Kenny Phillips
Final Approach
- Joined
- Jul 29, 2018
- Messages
- 5,634
- Display Name
Display name:
Kenny Phillips
Why,, I'd bet they didn't harm a thing.Hope rangers got the tail number and do something about this.
YEP !Textbook emergency landing, followed by resolving the issue and departing ASAP.
Easy!
What if 500 helicopters landed in the blooms? Is that OK, if one is OK? Or did the "chosen one" land? The pilot should be busted.Omg short lived flower blossoms might have lived a day less than they could have. It’s the end of the world!!!!!!!!! Until tomorrow.
What if all the blossoms died a day earlier? Probably nothing.What if 500 helicopters landed in the blooms? Is that OK, if one is OK? Or did the "chosen one" land? The pilot should be busted.
Slippery slope logic, because using reasoning and discretion is just too hard.What if 500 helicopters landed in the blooms? Is that OK, if one is OK? Or did the "chosen one" land? The pilot should be busted.
Why,, I'd bet they didn't harm a thing.
And much less of a foot print than a million fold stomping thru the posies
thing is though, helicopters can be operated at different minimums than fixed wing:Textbook emergency landing, followed by resolving the issue and departing ASAP.
Hell yes, every one should get to enjoy the flowers.What if 500 helicopters landed in the blooms? Is that OK
So, everyone who goes to see them can pick a bouquet for themselves? How many will be left for the future?Hell yes, every one should get to enjoy the flowers.
So, everyone who goes to see them can pick a bouquet for themselves? How many will be left for the future?
When I was in the area last week, I should have driven my car through the field for a better look. How much harm could a single car do?Slippery slope logic, because using reasoning and discretion is just too hard.
In the grand scheme of short blossoming flowers, almost nothing detectable. But it would prove you were a jerk if you were to do that.When I was in the area last week, I should have driven my car through the field for a better look. How much harm could a single car do?
None of here are ecologists, so none of us can say the what the damage would be to those particular flowers with any authority. It may well be as slight as you claim. I also know that just a few hours west of me, I can see the Oregon trail, still visible after over 100 years because the trail was packed down enough that the prairie doesn't grow as well there. Aside from the poppies, there are also lupines and other flowers growing as well with the poppies and those may not be as resistant to trampling.In the grand scheme of short blossoming flowers, almost nothing detectable. But it would prove you were a jerk if you were to do that.
I'm sure that is part of it, a very large part of it. Probably most of the hooplah, in fact.Sometimes I wonder if all the hooplah is more about "We're mad because those rich people with their aircraft can do things we can't"
They did close at least one of the parks due to damage caused by the crowds. I did see news stories about pedestrians acting like jerks.After all, it's pretty plain that crowds going off trail causes a lot more damage than one helo landing.
And we must consider certain inequalities:
-no news story for each person laying in the flowers but we do have one for the helo.
-they are talking about charges for the helo landing but do they have similar and as frequent charges for errant pedestrians?
Perhaps, but landing a helicopter in the flowers encourages people walking to go where they shouldn't..."Why can't I go there? I'm lighter than that helicopter!"The helo landing, if for sight-seeing purposes, is not condoned by me.
However, the news and possibly the park reaction to it are excessive.
More than a helicopter touching down for a few minutes, I would guess.When I was in the area last week, I should have driven my car through the field for a better look. How much harm could a single car do?
Let's see...while I didn't see what make of helicopter in the article, let's assume an R44- it is very common and a fairly typical sized helicopter. It weighs 2500 lb, about the same as the car I was driving. So the pressure on the ground is similarMore than a helicopter touching down for a few minutes, I would guess.
I’m all for preserving wildlife, it’s just nice when common sense isn’t jettisoned.
One event, such as a helicopter landing, doesn't do much harm
Slippery slope logic, because using reasoning and discretion is just too hard.
I've seen real damage from a police chopper that landed in a development I was associated with. Had to resurface a freshly paved cul-de-sac that one landed in. Not one house built yet, had to bring road crew back in.
Either the concrete was still wet or pretty crappy, sounds like the crew needed to come back anyway.
So what was your point? It's perfectly fine to land a helicopter on an area that is already stressed?
(reply to post #27)
I didn't make that comment.My point is that slippery slope logic short circuits sound reasoning. And frequently leads to absurdity. 500 helicopters landing to pick up flowers is not a reasonable basis in advocating for punishing the pilot.
I didn't make that comment.
But is still seems as if you think landing a helicopter in an area already stressed by fools, many of which are anti-aviation, is a good idea. Sound reasoning suggests either not landing, or going somewhere else where they won't add to the damage caused by said fools and in an area more friendly for the landing. I never said anything about punishing the pilot, merely landing there wasn't a good idea for many reasons.
The continued discussion suggests that maybe you thought it is a good idea to land in that fashion. I'm attempting to apply some thought to the situation, but the replies to my posts suggests that isn't being acknowledged. My posts indicate it wasn't a great idea to land at that location, at that time, and perhaps we are in agreement. I did say if s/he landed elsewhere or merely hovered, there wouldn't be an issue (to me).I know. You responded to my initial comment and I answered your question.
Can you point to anything I said that suggests I think landing in the field was a good idea? I don’t know the pilot and I have no idea why he landed there. I’m just not concerned that it will now be regarded as an open airfield with hundreds of pilots showing up to test it out. If that does happen, I’m sure it can be rather easily stopped.
Not sure what difference that makes, but I know that Antelope Valley, where the helicopter landed, is not Temecula. Given California traffic, probably 2 or 3 days drive between them . In Nebraska, it would only be an hour drive, maybe.No offense but you are from Nebraska, not local.
Native plant, unless it grows in your garden and you don't wish it to do so. I'm not sure of your point about meth- this poppy doesn't produce narcotics. Certainly not meth. So no one went to the fields to harvest the poppies for their drugs.This is happening in Temecula, the last time this many people went to Temecula was when it made the Meth capital of the US. These are Poppy flowers, not some ultra rare and delicate ecosystem. It's a native weed that is in superbloom due to all the rain we have had, that's it. Even in the draught they bloomed. 2 years ago those same hills were on fire, no one cared, and yet today it is being reported as a ultra sensitive eco system. No, not it is not.
They will be there next year, and the next year and then every year after until they either build houses, the homeless move in or the burn down again to fire.
This reminds me of the old cow fart discussions. There's ignorance and stupidity, and stupid you can't fix. Who came up with that "catchy" little Super Bloom label? Hilarious. It's nothing more than a bunch of wild flowers blooming because they finally got a little water. Happens every spring with the bluebonnets in Texas. Instead of focusing their attention on people picking, or stepping on a few of the billions and billions of blooms, the intelligent thing to do would be to warn about the critter hazards lurking in those blooms. The public should be made aware that rattlesnakes don't always rattle any more. California. What can you say?