Old Congress Days 2007

A great local gig.

Today I flew for the second year in a row at Old Congress Days, an annual event in nearby Congress, AZ. The event includes a parade, flea market, music, and other activities and draws crowds from Congress, Yarnell, Peeples Valley, Stanton, and North Ranch. There were even a few people from Wickenburg who came to the event just to fly with me.

Assisted by my very able ground crew of Darlene and Dave (who took these photos), I did 6 to 8 minute rides around Congress, AZ for $25 per person. I started flying right after the parade at about 10:45 AM and didn’t stop until 1:15 PM, when I had just enough fuel left to get home.

Congress DaysHere’s a photo of the landing zone as Dave loads passengers. I want to thank the Congress Fire Department for allowing me once again to use the emergency medevac helipad beside the firehouse. This helipad makes an excellent landing zone for events because it is completely surrounded by a short chain-link fence, making it very easy for my ground crew to secure. But best of all, it’s paved, level, and dust-free.

Congress DaysHere’s a shot of me taking off on one of the flights. I picked up from the pad, made a 90 ° turn, and took off to the northeast. My only obstacle (other than the short fence) was a set of power lines a distance away. I had no trouble clearing them on any flight. Although a train track runs right behind the helipad area, only one train came by during the entire event — and it stopped until I landed on the pad!

Congress DaysDarlene took this shot at the end of the day while I was cooling down the helicopter before shutting down. Do I look tired? We packed up the gear — table, chair, flags, signs, etc. — in the helicopter, then went for lunch at the Community Center, where they were serving barbeque. Afterward, I flew back to Wickenburg, where I washed the helicopter in preparation for the six-day excursion I start tomorrow.

Many thanks to the folks who organized Old Congress Days for asking me to be part of their event. It was a pleasure to fly so many people — especially so many young people — many of whom were on their very first flight.

And a special thanks to Darlene and Dave for their support at this event. I couldn’t have done it without them. Thanks for the photos, too!

Question: When does an apparently fun way to earn income become a "job"?

Answer: From the moment you start.

While I was in the middle of the Big September Gig, I found several times to post “tweets” to Twitter about my progress, using the text messaging feature of my Treo. Later, when I got a chance to read the tweets of the people I follow, I found this comment from a fellow Twitter member:

Wish I was out flying but after so much, does it become a “job”?

The question kind of floored me. After all, the flying I do for hire is a job. So I replied:

Any time you’re required to perform a task at someone else’s whim in exchange for money, you’re doing a job, aren’t you?

But that doesn’t mean it has to be a bad thing.

And that pretty much sums up the way I think about all the things I do for a living, whether it’s writing or flying.

Why People Might Think Otherwise

That got me thinking about why some people might think that my flying or writing was not like a job. What did they include in their definition of job that I wasn’t including?

And I came up with the following list of items:

  • Many people’s jobs require them to be in a certain place at a certain time every day, such as an office or a jobsite. There’s usually some regularity to this, for example, 9 to 5, five days a week.
  • Many people’s jobs have a limited amount of time off that has to be approved before it’s used. For example, a 2-week vacation or “personal days.”
  • Many people’s jobs include a manager or supervisor or some other kind of “boss” who keeps tabs on their work and has the final say over how their work is done. This same person will also evaluate performance and provide input into promotion and raise decisions. And this person can terminate employment at any time.

For many people, this is the true gist of what a job is. They go to work on a regular basis, they do something under the supervision of a boss, and they get paid. A few times a year, they take time off.

Freelancing and Business Ownership is Different

I’m a freelance writer and the owner of a business. These are my two “jobs.” And in both jobs, I’m subject to the same requirements of a regular job, but in different ways.

As a freelance writer:

  • Although I’m not required to be in a certain place at a certain time every day, I am required to complete my work on time. So that means I have to sit at my desk and work to get the book or article or whatever is due done. And if meeting a tough deadline means working 12- or 14-hour days — even on weekends — that’s just the way it is.
  • I get as much vacation time as I like and no one has to approve it. However, if I don’t work, I don’t get books or articles written. And I don’t get paid.
  • I have a boss: my editor. He or she decides whether I’m creating the content the publisher wants to see. He or she can also make changes to my work or require me to redo it a different way. And if I don’t do my job right, he or she is not likely to recommend me or hire me for future assignments.

As the owner and chief pilot of Flying M Air:

  • When I have a gig, I have to show up on time and stay until my client is satisfied that the job is done. That job can be any day of the week, any time of the day or night.
  • I get as much time off as I want — as long as there isn’t an upcoming gig on my calendar. But when I’m not working, I’m not making money.
  • My boss is my client. If he wants me to be on the ramp, ready to fly at 6 AM, I have to be there. (There are exceptions to this. For example, as pilot-in-command, I have final say over whether a flight is conducted. So if I feel a flight cannot be conducted safely due to weather or other conditions, I can cancel it.) If I don’t do my job satisfactorily, my client will probably not hire me again in the future.

But Wait, There’s More!

I can make a good argument that being a freelancer or business owner is a lot more work than being an employee with a desk job.

  • When I’m not working and have no work lined up, I have to work to find work. For example, I might need to write a book proposal or pitch an article idea. I have to maintain my Web sites to keep potential customers — editors, readers, passengers — interested in my services. Or meet with hotel concierges to convince them that they should be recommending my helicopter day trips to their guests.
  • I have to manage the finances of each of my businesses. That includes keeping track of all banking records, balancing bank accounts, paying bills, and filling out sales tax returns. (Thank heaven I don’t have employees anymore; dealing with that paperwork is a nightmare.)
  • I have to keep my competitive edge. That means learning about the new technology I might have to write about and purchasing the computer hardware and software I need to get my job done right. I have to take an annual Part 135 check ride with an FAA inspector and work with helicopter instructors to get advanced ratings (like the instrument rating I want to get this season) and practice emergency maneuvers. It also means preflighting and washing the helicopter and managing its maintenance.
  • I have to think about and plan for my businesses 24/7/365. So yes, I lose sleep when I have a seemingly impossible to meet deadline ahead of me for my biggest book. (I made it.) Or when I can’t figure out where that pesky oil leak is and wonder whether it’s serious enough to be squawked. (It wasn’t.) And I’m thinking in the shower or while driving or flying about things I can do to grow my businesses and my income.

Do you do all that in your job?

I’m Not Complaining!

I’m certainly not complaining. While it’s true that being a freelancer or business owner can be a headache sometimes, it’s never bad enough for me to face the alternative — that desk job. I’ve been there and I know.

There’s something enticing about collecting a regular paycheck (with benefits, if you’re lucky) and moving your way up the corporate ladder — or even just skating at a ho-hum job. There’s something sweet about not having ultimate responsibility for profitability of a business. It’s certainly great to leave your job at the office door when you leave at the end of an 8- or 9-hour day.

I made the move to a freelance career in 1990, after eight years of a “9 to 5” job. And after 18 years of working for myself, building a writing career and flying business, I simply could not go back to the 9 to 5 grind. I’d rather work my ass off on my own schedule, taking the ups and downs that come with the freelance/business owner lifestyle, and be completely responsible for my livelihood than to tie myself to an office job again.

But that’s me.

What do you think? Use the Comments link or form for this post to share your thoughts.

And please, no get-rich-quick links. They will be deleted.

The Big September Gig, Day Four

Night flight on the Rez, rain, rest.

I slept badly again and was up at 4 AM. It was very dark outside. I needed to make the 30-mile flight to Cal Black for fuel and be on the ramp, ready to fly before sunrise.

My Thoughts on Night Flying

I’m not afraid to fly at night. I do a “moonlight dinner tour” in the Phoenix area that flies all around the area before I return to Wickenburg. It doesn’t matter whether there’s a moon when you’re flying over the urban sprawl that is America’s fifth or sixth largest city. It’s so darn bright that I get reflections from the ground in the bubble.

And I fly around the Wickenburg area at night when there’s a moon. I did it twice in September. No big deal.

But the Navajo Reservation isn’t anything like Phoenix or Wickenburg. It’s thousands of square miles of mostly empty land with mountains and ridges and buttes and canyons. And it gets very dark at night.

That said, I knew what I needed to do to be on the ramp with fuel in time for my dawn flight. I had to wait until I could see the horizon in the direction I was going to fly — northwest — and then go for it. By the time I got to Cal Black, it should be light enough to see the runway. Ten to fifteen minutes on the ground while Maury fueled me would be more time for the sky to brighten. The return flight was toward the dawn sky, so I shouldn’t have any problem coming back.

And that’s pretty much how it all came off. Except that when I took off at about 6 AM, I could barely see that 6000+ foot ridge I had to cross on the northwest side of the San Juan River. I started climbing immediately. I could see a large butte to my left and had no trouble avoiding it. Below me, each Navajo home I flew near had a big bright light that illuminated the yard. I could see trailers and hogans and trucks. The homes were dark. The occupants were probably still asleep.

When I passed the last Navajo home, still 20 miles from my destination, I suddenly felt very lonely. There were no lights in front of me. Just that dark ridge with a hint of taller mountains way out in the distance. To my left, however, I was very surprised to see a bunch of lights near the base of Navajo Mountain. About 30 miles away.

I continued to climb. I couldn’t remember how tall the ridge was, but I wanted to clear it with plenty of room to spare. 8,000 feet MSL should be enough. I climbed.

And then I saw the lights of the Bullfrog and Halls Crossing marinas on Lake Powell. I wasn’t flying into emptiness. There was something up ahead.

But nothing warmed my heart as much as the rotating beacon at Cal Black airport, which I saw when I was still 15 miles out.

That’s when I crossed the ridge. It was actually a series of ridges with deep canyons between them. Very dramatic during the daylight hours. A cool place to take a hike, I bet — if you could get to it from the ground. I probably cleared the ridges by 1,000 feet, but they looked a lot closer in the gray, predawn light. And I knew that if my engine quit right then and there, I’d be dead. There simply wasn’t any way I’d find a decent emergency LZ there in the dark.

Fortunately, my engine kept running and I kept flying. After the last ridge, I cut power and began the long descent to the airport over the sloping terrain.

I’d been making radio calls since I was 20 miles out, calling in every 5 miles. Maury hadn’t replied. I hoped he had the volume turned up loud enough to hear me and wake up. It would be a bummer if walking to the terminal building to wake him caused me to be late.

I was still 5 miles out when I activated the pilot controlled lighting with five clicks of the mike button. The airport’s runway lights appeared in the gloom, bright white and blue lights that outlined the runway and taxiway perfectly. Now all I had to do was figure out where the fuel pump was along that line.

A light came on over the pump as I neared. And there was Maury, standing by his golf cart. I pulled in close to the pump and shut down.

While he fueled, we talked about the joy of living in remote places. I told him that if he ever wanted to go on vacation, I’d watch the place for him. He told me he’d rather read about vacation places in books and magazines. Less of a hassle. He told me that when he was a kid, he always wanted to be a lighthouse keeper. But now they’re all automated. I pointed to the rotating beacon and told him that he was a lighthouse keeper.

When Maury was finished fueling, I climbed back into the helicopter and started back up. He flicked off the light over the pump just as I was lifting off.

As I expected, the flight back was easy. Clouds in the east showed color briefly as the sun, still beneath the horizon, illuminated them from below. I sped across the desert, climbing the slope to the ridges and crossing over them. In the distance, I could see the lights at Goulding’s. But I could also see the texture of the land I flew over. It was almost daytime.

I set down at the pad at Gouldings at 6 AM. Mike and Oleg were waiting.

Last Flight in Monument Valley

We took off to Monument Valley sometime around sunrise. We weren’t sure if the sun was up or not. The clouds in the east were thicker than I thought and hid the sun from view.

Mike was bummed. The light was too soft. But it wouldn’t be long before the sun peeked over the top of the cloud. He wanted to be in position. So we headed out to the formation commonly known as the Totem Pole, watching the light on the buttes as we went.

What followed was more than an hour of precision flying, following the instructions issued by Mike and Oleg. I flew all over Monument Valley at all elevations, back and forth around the buttes. The scenery around me was beautiful, the light eventually very good. We flew briefly to Agathla Peak, which is halfway between Kayenta and Monument Valley on Route 163. Then back to Monument Valley for more shots.

Another Fuel Run

Although we had enough fuel for a trip to Goosenecks, Mike wanted to get there later in the morning, so we went for fuel first. And as we made our way toward Cal Black, I realized that the sky was quite thick with clouds.

Mike noticed, too. “Is it raining?” he asked.

“Looks like it to me,” I said.

“We will get wet,” he said.

“Maybe a little,” I agreed.

He suggested that we go back to Goulding’s and wait until the rain stopped. I didn’t like that idea. First, it wasn’t raining at Goulding’s (yet). Second, we couldn’t see the area where it was raining from Goulding’s. Third, the idea was to fly early in the morning when the light was good. And fourth, I really wanted to get the flight finished so I could get some rest.

Rather than explain all this, I told him that at 90 to 100 knots, which was the speed I was flying, the water tended to skim around the helicopter. This is what I’d always observed in the past. Heck, I’d flown through the edge of a thunderstorm with pouring rain with all four doors off and had barely gotten a drop on me!

But when we hit the rain, just after crossing the ridge, I realized that Mike and Oleg were indeed getting wet. They moved their cameras away from the gaping doorways. I was nice and dry with my door on.

[I should explain something here for readers who are not desert dwellers. In normal climates, getting wet is a big deal. It often means that you’ll stay wet until you do something to get dry. But in the desert, just leaving a wet area is enough to get you dry. The air is so dry that anything that is wet dries within minutes as soon as you take it away from the source of wetness. That’s one of the reasons I don’t mind leaving the windows off in my Jeep, even in the rain. The seats and carpet will dry when the rain stops.]

When we landed at Cal Black, Maury was waiting at the pump. It was raining there, too, but had evidently just started. When I told Mike that no, he could not smoke in my helicopter, he and Oleg stepped out into the rain. I chatted with Maury, unwilling to stay dry while he was getting wet for my benefit. When he was finished, I waved the others over. Maury hurried back to shelter in his golf cart. I dried the two passenger seats off with rags I keep under my seat and loaded my passengers in.

“Are we going to leave now?” Mike asked.

“Sure,” I replied. “Why not?”

“Well, it’s raining.”

This is something I don’t understand. So many people think that you can’t fly in the rain. Like the helicopter will melt or something. But we’d flown in the rain to get to the airport. Why couldn’t we fly in the rain to leave?

I pointed in the direction of Goosenecks, where the sky was bright and the sun was probably shining. “It’s not raining there,” I said.

I started up and, a few minutes later, we were heading toward sunshine.

Goosenecks

Goosenecks of the San JuanIt was partly cloudy at Goosenecks. We spent a lot of time hovering not far from the parking area — but about 1,500 feet above it. We got a few shots of a rock formation near there, then went back for more Goosenecks shots. The air was relatively smooth, but Oleg did not ask for one of his 360° panoramics. (I think it’s because Mike doesn’t like the flying I have to do for them — which makes two of us.)

I took this picture the next day,when I was alone and flying to Farmington. Not a great picture — you try taking a photo with your left hand while flying a helicopter! — but it gives you the idea of the area. You can clearly see the road and parking area for the viewpoint. Please ignore the glare; I took the shot through the plexiglas bubble. And oh yes, that is Monument Valley in the distance.

Then it was done. Mike told me to fly back to Goulding’s.

R and R?

Back at Goulding’s, we put the doors back on the helicopter. I stood on the bumper of Mike’s rental SUV and tied down the blades. Then they departed to rejoin their group. Their plan was to go camping with a guide atop Hunt’s Mesa, which overlooks all of Monument Valley. With clouds moving in, I had concerns about their timing.

I was hungry, but it was too late for breakfast. I used the microwave in the pilot lounge to heat up a Banquet pot pie I’d bought the evening before at the grocery store. I hoped that would satisfy me for a while.

Then I got to work on my Leopard book. Yes, I’d brought that work with me. There were two laptops in my bag — my trusty 12″ PowerBook and my 15″ MacBook Pro. That’s why my bag was so darn heavy. (Laptops are light and portable, but not when you’re carrying two of them.) I still needed to write the Introduction and Acknowledgments.

To write the Introduction, I had to get the original file off my iDisk. Since my PowerBook wasn’t set up for iDisk syncing (because I didn’t have enough free hard disk space to accommodate the new 10GB iDisk size), I needed an Internet connection. Although my phone worked at my room, the Internet capabilities did not. That means I needed to get up to the lodge.

I called for the shuttle, unwilling to lug the two laptops and associated power cords up the hill in a plastic shopping bag. I waited. The shuttle didn’t come, but housekeeping did. One of the housekeepers ran me up to the lodge.

I parked myself on one of the leather sofas in the lobby and got online. It wasn’t long before I realized that I’d left behind the DVD with all the book files on it. I needed the files to reference the existing figures that would be used in the Introduction. That meant another round trip to my room. But not just then. I did what I could do, checked and replied to e-mail, deleted some spam comments on my blog, and closed up both computers.

Then I went for lunch in the restaurant: Navajo fry bread with a bowl of pork chile stew. A bit on the spicy side for me, but excellent.

It had begun raining while I was in the lobby doing my work. It was still raining an hour later. The tourists who’d eaten in the restaurant were clustered together under cover on the stairs, waiting for their bus. No one wanted to get wet. Obviously not desert dwellers. I walked back down to the lobby in the pouring rain and asked for a lift back to the hangar. A while later, I was warm and dry in my room.

Clouds in Monument ValleyVisibility in Monument Valley had dropped to just a few miles. I could no longer see the ridge to the northwest that I’d crossed four times that day and the buttes in the valley were shrouded by clouds. It rained on and off. Every once in a while, I’d pop outside to see what things looked like in the valley. A few times, I took photos.

I also relaxed. I had about 900 songs on the MacBook Pro that I’d loaded into iTunes for my Front Row chapter of the Leopard book and I set that computer up as a little stereo. (The 12″ PowerBook’s speakers suck.) I wrote up the first few days of the trip.

Helicopters at Monument ValleyIt cleared a little and the two Huskies that had been on the ramp overnight returned from wherever they’d been all day. A while later, a Bell 206L landed on the helipad beside mine.

I was standing in the doorway, looking out into the day while chatting on the phone with my brother when he landed. The pilot shut down and, when the blades stopped spinning, walked over. Turned out, he was from Arizona Heliservices, which is based in Mesa. He’d been hired as a film ship for a movie being filmed in the valley. As we talked, a Budget rental truck pulled up next to his helicopter and two guys began rigging it with a special camera mount. I told him about the pilot lounge next door and let him go about his business.

Later, I tried again to get a good panoramic shot of the area. This is what I wound up with. You can click it to see a larger view; be prepared to scroll right and left.

At Goulding's

Sunset with Clouds at Monument ValleyAbout an hour before sunset, the sun broke through some of the clouds, illuminating one of the buttes. I took out my “good camera” — my Nikon D80 is nothing compared to the super high tech professional equipment carried by the photographers I’d been flying for the past few days — and took some photos. I could see the hint of a rainbow to the east, but not enough to photograph.

I thought about my Russian friends atop Hunts Mesa. I hoped they were warm and dry and getting a good show.

I worked on my blog entries into the night. It was very dark when I finally shut off the lights and went to sleep.

The Big September Gig, Day Three

Lots of flying.

I spent a good portion of Sunday flying around Monument Valley and the Goosenecks of the San Juan River with two or three photographers on board.

Perfect Weather, Outrageous Scenery

Sunday was an incredibly beautiful day. Not a cloud in the sky, little or no wind, and clear views of everything around us. I was ready to fly at dawn and we took off soon afterward. We flew a few laps around Monument Valley, then headed north to the Goosenecks of the San Juan.

Monument Valley is cool. No doubt about it. All those towering red rocks rising from the desert floor. At this point, I think I’ve seen them from every angle in all kinds of light. I’m still awed when I get a fresh view or when the light hits a rock formation just right.

But Monument Valley is so often depicted as an icon of the southwest — remember Forest Gump running up Route 163? — that it’s become a cliche.

The Goosenecks of the San Juan, however, is something few people have seen — and it’s less than 30 miles up the road! As I’ve mentioned elsewhere, it’s best seen from the air, but there’s a perfectly good parking area at a view point that’ll give you enough of a look to remember it for a lifetime.

We flew laps around Goosenecks at 2,000 to 3,000 feet AGL. The altitude is required just to get the whole thing in the frame of a camera.

I wish I had a photo to share with you, but I’m usually pretty busy flying when I’m over it and can’t take pictures. I’m hoping that one of the photographers reads this and sends me a low-res image from the trip.

My only complaint: it was a lot colder than I’d expected up there. The two long-sleeved shirts and jeans I was wearing was not enough.

Earning My Pay

The first flight’s passengers were easy. The second flight’s were not. I was flying Mike, who had arranged the trip, and Oleg, master of 360° QuickTime VR panoramic images.

Mike speaks perfect English. Oleg speaks enough English to be understood. Neither of them have any qualms about telling me exactly where they want me to put the helicopter for their shot.

I definitely earn my pay when I fly these two around.

For Oleg to build his panoramas, he needs me to get the helicopter into a hover and then make two 360° pedal turns, one right after the other. For those of you who aren’t familiar with the idea, a pedal turn is a rotation on the helicopter’s vertical axis (it’s mast). It’s a pretty tricky maneuver because it requires the pilot to perform a few difficult tasks at once:

  • Get the helicopter into an out-of-ground-effect hover. That means coming to a dead stop hundreds (or thousands) of feet in the air, where ground reference points aren’t exactly easy to track.
  • Get the right power setting for the helicopter. Too much power and it could climb (unlikely at our weight and elevation); too little power and it could descend (very likely at our weight and elevation).
  • Recognize and recover from settling with power. That’s a condition when a helicopter settles into its own downwash. Unless you’re flying very light or very low, it’s going to happen at one point or another. The trick is to catch it before it gets out of control and you lose a lot of altitude in recovery. (Settling with power is one of the reasons newly minted helicopter pilots should not do aerial photography gigs — sometimes they just can’t recover before they run out of altitude.)
  • Use the pedals to turn the helicopter smoothly on its axis for 720 degrees. In a no-wind situation, this isn’t too tough. But if it’s windy, you’re fighting the wind any time you’re not pointing into it. If the wind is strong enough, LTE (loss of tail rotor effectiveness) can set in, making it even tougher and sometimes — just sometimes — causing a case of “the wiggles” that greatly resembles a loss of control.

Usually, Oleg only asks me to do one of these maneuvers per flight. But this time, he asked for five or six. And in the past, he’s only wanted one pedal turn. Now he wants two. This year, he has a special camera mount on a pole that he can stick out the helicopter door for the shots. He doesn’t want the skids in the photos.

What I discovered is that if I glanced down at the directional gyro while performing the maneuver, the quick spin of the dial would make me feel sick.

And this might sound silly, but I have a touch of acrophobia. You know. Fear of heights. I sometimes get that weird feeling in my gut when I climb a ladder to preflight the rotor hub. Or when I look down from a high place. Or when I pivot a helicopter 2,000 feet above a snaking, curving canyon. Especially with my door off.

I kept my door on and remembered what I was being paid for.

At Cal Black

We went for a fuel run halfway through that second flight. That took us to Cal Black Airport, 10 miles from Lake Powell’s Hall’s Crossing Marina.

Cal Black is a very nice little off-the-grid airport. Paved and lighted runway, rotating beacon, tie-down parking, and both 100LL and JetA fuel. It’s managed by a man named Maury who lives at the airport. When you call in, he gives you an airport advisory. If you say you’re coming in for fuel, he’s waiting at the pump when you arrive. Even if you arrive at 6:30 AM. Or in the rain.

That’s service.

I asked Maury to fill up the tanks and he obliged. Mike and Oleg wandered off into the red rocks so Mike could have a cigarette. Maury and I talked about running an FBO in such a remote place. I warned him that I’d be coming early the next morning and asked if I should call him.

“I keep a radio next to the bed, turned down low,” he said. “I’ll hear you coming if you call in.”

We flew back to Gouldings by way of Goosenecks. I performed my pivot maneuver for Oleg. I was glad that the wind wasn’t howling at 2,000 feet AGL. I was tired. I’d been flying almost nonstop since 7 AM and it was getting close to 11.

A Break

After putting the doors back on the helicopter, I accepted a ride from my passengers up to the lodge. We got a table for six or eight, although I don’t think we had more than four people at it at any one time. I had a hamburger with chili on top of a big piece of Navajo Fry Bread. I really like fry bread. My passengers picked up the tab.

I relaxed in my room for a while. Then went out to the middle of the runway to try my hand at a panoramic image. I took 18 shots with my 50 mm lens on. I’d been planning to stitch them together manually with Photoshop, but Photoshop said my scratch disk was full. While looking for files to delete and make room, I stumbled across Photostitch software from Canon that I must have installed when I got my first Canon camera. After playing around with it, I got it to create this little QuickTime VQ panorama. (Go easy on me, folks; this is the very first one of these I’ve ever created.)

[qt:https://aneclecticmind.com/wp-content/movies/Gouldings2.mov 400 300]
This is QuickTime VR, so you’ll need QuickTime to view it. Click and drag in the window to pan from side to side. If you look all the way to the left, you’ll see Monument Valley and the hangar I’m staying in. If you pan to the right, you’ll see my helicopter on the ramp.

More Flying

I needed to make another fuel run before the next flight and had until 4 PM to get it done. Mike said he might send someone to fly with me. “If he’s not there by 3:30,” he said, “he’s not coming.”

So, at 3:35, I went out and started the helicopter. I had all doors on (for warmth) and my iPod (for entertainment). I’d just gotten the RPM up to warm-up speed (68%) when one of Mike’s rentals came screaming into the ramp area. The door opened and Gleb popped out. I didn’t want to shut down and he knew all the safety rules, so I waved him over to my door.

“Do you want the door off?” I asked, knowing what the answer would be.

So even though the controls were locked down, I had him stand at my door to watch them while I went around to the other side and removed the back door. (The front door was locked and I needed a key to unlock it, which would require shutting down.) I handed the door off to the guy who’d driven him there, then sent him around to his seat and settled myself in mine. As the truck drove away with my door, I never really thought about what might happen to it. (I’d been storing all the doors in my room at the hangar for each flight.)

We took off for Cal Black. With a door off, my speed was limited to 100 knots, but I think I could have gotten 110 out of it, even at that altitude with two people on board. Maury was waiting for us and took care of us quickly. Gleb asked him questions about courtesy cars — there is none at Cal Black — and Maury explained the shuttle to the marina that’s available between 8:30 and 4:30 each day.

On the way back, we hit Goosenecks and then Monument Valley. Actually, Goosenecks is not on the way back. Imagine a triangle with Cal Black AIrport, Goosenecks, and Monument Valley at each point. The legs between Cal Black and Monument Valley and Cal Black and Goosenecks are about the same: 20 or so minutes of flight time. The one between Goosenecks and Monument Valley is quite short: 10 minutes of flight time. Along the way, we saw wild horses and some interesting rock formations. On the way back from Monument Valley to Gouldings, we saw a herd of sheep grazing on the high school football field.

One more flight that the afternoon. Not too tough. Goosenecks first, then Monument Valley. If we would have gotten back 30 minutes before sunset, I would have made my fuel run then for the next day. But we landed 15 minutes before sunset. And I wasn’t the least bit interested in flying over dark desert back to an unlighted field. Fueling would have to be done before dawn the next day.

Winding Down

There was no wind, so I skipped the tie downs. I was going out early in the morning and didn’t want to deal with them unless I had to.

I walked to the grocery store about 1/3 mile away and bought some orange juice and fruit and green tea. I walked back in the growing darkness and settled myself in for a night of relaxation That included two attempts to get time exposures of the perfect night sky. Failed miserably.

[composed in a hangar/hotel room while on a flying gig with ecto]

The Big September Gig, Day Two

Page, the Windy City — and More

I slept like shit. I don’t know why. The bed was very comfortable and the room temperature was cosy without being hot. The place was even pretty quiet.

I was at the airport by 5:30 AM. My first flight was scheduled for 6:10 AM and I had to get the doors off and do my preflight. I borrowed the FBO’s cart to shuttle myself out there and bring the doors back. The pilots for American, which is also the FBO I used, were doing their preflight stuff. One of them commented about me starting work so early. I didn’t mention that less than two weeks before, I’d been airborne with clients 30 minutes before sunrise.

More Wind

I should mention here that the forecast called for strong winds. When I got to the airport, the wind was calm. I figured that if I could knock off my two morning flights quickly, we might be able to finish before the wind kicked in.

Wrong!

Although we were halfway to the confluence by the time the sun came over the top of a cloud layer to the east, it was already bumpy out near Navajo Mountain. At one point, I had a 30-knot tailwind. We bumped our way past the mountain and spent some quality time at the confluence before bumping our way back. We did Horseshoe Bend and the Dam before landing at the airport.

I warned my next group that I wasn’t going very far up lake. Fortunately, there was a map in the terminal and someone who could translate for me, so they knew what to expect. But by that time, it was getting windy, even at Page. I hit sinkhole at 8000 feet flying circles over Horseshoe Bend that got one of my passengers to scream. I hate when that happens.

By the time I landed, the wind was 14 gusting to 28. I don’t mind wind half as much as gusts. It’s the gust spread that’ll get you every time.

I was done flying before 10:30 AM. I went back to the hotel to check out. I ran into Mike in the lobby. He’d planned on sending someone with me to Monument Valley. But I told him I wasn’t sure if I could make it. That had him bothered. He was scheduled for the afternoon flight there. I told him that if it was too windy to fly out that night, I’d start before dawn and get there in time for the morning flight. Then we parted ways. He had a long drive in front of him. I wasn’t looking forward to the flight ahead of me.

Lower Antelope Canyon

With some time to kill while I waited for the wind to die down, I went to Lower Antelope Canyon. Although I’ve been to Antelope Canyon many times, this was the first time I’d been to the less popular, lower part. It was easy to understand why it was less popular — it required climbing. On ladders.

Entrance to Lower Antelope CanyonAh, but first you had to pass the entrance exam. I mean that quite literally. You had to step down into the canyon, which appeared as a narrow slot (see photo). I’m not huge but I admit that I had to twist my body a bit to fit into the opening of the canyon. A really fat person never would have made it, which explains why there really weren’t any really fat people in there.

From the mouth of the canyon, it was a few steps down into a world of swirling sandstone chambers. I’d pass through a narrow slot or twisting path that would suddenly open up to a wide area where the light came in, casting a golden glow on the rock surfaces. Then more twists and turns and squeezes with a few ladders and steps thrown in to keep out the out-of-shape riff-raff. The canyon went on for at least a half mile, always descending, with each twist and turn bringing more of the same. I counted two arches carved through the rock, but there may have been more — I missed the first one on my way in.

Antelope Canyon SandThere was fine sand under foot and blowing sand drifting down into the canyon from above. Soon, there was sand in my hair and clothes and camera lens. It was a fine red sand that gathered in small dunes and drifts outside the canyon. Inside, it fell like rain from the sky. (One of the first things I did when I got to my hotel room that night was to take a hot shower and get all that sand off me.)

In Lower Antelope CanyonI took lots of photos. For some reason, I thought the light would be better in Lower Antelope Canyon than the Upper Antelope Canyon, so I’d left my tripod in the car. Very dumb. I really could have used it in there. So I had to play with the camera, using Program mode for some shots and setting other shots to a minimum shutter speed of 1/30th of a second. About 1/2 of the shots are usable and about 1/2 of those aren’t bad at all.

There were quite a few people in there, but they were spread out, so there were plenty of opportunities to just sit and look around, undisturbed, or frame that perfect photo. Unlike Upper Antelope Canyon, visitors get a full 4 hours in the canyon, which is plenty of time to explore and enjoy. (In the upper canyon, you only get about an hour.)

At this point, I think I like Lower Antelope Canyon better than Upper Antelope Canyon. But I need another visit to be sure.

Lunch and Waiting

I hit the Chinese restaurant in the Basha’s shopping center for lunch. Nothing like a Chinese buffet to remind you how much crap the average person eats. But it was quick and easy and cheap. And I really am starved for Asian food.

The car had to go back to the airport or I’d have to pay for another day. So I went back to the airport and turned it in. And then spent the next few hours hanging around with the tour pilots who worked for the FBO there. They flew Cessna 172s and 206s up and down the lake all day. But that day, they were sitting in the pilot lounge, waiting for the wind to die down.

The pilot lounge overlooked the ramp. The FBO’s planes were out there, tied down, facing the wind. If they hadn’t been tied down, they would have been airborne. The wind was gusting into the 30s and someone had even heard the automated weather observation system claim a gust of 43. Sheesh. That made a gust spread of over 20 mph.

I’d tied my helicopter’s blades down to prevent them from flopping around and damaging either the tailcone, blades, or droop stops. One of the pilots wanted to know if it was tied down to the ramp. I guess he thought it might take off like a plane in heavy wind. I told him it was full of fuel so it weighted about 1800 pounds. It wasn’t likely to blow around the ramp.

The pilots traded flying stories. A few of us were up in the “tower” room in the corner of the building when a Cessna 172 tried to land on runway 25. He was pointing right into the wind, but he seemed to have trouble descending. He floated over the runway, then said he was going around. I don’t know where he went around to because he didn’t come back. Kind of weird when you realize that there are only two or three other airports within 50 miles. Where did he go?

Westwind, which flies Cessna Caravans, was picking up the business that American was turning down. Caravans are considerably larger. A group of 17 French people came in, wanting to fly. Westwind warned them that the flights would be very bumpy and uncomfortable. 10 people decided to fly anyway. They split the group into two planes. One of the pilots, as he was leaving, said to us, “Well, it was nice knowing you all.”

Of course, it turned out okay. Although they had to take off with a stiff crosswind on runway 33, they were able to land on runway 25, pointed right into the wind. One of the planes looked as if it were hovering out there before landing.

Decision Time Comes, I Go

Meanwhile, time continued to move on. I’d already called Goulding’s Lodge, where my paid-for room awaited me. Sunset was at 7:08 PM Navajo Time. (The Navajo reservation has daylight savings time; the rest of Arizona does not. That put them an hour ahead of Page.) If I flew, I wanted to be on the ground before sunset. The strip at Goulding’s is not lighted and there isn’t much between Page and Monument Valley on the direct route — or on an indirect route, for that matter. Goulding’s was 60 nautical miles away by air. That was a little over 30 minutes of flight time.

Of course, the wind was howling from the west, making a good tailwind.

If I didn’t go to Monument Valley, I’d not only have to get a room in Page on a Saturday night but I’d have to get to the room and then get back to the airport about an hour before dawn for departure. And I’d have to fly a route I’d never flown before in the predawn light. None of that sounded good to me.

What did sound good was checking into Goulding’s and getting a good night’s sleep.

If I flew out, I’d have to leave by 5 PM. I made my decision at 4:30.

Ah, Tailwinds

At 4:45, I was sitting in my helicopter on the ground, pointed into the wind. My airspeed indicator needle moved from 0 to over 20 knots. While I was parked.

The helicopter shook in the gusts.

One of the dangers of starting an R44 in gusty conditions is the remote possibility of a gust pushing up the front blade while the blades are just starting to spin up. At low RPM, there’s no centrifugal force on the blades to keep them up or out. The front blade goes up, the back blade comes down — and strikes the tailcone. Rare but possible. This is what I was thinking about as the blades started spinning up.

Of course, I didn’t have any problem. (Sometimes I really think I worry far too much.)

While the engine warmed up, I programmed the GPS using a user waypoint I’d created for Goulding’s on a previous flight. Being a private strip, it isn’t in the Garmin database.

A trio of Westwind Caravans were just returning from an exciting uplake flight when I took off.

Navajo Power PlantI took off right over the ramp and hangars. I had plenty of lift with that headwind and light weight. Things were tricky for the first minute or two, but once I had a good climb and forward airspeed going, I was able to bank gently to the left. The wind pushed me sideways over town. I passed the Navajo Power Plant and headed east.

In no time at all, I had a 143 knot ground speed going. Not bad when I was indicating only about 110 knots airspeed.

My route would take me south of Navajo Mountain rather than uplake. The terrain was a mix of canyons and plateaus. I passed a few scattered ranches. On the southern slope of Navajo Mountains was an airstrip I’d seen on the chart and a few trailer homes with a well maintained dirt road. Otherwise, there wasn’t much in the way of civilization for 60 miles.

I hit turbulence each time I passed a butte or ridge. The wind tossed me around as if to say, “You’re nothing to Mother Nature, and don’t you forget it.” I reduced power each time I hit a nasty spot, then came back up to speed when it smoothed out. I wanted to be on the ground as soon as possible.

I approached Gouldings from the southwest, around the mesa behind it. The air seemed smoother as I followed the runway in. I was very surprised to see two brand new helipads. I moved over to one of them, let Mother Nature toss me around a little bit more, then set down, pointed into the wind.

More Surprises

My second surprise at Gouldings was that my cell phone worked. It turns out, they’d gotten a new cell tower. Although I couldn’t access the Internet — what do I want, everything? — my phone had a good strong signal. I used it to call home and let my husband know I’d arrived safely and to call Goulding’s and get a shuttle to the office from the landing strip.

The next surprise waited for me in the office: my client, Mike. He’d arrived only minutes before. He was shocked that I’d attempted the flight. He was also glad to see me. We’d fly the next day on schedule.

I checked into my room and Mike drove me back down to the airstrip. That’s where my room was: in the hangar adjacent to the landing strip. It’s a pretty big room with two double beds, a table and two chairs, a sofa, and a kitchen area with a stove, fridge, and sink. It doesn’t face the valley like the rest of the rooms at the lodge, but it’s comfortable and quiet and very private.

And it was all mine for three nights.

The Day Winds Down

I had to stand on one of the chairs I’d taken from my room to put the tie-downs on my blades. Where’s the junk plastic furniture when you need it? This chair was heavy!

After unpacking in my room — I hate living out of a suitcase and will always unpack anywhere I’m staying two or more nights — I walked up to the lodge. It’s probably about a 1/2 mile walk, half of which is up a gentle slope. I was still huffing and puffing at the restaurant at the top. They put me in a window seat and I had a very boring but very hearty dinner.

By the time I was finished, it was dark. Or maybe I should say DARK. You don’t know darkness until you’ve come to a relatively empty spot in the desert at night before the moon has risen. The wind was still blowing pretty good, too. The only light out at the airport was the one beside my door at the hangar. But there was a lot of dark ground to cover between the lodge and that light.

I stopped in the office for a ride down.

[composed in a hangar/hotel room while on a flying gig with ecto]