about it is right before my mains touch the runway. Even practicing stalls and slow flight keeps me a little on the "you've got my attention, stall horn!" side of things, because there's always the potential for surprise in those conditions.
Keep in mind that he flies with an AOA indicator, which gives a much more accurate picture of the margin above stall than a stall horn. For max lift operations (like short take offs and landings), you're leaving a lot of performance on the table if the stall horn isn't going off.
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
And vortex generators (and maybe other STOL devices) so the stall horn may not even be calibrated to actual aircraft performance.
Keep in mind that he flies with an AOA indicator...
How come we never see the video where they run off into the water, or can't turn the plane around, or snap a wheel or a wing off?
And who pays for the heavy lift chopper to come in and haul them out when they screw up?
I wonder if I could get in and out with the J3-85? hmmmmmm.
I'd feel better in a J3 doing that than a 182.
Yeah, my thoughts exactly.
I have no major kvetch about (most) Cessnas. But I just don't trust them enough for that kind of stuff. Too fragile.
I'd feel better in a J3 doing that than a 182.
You sure a 207 wouldn’t be better. With them feathers nearly touching it’s practically a performance mod with them wings angled to flyFunny, I was thinking I would feel better doing that in a C-206 than a 182...
You sure a 207 wouldn’t be better. With them feathers nearly touching it’s practically a performance mod with them wings angled to fly