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Alaska 2009
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John Hauck



Joined: 09 Jan 2006
Posts: 4639
Location: Titus, Alabama (hauck's holler)

PostPosted: Mon Mar 02, 2009 9:42 am    Post subject: Alaska 2009 Reply with quote

Morning Gang:

For many years I have planned to make a flight to Alaska to celebrate my
70th year. This summer is that time.

I plan to depart hauck's holler, alabama, the last week of June 2009.

This will be a fun, enjoyable, hopefully relaxed flight to celebrate the
fourth flight of Miss P'fer, my Kolb MKIII, to Alaska, and hopefully making
70 years for me here on Mother Earth. None of us has a guarantee.

I plan to visit old friends I have made on that flight since the first one
15 years ago in 1994. I do not plan to push the envelope as I have done on
the past three flights to Alaska. I do plan to return to Deadhorse/Prudhoe
Bay on the North Slope and the Arctic Ocean. Also a visit to the
Helmericks, 40 miles NW of Deadhorse. If I can make coordination with my
Eskimo friend Robert Thompson, and weather permitting, I'll probably fly
over to Kaktovik (Barter Island), 125 sm east of Deadhorse. Usually, I fly
up through Bettles, Anaktuvuk Pass, to the North Slope, then back down the
Pipeline Haul Road (Dalton Highway) through Atigun Pass to Wiseman, AK, to
visit Jack Reakoff, a trapper I met there in 1994.

I don't plan on making the agressive flights I made in 2004, however, some
of that may change once I get back to Alaska. I met some local Athabascans
in Bettles on the way north to Deadhorse in 2004. There were about 15 or 20
of them from the village of Ruby. They were young men, late teens, early
twenties, waiting on an aircraft to fly them back to their village of Ruby.
They had been on the fire line for 30 days fighting forrest fires that raged
during my flight that year. They invited me to come visit. I promised them
I would, but ran out of time, money, and courage, on my last flight up
north.

A flight to Ruby from North Pole would be agressive and expensive. 100LL is
8.29 a gal at Galena, 45 miles west of Ruby, the nearest fuel to get me back
to North Pole. That makes it 300 sm one way, with no interim fuel stops
available. Probably pass this one up too. Wink

100LL at Bettles - 8.10

Deadhorse - 5.87

Barrow - 6.55

Fairbanks - 3.83 (this is good!!!)

Northway (port of embarkation) 7.60 (this is a total rip off because
Northway is right off the Alaska Hwy near the Canadian Border)

When it comes to fuel though, there is no choice except to top off the fuel
tank every chance you get. Northern Canada and Alaska, for that matter many
places in CONUS, are not places you want to depart with less than full
tanks.

Take care,

john h
mkIII


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John Hauck
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hauck's holler
Titus, Alabama
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robcannon



Joined: 22 Jun 2008
Posts: 39
Location: British Columbia

PostPosted: Mon Mar 02, 2009 12:35 pm    Post subject: Re: Alaska 2009 Reply with quote

John - would you be coming through British Columbia ? I live on Saltspring Island which lies between Vancouver and Victoria in the Gulf Islands. I live on a 1400 ft. grass strip, and you would be more than welcome to have a pit stop/rest here.
Rob Cannon


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John Hauck



Joined: 09 Jan 2006
Posts: 4639
Location: Titus, Alabama (hauck's holler)

PostPosted: Mon Mar 02, 2009 12:47 pm    Post subject: Alaska 2009 Reply with quote

Quote:
John - would you be coming through British Columbia ? I live on
Saltspring Island which lies between Vancouver and Victoria in the Gulf
Islands. I live on a 1400 ft. grass strip, and you would be more than
welcome to have a pit stop/rest here.
Rob Cannon

Rob:

No hard flight plan yet. Would be a nice route up through your area,
Fraiser River Canyon, Stewart-Cassiar Hwy to Watson Lake, then up the Alaska
Hwy to Fairbanks.

Apppreciate the invite. I'll stick your email in my Alaska 2009 file.

Thanks,

john h
mkIII


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John Hauck
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hauck's holler
Titus, Alabama
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PostPosted: Mon Mar 02, 2009 2:27 pm    Post subject: Alaska 2009 Reply with quote

John

Sounds like another wonderful trip.

This trip would make a spectacular article. Sure would be great if you would
put some words with some of your photos. It would be super public relations
for LSA and Kolb. I would bet Mary Jones would make it worth your time for a
EAA article.

Rick Neilsen
Redrive VW powered MKIIIC

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John Hauck



Joined: 09 Jan 2006
Posts: 4639
Location: Titus, Alabama (hauck's holler)

PostPosted: Mon Mar 02, 2009 4:34 pm    Post subject: Alaska 2009 Reply with quote

> This trip would make a spectacular article. Sure would be great if you
would
Quote:
put some words with some of your photos. It would be super public
relations for LSA and Kolb. I would bet Mary Jones would make it worth
your time for a EAA article.

Rick Neilsen


Rick N:

That would be nice to get some compensation for writing an article and
photos.

Most of the publishers want your article and your photos. When you mention
money, they choke. Tell me it is for the good of the sport. Wink

This may turn out not to be a solo flight as was the case of the first three
and a half flights to Alaska. I'm working on some company on this one.
Maybe one or two other Kolbs, or another Kolb and a Cub. Still in the
thinking stages.

I'll take a lot of photos and notes.

john h
mkIII


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John Hauck
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hauck's holler
Titus, Alabama
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JetPilot



Joined: 10 Jan 2006
Posts: 1246

PostPosted: Mon Mar 02, 2009 8:37 pm    Post subject: Re: Alaska 2009 Reply with quote

It will be great to see you doing another Alaska trip in your Kolb... Doing flights like this at 70 is pretty amazing, I hope I am so lucky when I get there ! Its good to hear you will be taking it easy, keeping it fun is what this is all sport is about and also makes the trip more enjoyable. We have lost to many people to accidents recently Sad Your flights inspire a lot of people, and I am sure you have been the reason for quite a number of people deciding to buy and build a Kolb over other designs. Take lots of pictures and videos, have you considered taking a HD video camera with you ? The new Sony XR520V will record many many hours of video on its hard drive in full HD, and the price is not to expensive... I would think the National Geographic or discovery channel like may take an interest in your trip if you have good quality video and pictures, it would make a really awesome and inspiring television program !

Mike


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John Hauck



Joined: 09 Jan 2006
Posts: 4639
Location: Titus, Alabama (hauck's holler)

PostPosted: Mon Mar 02, 2009 9:43 pm    Post subject: Alaska 2009 Reply with quote

I would think the National Geographic or discovery channel like may take
an interest in your trip if you have good quality video and pictures, it
would make a really awesome and inspiring television program !
Quote:

Mike


Mike:

That would be more like work than play.

I'll take photos, hopefully more of friends than forest. I think I have
taken most of the scenery type photos on the previous 3.5 flights.

I was 65 my last flight to Alaska in 2004. Was pretty noticeable I had
slowed down quite a bit since my 2001 Alaska flight. My flying days were
much shorter. Can't slow down too much or I'll never make it there and
back.

I remember a gentleman flying a Pioneer Flightstar from NC, I believe, to
Arizona or some place out west back in the 1984- 85 time period. He was
either 60 or 65 years old at the time. I still remember how impressed I was
that this old geezer still had the will, drive, and ability to complete a
flight of this type. Of course back then, a cross country flight in an
ultralight was very rare. I thought, at the time, I wanted to do something
like that when I got that age. Well, that age has come and gone before I
knew it. Hopefully, I can still do it. Time flies when you are having fun.

john h
mkIII


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John Hauck
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hauck's holler
Titus, Alabama
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Thom Riddle



Joined: 10 Jan 2006
Posts: 1597
Location: Buffalo, NY, USA (9G0)

PostPosted: Tue Mar 03, 2009 3:57 am    Post subject: Re: Alaska 2009 Reply with quote

John,

I've written four articles that were published in EAA's Light Sport Magazine over the last couple of years. I got paid. If they like what you send them, and you ask for payment, they will pay.... not a lot but it makes it worthwhile. Contact Mary Jones if you are interested. A heads up, they don't do much editing, so your finished copy, at least the words, need to be "reader ready". The only editing I've seen in my articles was injecting errors that were not in the copy I sent them Smile.

do not archive


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Thom Riddle
Buffalo, NY (9G0)



Don't worry about old age... it doesn't last very long.
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PostPosted: Tue Mar 03, 2009 7:31 am    Post subject: Alaska 2009 Reply with quote

At 11:42 PM 3/2/09 -0600, you wrote:
Quote:


I was 65 my last flight to Alaska in 2004. Was pretty noticeable I had
slowed down quite a bit since my 2001 Alaska flight. My flying days were
much shorter. Can't slow down too much or I'll never make it there and
back.


John,

Welcome to the over 70 flying club. A few years ago, I could look at an old
codger and say to my self "I will never look like that." Now when I look in
the mirror to shave, I see that person.

Don't let it worry you. People ask me how long I will fly, and I say that I
will as long as I can drag the FireFly in and out of the hangar. I may have
to rest a bit in a chair before I get in and crank up. One thing that helps
me is that I have met a fellow west of Winchester that is in his nineties
and he continues to fly. When I am out side working on the place and I hear
his 1/2 VW and see him fly over, it gives me a boost that if he can do it so
can I.

Now that I have a working air/fuel mixture control on the FireFly, this
summer, I hope to put a lot of pins in the map.

Jack B. Hart FF004
Winchester, IN


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PostPosted: Tue Mar 03, 2009 7:46 am    Post subject: Alaska 2009 Reply with quote

Two solutions to that Jack, either throw away the mirrors or don't
shave. Having a grizzly looking
gray beard keeps the young chicks from chasing you.

I have stopped lifting the tail now when moving the plane in and out
of the shed.
Spine is not as resilient as it once was.

90 year old guy with a 1/2 VW? that's great.
BB, a youthful 68 (in my mind anyway)
do not archive

On 3, Mar 2009, at 10:31 AM, Jack B. Hart wrote:

Quote:

<jbhart(at)onlyinternet.net>

At 11:42 PM 3/2/09 -0600, you wrote:
>
>
> I was 65 my last flight to Alaska in 2004. Was pretty noticeable
> I had
> slowed down quite a bit since my 2001 Alaska flight. My flying
> days were
> much shorter. Can't slow down too much or I'll never make it
> there and
> back.
>

John,

Welcome to the over 70 flying club. A few years ago, I could look
at an old
codger and say to my self "I will never look like that." Now when
I look in
the mirror to shave, I see that person.

Don't let it worry you. People ask me how long I will fly, and I
say that I
will as long as I can drag the FireFly in and out of the hangar. I
may have
to rest a bit in a chair before I get in and crank up. One thing
that helps
me is that I have met a fellow west of Winchester that is in his
nineties
and he continues to fly. When I am out side working on the place
and I hear
his 1/2 VW and see him fly over, it gives me a boost that if he can
do it so
can I.

Now that I have a working air/fuel mixture control on the FireFly,
this
summer, I hope to put a lot of pins in the map.

Jack B. Hart FF004
Winchester, IN



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John Hauck



Joined: 09 Jan 2006
Posts: 4639
Location: Titus, Alabama (hauck's holler)

PostPosted: Tue Mar 03, 2009 7:48 am    Post subject: Alaska 2009 Reply with quote

Quote:
I've written four articles that were published in EAA's Light Sport
Magazine over the last couple of years. I got paid.
--------
Thom Riddle


Wasn't like that in the old days, and up through late 2004.

Was fun getting my airplane and photos in international publications in the
beginning, but that wears off after 25 years of doing this.

I did not write anything about my 2004 flight. That was strictly my flight.
I didn't receive any sponsorship. Had no deadlines or obligations to meet.
Turned out to be the best flight yet.

john h
mkIII


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Thom Riddle



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Location: Buffalo, NY, USA (9G0)

PostPosted: Tue Mar 03, 2009 7:54 am    Post subject: Re: Alaska 2009 Reply with quote

Jack,
That is very good to hear.

One of my RANS S6-S partners is in his early 70s. He told me 5 years or so ago that he would probably stop flying at around 75 but he is showing no signs of slowing down. I'm only in my early 60s so I hopefully still have another decade or more before I retire my wings.

There are several oldish(80s) pilots at our airport but I've not seen any of the octogenarians actually fly in the last few years.

do not archive


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Buffalo, NY (9G0)



Don't worry about old age... it doesn't last very long.
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John Hauck



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PostPosted: Tue Mar 03, 2009 8:08 am    Post subject: Alaska 2009 Reply with quote

> Welcome to the over 70 flying club. A few years ago, I could look at an
old
Quote:
codger and say to my self "I will never look like that." Now when I look
in
the mirror to shave, I see that person.
>

Quote:
Jack B. Hart FF004


Thanks, Jack:

Cool being an old codger. I get away with a lot more sh_t now than I could
in my younger days. Wink

Yea, sometimes the mirror is shocking, until I figure out who that old fart
is looking back.

I'm not as mobile, flexible, or strong as I was a few years ago, but when I
get in the Kolb, I fell like I am 18 again. I don't know that my ability to
fly well has deminished any. However, I have not been flying nearly as much
as I used to. This shows up as a rusty old pilot right away. A day or two
into a long cross country and I am back in the groove flying and staying
ahead of the airplane and my navigation.

john h
mkIII


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John Hauck
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PostPosted: Tue Mar 03, 2009 8:39 am    Post subject: Alaska 2009 Reply with quote

At 07:54 AM 3/3/09 -0800, you wrote:
Quote:


One of my RANS S6-S partners is in his early 70s. He told me 5 years or so
ago that he would probably stop flying at around 75 but he is showing no

signs of slowing down. I'm only in my early 60s so I hopefully still have
another decade or more before I retire my wings.
Quote:


Thom,

My problem is that I did not get started until very late. Flew on and off a
little from 1970, but did not finish a ticket or own a plane. I had to be
responsible by getting my kids and wife educated. But now that I am retired
I have learned to be selfish and irresponsible. This mode really started in
1999 when the FireFly first broke ground, continues up to this day, and I
hope for many years to come.

The move up here to Indiana has been a good one, in that, where I used to
have to drive 38 miles to get to the airport, the current trip is 1.5 miles.
Also, Indiana seems to be kinder on rental hangar space. I can fly all
year on one Social Security check and have money left over. Not bragging,
just a fact. Let's face it, if the old codgers did not keep spending money
the economy would be in much worse shape than it is.

Jack B. Hart FF004
Winchester, IN

do not archive


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PostPosted: Tue Mar 03, 2009 11:47 pm    Post subject: Alaska 2009 Reply with quote

My instructor is in his early 80s and still instructing.Its 20 years since
he sent me into the sky by my lonsome. Its now my turn to teach him how to
operate a 1914 Ford T. How times change.

Tony
Downunder
Kolb MK111c
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Joined: 03 Jun 2007
Posts: 721
Location: santa fe, NM

PostPosted: Wed Mar 04, 2009 6:56 am    Post subject: Re: Alaska 2009 Reply with quote

I'm still "only" 46, but am already transitioning into being an older dude. The main benefit is your resistance to taking zhit from the younger gung-ho's with lots of testosterone goes steadily upwards.

OTOH, you start to realize your flying time is ultimately finite, so you need to do more of it.

I'm still trying to see if I like the long xcountry flying, as my admiration for you folks that do it is as high as for probably anyone else on the earth. So far, tho, I seem to be reverting back to my UL flying habits, preferring to go "up" over going over yonder.

But even tho Im a little bit of an infidel, you're welcome to fly through KSAF and I'd love to at least shake your hand if you do. Might be a little off your route, but that's a standing invitation at any rate.

I'm still kicking the Firefly idea around too, tho that's still a ways out after I pay off some more of my current stuff. So hope to be part of the Kolb family again..

LS


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John Hauck



Joined: 09 Jan 2006
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PostPosted: Wed Mar 04, 2009 7:27 am    Post subject: Alaska 2009 Reply with quote

> My instructor is in his early 80s and still instructing.Its 20 years
since
Quote:
he sent me into the sky by my lonsome. Its now my turn to teach him how to
operate a 1914 Ford T. How times change.

Tony


Tony/Gang:

Flying my Kolb is no problem. I think I can continue to fly it for quite
some time, as long as I can get it out of the hanger. Need to do some
landscaping to cut down on the slope toward the hanger. Been having a hard
time pushing the fat mkIII up hill.

Doing an Alaska flight is much more physically and mentally demanding than
flying around the patch. The mental and physical part affect each other.
When I get really tired, it is easy to make dumb decisions. Weather
extremes play Hell physically and mentally. Like the 2004 Alaska flight, I
got into a situation where I ran out of visibility, could not get through a
4,000 foot pass because the ceiling was 3,000 feet. I was getting low on
fuel, so I could not take an alternate route up the river around the
mountain. It was drizzling rain, cold, late in the day, been flying all
day, tired and hungry, had not had a good meal that day. Murphy was piling
up on me. I found a straight section of road on the side of the mountain
that had a small, muddy pull out to get the mkIII off the highway. When the
road was clear, I was on the ground. I was a long way out in the bush.
Nothing out there but me and the bears. I got my tent up in the rain and
mud, grabbed my tiny .22 survival rifle, and crashed for the night.
Luckily, I had a satellite phone to call Whitehorse FSS and cancel my flight
plan. The FSS operator asked me if I got the airplane off the highway when
I told him I had landed there. Wink

That was 5 years ago when I was 65. Of course, I have the question in my
mine, "Can I still do it?"

Other times I got into situations where I had to physically man handle the
aircraft on the ground to get it into a place out of the wind when there was
no way to get it tied down. This type situation happens at the end of a
long flying day when mind and body are worn out. Easy to make some dumb
decisions. I got a severe chill when I landed at Eagle Plains, Yukon
Territory. I was shaking like a leaf, uncontrollably. In a situation like
that it is hard to think, much less push a heavy airplane in the wind around
a bunch of old sheds and buildings.

I think if I take my time, think ahead of the envelope, I can make it and
still enjoy my flight. Probably have to slow down some, not push, and take
a little longer to get there and get home.

Weather and patience are primary factors in accomplishing this flight. It
really gets hard, at times, to sit in the middle of nowhere waiting on
weather....

Better be careful or I'll talk myself out of the flight. Wink

john h


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MKIII/912ULS
hauck's holler
Titus, Alabama
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John Hauck



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PostPosted: Wed Mar 04, 2009 8:17 am    Post subject: Alaska 2009 Reply with quote

> But even tho Im a little bit of an infidel, you're welcome to fly through
KSAF and I'd love to at least shake your hand if you do. Might be a little
off your route, but that's a standing invitation at any rate.
>
Quote:
LS


Lucien:

Come May you need to load and fire up the Titan, point it west, and head for
MV. It is 220 sm from Santa Fe Airport to Gouldings airstrip, a little over
two hour flight in a Titan. If you couldn't spend the weekend with us, you
could fly over, have lunch, then fly back home.

Thanks for the invite to Santa Fe. I have never been there. I'll take you
up on it one of these flights.

john h
mkIII


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PostPosted: Wed Mar 04, 2009 5:34 pm    Post subject: Alaska 2009 Reply with quote

About selling articles & photos -- one big advantage, if it applies
to you, is that you can deduct some or all of your expenses from
your taxes -- IF you sell an article or at least make an honest
effort to do so. Talk to your tax man. And good luck.
Russ K

On Mar 3, 2009, at 6:57 AM, Thom Riddle wrote:

Quote:


John,

I've written four articles that were published in EAA's Light Sport
Magazine over the last couple of years. I got paid. If they like
what you send them, and you ask for payment, they will pay.... not
a lot but it makes it worthwhile. Contact Mary Jones if you are
interested. A heads up, they don't do much editing, so your
finished copy, at least the words, need to be "reader ready". The
only editing I've seen in my articles was injecting errors that
were not in the copy I sent them Smile.

do not archive

--------
Thom Riddle
Buffalo, NY
http://riddletr.googlepages.com/sportpilot-cfi
http://riddletr.googlepages.com/a%26pmechanix

A complex system that works is invariably found to have evolved
from a simple system that works.
- John Gaule


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Joined: 09 Jan 2006
Posts: 4639
Location: Titus, Alabama (hauck's holler)

PostPosted: Wed Mar 04, 2009 5:39 pm    Post subject: Alaska 2009 Reply with quote

Quote:
About selling articles & photos -- one big advantage, if it applies to
you, is that you can deduct some or all of your expenses from your
taxes -- > Russ K


That would be great. However, I don't make enough money to list deductions.
Better for me to take a standard deduction.

john h
mkIII


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