Badger
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Badger
Back in the day, no one would bother to remove the wreckage way out in the boonies. I wonder how remote an area would have to be before the insurance company would leave the wreck? I imagine that unless it was on gov't land, the property owners would insist on the responsible parties removing it. Size matters too. A downed 152 doesn't warrant cutting roads to the crash site, but an airliner undoubtably would.
Interesting, but kind of eerie.
I thought that they tried to get wreckage removed from the crash site, unless it was in an extremely remote area, like Denali in Alaska (that kind of thing). That they could bring in a chopper and somehow airlift the wreckage out?
Maybe it's a lot more complicated (and expensive) than I think it is. I suppose it could cost thousands to remove wreckage. Is that something an insurance company would pay for?
If I ever came across a crash site, not sure I'd be up for poking around. I dunno, it would be like crawling all over a gravesite at a cemetery, since somebody probably died there.
Here's an interesting site where the guy tracked down an A-12 (predecessor to the SR-71) crash site among other interesting things.
http://www.otherhand.org/home-page/...aces/bluefire-main/bluefire/the-hunt-for-928/
The linked story is the A-12 hunt. There are a dozen other very interesting stories on the site.