Howard Mesa

My windsock.

As I’ve written extensively elsewhere, Mike and I own 40 acres of land at Howard Mesa, which is about halfway between Williams and Valle, Arizona, 5 miles off route 64. If you’ve ever driven from Williams to the Grand Canyon, you’ve passed within 3 miles of it (as the raven flies).

Howard Mesa WindsockThis photo shows my windsock at the top of the property, with a dead tree in the foreground. It was probably taken during the summer; that’s a thundercloud in the making in the distance in the background.

I occasionally land my helicopter not far from the windsock on a gravel pad. It’s a three-hour drive from our house to the property but only an hour by helicopter. We sometimes fly up just for the day — usually to do some work in the shed or check on things.

The dead tree is a whole other story. Here’s the short version.

Imagine a whole lot of land laid out in one square mile sections called…well, sections. The sections are colored on some maps like a checkerboard, with private squares and state land squares. The private squares were owned by cattle ranchers. They contracted with the state to graze their cattle on the state land as well as their private land in what’s known as open range.

Cattle eats grass. The ranchers got the idea that more grass would grow if there were less trees. So they came onto their land (but not the state land) with bulldozers and knocked down all the piñon and juniper pine trees that grew there. The trees died, but since the ranchers didn’t take them away, their carcasses littered the rancher’s land.

The ranchers were wrong. About the same amount of grass grew.

Years passed. New trees grew in place of the old. The ranchers had another brainstorm. They realized that they could make a bunch of money by selling their land to developers. Best of all, with Arizona’s open range laws, they could still graze their cattle on the private property that didn’t fence the cattle out. So they could stay in business without actually owning the land the cattle grazed on.

The developers split up each section of land into 10-, 36-, and 40-acre lots. We bought one of them.

So now you know why we have dead trees like this one on our land.

The good thing about all this: there’s no shortage of firewood.

Howard Mesa, Arizona, photo

Grand Canyon Back Roads and Trails

We take the Jeep on some forest roads at the local park.

Now that work on our shed at Howard Mesa is just about complete, we can spend more of our time in the area on recreational activities. Yesterday, we spent the day doing one of my favorite activities: back road driving in my Jeep.

I need to clarify something here. A lot of people think that when you drive on some of the unmaintained yet marked dirt roads that wind through places like national forests and state parks, that’s off-roading. It isn’t. After all, how can it be off-roading when you’re following a road? Sure, the roads are in terrible shape sometimes. Sure, they have huge erosion ditches running down one tire track or the other or sometimes right across the middle. Sure, there are no signs other than those with the secretly coded forest road number, which may or may not match the number on your detailed forest service map. But they are roads. So when you drive on them, you’re not off-roading. You’re driving off-pavement.

Of course, if you’re a city slicker and your SUV tires have never had dirt or gravel between their treads, you probably wouldn’t even attempt the roads I’m talking about. After all, my sister-in-law, on her first visit to our house, exclaimed, “Wow! This is the first time I’ve ever been off-road!” That would have been fine if we were driving off-road at the time. But we weren’t. We were driving down the only road to get to our house. And her husband, my brother, owns a Nissan Pathfinder.

I remember when my mom and stepdad came to visit years ago, driving to Arizona from Florida in their Mercury Mountaineer. We decided to take them to Box Canyon, which is up the Hassayampa River a bit. Rather than all cram into my Jeep, we climbed into their SUV. I can’t remember who drove, but I do remember my parents’ cries of alarm when they realized that we were actually going to drive in the river to get there. “But this is an SUV,” we countered. “It’s designed to drive places like this.” Needless to say, their vehicle stayed parked in our driveway for the rest of their stay, lest they should be tricked into taking it off pavement again.

Can someone explain to me why people buy SUVs when they’re afraid to drive them on anything but paved roads and highways?

Did you ever notice how I can take a short story and make it really long?

Anyway, that’s what we did yesterday. We took a 40-mile off-pavement drive.

I had my extremely detailed forest service map for the Kaibab National Forest, Tusayan Ranger District. That’s the area of the Kaibab National Forest that butts up against the southern part of Grand Canyon National Park. The map included dozens of forest roads with numbers like 305, 301A, and 311. Narrow, two-track roads that wound their way through the ponderosa, pinyon, and juniper pines, along ridges, over creeks, and alongside rocky outcroppings. The map included several “places of interest” marked with red “i” icons. One was the Grandview Lookout tower, which I had visited two years before (and wrote about it in this blog; try searching for Grandview; I can’t link to it while composing offline). Another was someplace called Russell and yet another was a place called Hull Cabin in the Hull District. I wanted to visit all of these places. And I didn’t want to get there the fast way.

Although I can provide the road numbers here, they aren’t much use unless you either have a map to consult or are in a high clearance vehicle — I didn’t use 4WD at all — and want to follow my path. I suggest the latter.

We took Route 64 north, toward Tusayan and the Grand Canyon. A bunch of miles past Valle (crossroads with route 180 from Flagstaff), and just past Red Butte, we turned right onto Forest Road (FR) 305, which is indicated as an “improved” gravel road on the map. The map is from 1995 and that may be the last time they laid down gravel there. We followed 305 east and then northeast. We were in the vicinity of the old Grand Canyon airport, but since it was not marked on the map or my GPS and there were many trees, we only got a single glimpse of what might have been it.

I should mentioned here that Grand Canyon’s current airport is at Tusayan, just south of the park entrance. It has a nice, long paved runway and more helipads than I’ve seen anywhere else. It also has an old tower and a new tower. The new tower, which I had a chance to visit about two years ago, is quite modern and very nice. But a long time ago — I really don’t know how long — the Grand Canyon airport was in a big open field north of Red Butte, east of highway 64. That’s about 10 miles south of the current airport. I know the old airport from the air — Papillon does all of its pilot training in that area — but I’ve never driven there. That’s one of the things I hope to do sometime next week, just to check it out from the ground. The old airport doesn’t have any pavement — I don’t think it ever did. I recall that a hangar is still standing and there are two decrepit fuel trailers parked nearby.

Yesterday, we didn’t see any of that — although I think we drove right through the tiny clearing that I was asked to land in on my check ride. At the time, I’d replied — correctly — that it wasn’t a safe landing zone and I hadn’t actually landed there. But it was weird to drive through it and see it from the ground.

From FR 305, we got on FR 305A and then the rather challenging FR 343. I say challenging because the turnoff to this road was extremely eroded with hugh ditches. It was a matter of putting the wheels in the right places to avoid getting stuck or toppling over. Once past that, the road was much better, although parts of it were extremely bumpy.

Of course, there were plenty of other roads intersecting our road. Most of them — and more! — showed up on my GPS’s moving map, which I had preloaded at my office a few days before. Some of them showed up on the Forest Service map. The only way we knew where we were on the map was by comparing landmarks we passed that were labeled on the GPS or signed alongside the road. For example, we passed right by Gallo Tank — for some reason all the tanks out there had names and all the names were on the map and the GPS. We saw the Gallo Tank sign and matched it to Galo Tank (with one L) on the map. That’s how we knew we were halfway between the start of FR 343 and its intersection with FR 2732 at Skinner Ridge. So getting lost out there was not a concern at all. We always knew where we were and, since we had a map, always knew what road we needed to get where we were going. And since most of the roads were clearly marked at intersections, we usually knew which one we were on.

Pine flowerThe forest was cool and quiet and the air smelled fresh, with the fragrance of pine and whatever small trees were flowering. We saw some birds but nothing else. No other vehicles, either. It was 9 AM on a Saturday morning and the forest south of the Grand Canyon, where thousands of people were peering into a big ditch, was completely ours.

At Skinner Ridge, we stayed on FR 343 and followed that to FR 302. FR 302 is the “main road” from Tusayan to Grandview Fire Tower, an improved gravel road that really is maintained. We took that east to FR 301A and then to FR 301. That took us southeast. We eventually hit FR 320 at Bucklar Ranch, one of several privately owned “islands” of land in the sea of national forest. We took a wrong turn there, mostly because the intersection on the map didn’t match the intersection in reality. We figured it out pretty quick and backtracked, then got on FR 311 northbound.

The point of interest named Russsell turned out to be a tank with a log corral. I should probably explain what a “tank” is in Arizona. Tank is short for cattle tank. It’s a man-made pond created by damming up the downstream end of a wash. When the wash runs, the water comes down the wash until it hits the dam. It then pools up behind the dam to store water for cattle to drink.

Russell TankAs I mentioned earlier, all of the tanks in the area were named and had signs in front of them. This one also had an extremely clean pit toilet building, animal-proof trash cans, and a sign board that had few signs on it. We parked at the end of the road and, after utilizing the facilities, walked down the path to the tank. Jack the Dog was with us and he ran ahead, very glad to be out of the Jeep. We wound up on the bank of a very large tank with fire rings and a log corral — which was long broken — nearby.

It was a very picturesque place so I took some pictures.

The Arizona Trail runs right through the Russell Tank area. The Arizona Trail is a hiking/horseback riding trail that I believe runs the full length of Arizona, from Utah all the way to the Mexican border (someone please correct me if I’m wrong). From Russell Tank, it heads north not far from FR 311, then heads northwest along the Coconino Rim. Eventually, it gets to the rim of the Grand Canyon, where it follows one of the existing trails down into the canyon, across one of the bridges near Phantom Ranch on the bottom, and up the other side, most likely on the Bright Angel Trail.

After about 20 minutes exploring the area, we climbed back into the Jeep and continued north on FR 311. It dumped us out on FR 310, which winds along the Coconino Rim — but not close enough to offer any views. We followed that northwest. A few miles short of Lockett Lake, we passed the first vehicle we’d seen since leaving route 64 at least two hours before: a pickup truck parked on the side of the road.

Mike wanted to check out Lockett Lake — he’s always looking for a place to go swimming — so we made the turn and drove the 1/4 mile to the lake. It was another tank — actually smaller than Russell Tank. A female elk and her youngster had been drinking from the lake when we drove in; of course we scared them away before we could get any photos.

We continued on toward Grandview Fire Tower, which was quite close, but made the right turn onto FR 307 toward what’s called the Hull District. We were on Grandview Ridge at the northwest end of the Coconino Rim. To the south, the earth climbed up to this point. To the northeast, the earth dropped off suddenly into what’s called the Upper Basin. From the southwest edge of this basin right up to the rim of the Grand Canyon, the earth rises slowly again.

I was intimately familiar with this terrain — but from the air. When I worked as a helicopter pilot at the Grand Canyon in the summer of 2004, our east end tours flew right past Grandview Tower and over the upper basin before crossing into the canyon at Zuni Point. I’d climb to 7800 feet, make my radio call at Grandview as I passed the tower, and then descend back to 7500 feet. The trees at the edge of the canyon seemed to rise up to the helicopter and then, suddenly, we were past them, over the abyss. That few minutes of flying, crossing over the rim of the canyon and hearing the passenger beside me gasp with surprise, was my favorite part of my summer job that year.

Wild TurkeysFR 307 wound down the steep side of Grandview Ridge with, at one point, a sheer cliff on the right. On the left there was some sign of another, older road or path; the downhill side had been shored up with rocks and logs many years before. At the bottom was Hull Tank and, as I drove by slowly, I saw the heads of some wild turkeys near the water. I stopped the Jeep and Mike and I both got out to see them and take photos, but they ran off. I managed to catch a few of them in the underbrush with my little Canon Powershot. (Thank goodness for 7.1 megapixel cameras and the ability to crop.) There were at least 20 of them and they ran across the road in front of the Jeep and disappeared into the forest.

There was a drag gate across the road for Hull Cabin, but since no sign told us to keep out, Mike got out and opened the gate while I drove through. He closed it behind us and we continued on our way.

Hull CabinHull Cabin was built in 1889 as part of a sheep ranch. It includes two cabins and a barn, all made out of logs. In 1907, the Forest Service converted it into a Ranger Station. It’s still used once in a while as a camp for workers during the summer months. No one was there that day. We peered into the windows of the main cabin. It had four rooms, one of which had a nice stone fireplace. There was a porch on front and a modern portable toilet building out back. After exploring down two roads that went past the cabin and finding dead ends on each, we backtracked to SR 307. A left turn would have brought us to SR 64 between Desert View on the east end of Grand Canyon National Park and Cameron in the Navajo Reservation. But we turned right to go back to Grandview.

There was no sign of the wild turkeys at Hull Tank. Instead, there was an enormous bull elk with a huge rack. He took one look at my red Jeep and ran off into the woods.

We climbed back up Grandview Ridge. That’s when we saw our second vehicle on the back roads, a bright yellow Jeep heading down the hill.

We followed FR 310 past Grandview Tower and into the park. A lot of people don’t know about this back road into the park — probably because most people wouldn’t subject their vehicles to the unpaved roads. The most direct route is to take FR 302 from Tusayan eastbound. I think it’s about a 16 mile drive through the forest.

What’s really amazing is that you can camp for free almost anywhere in the National Forest — including in the Grandview Tower area. That puts you less than two miles from East Rim Drive in Grand Canyon National Park, far to the east of the crowds, yet close to Grandview Point and other Canyon view areas and hiking trails. And you don’t have to take the 16-mile drive on dirt roads. Instead, go through the park and then exit at Grandview. A mile or two on dirt and you can find any number of great campsites. I’m talking about dry camping, of course. There are no full hookups for trailers and motor homes out in the forest and generators are definitely not welcome.

We made our way to Grand Canyon Village, hitting a ton of tourist traffic at Mather Point. A few years back, the National Park Service (NPS) decided that the Grand Canyon needed a centrally located information center. They put it right near Mather Point but then, for some reason unknown to me, didn’t build a parking lot for automobile traffic anywhere near it. There’s a parking lot for buses, but since most of the buses drop off their passengers in Grand Canyon Village a few miles to the West — which is also where the hotels and restaurants are — it’s severely underutilized. As a result, people park at the Mather Point parking lot — which isn’t terribly large — and then alongside Rim Road on both sides. The result is a traffic nightmare, with pedestrians, tourists cruising slowly for parking, and drivers who aren’t really looking where they’re going.

By some miracle, we found a spot in the parking lot near El Tovar in Grand Canyon Village. We settled Jack in by opening up the windows halfway and filling his water dish. He barked a little as we left him, but soon settled down.

The weather, of course, was perfect. Mid 70s, partly cloudy, gentle breeze. It had been cloudier and cooler in the morning. Now it was 1 PM and it was quite pleasant.

We had lunch in El Tovar, which used to be my favorite restaurant. In the old days — ten or years ago — it featured an eclectic menu with a rustic twist: lots of wild game and truly original appetizers and desserts. Service was excellent from highly trained servers and other staff. Eating their was a special occasion as well as a treat for the taste buds. But nowadays, things aren’t quite as special. The menu is more basic, the service is more ordinary. You don’t feel bad walking in for lunch in a pair of shorts and a t-shirt. And I think it still is the best restaurant on the rim.

We took Jack for a short walk along the rim there. It’s always good practice to make him walk on a leash and not bother every single person he passed. A mean dog tried to get him into a fight but we pulled him back. There were a lot of people there. And one of those ugly yet magnificent California condors sitting out on a ledge. I didn’t bother taking photos of the bird; I’d gotten some good ones the last time I was in the park. (Search this blog for “condor” to see them.)

We moved the Jeep over to the parking lot by Shrine of the Ages, put Jack back on his leash, and went for a walk on the rim trail from there to the Yavapai Observatory. It was a mile each way and paved with asphalt — a very easy trail. Yet few people were on it.

Mountain GoatsAt one point, a small group of people were sitting on the wall at the edge of the trail, looking toward the rim. They seemed interested in something. Then a young mountain goat — or possibly a bighorn sheep? — crossed the trail right in front of me to join his friends near the rim. There were four of them there when I got into position for a good look and a man there told me that a few had already descended down into the canyon. I took some video and still photographs. The youngster watched us from less than 20 feet away. He seemed very interested in Jack, although Jack wasn’t the least bit interested in him.

That’s one of the weird things about wildlife in the national parks. The animals have become almost tame from being exposed to so many people. Some animals — for example, squirrels and chipmunks — will actually beg for food. And that’s why they beg — because people will feed them. Although no one was offering food to these animals, they didn’t look as if an offer would scare them away.

Mike and Jack at the Grand CanyonWe continued on to the Yavapai Observation Station, which was recently reopened after a renovation. Mike and Jack waited outside on a bench while I went in. Inside, it has tinted windows that look out over the canyon, making the red rock cliffs look even redder and more beautiful. A ranger had set up a small telescope and was showing close-up views of points of interest far below: Phantom Ranch, one of the two suspension bridges, the Colorado River with river runners on it. I stood nearby for a few moments, looking at Phantom Ranch. Less than a year before, I’d hiked on the north side of the canyon from the ranch. I couldn’t believe how far we’d hiked when I saw it from across the canyon.

We headed back to the car soon after that. I was pooped. I’m terribly out of shape these days — why else would a 2-mile walk on pavement (for heaven’s sake!) make me so tired? (Okay, so we were walking around at an elevation of nearly 7,000 feet.) Clearly I need more exercise.

After a quick stop at the supermarket in the park for the next night’s dinner and Cokes with ice for energy, we headed back to Howard Mesa. We rolled through the gate at 5:30 PM after putting only about 120 miles on the Jeep all day.

The San Francisco Peaks

And Jack the Dog.

San Francisco PeaksI took this photo on the hiking trail to…well, I can’t remember the name of the place now. I think it’s called Red Mountain. It’s off route 180, between Valle and Flagstaff in northern Arizona.

The photo shows the San Francisco Peaks, which are the tallest peaks in Arizona. Mt. Humphreys is the main peak. There’s a ski resort up there that’s open in the winter when there’s enough snow. They want to use reclaimed water to make snow up there, but the Navajo indians are against it. You see, the San Francisco Peaks are one of the four sacred mountains of the Diné.

If you look closely, you should see Jack the Dog running towards the camera in the photo. Jack’s always running somewhere. He gets ahead of us on a hike and we call him back. We figure that he runs 2 to 3 times more on a hike than we walk. Ditto for horseback rides.

As for Red Mountain — if that’s what it’s really called — its an interesting spot at the end of an easy hike. It’s the remains of a volcanic mountain that collapsed years ago. Inside, past the lava, are hoodoos very much like you’d find at Bryce Canyon National Park. They’re even red like the ones at Bryce. There are trees in there and plenty of quiet places for a picnic lunch. Best of all, not many people know about it so it’s never crowded. I recommend it

Border Patrol

I take a photojournalist on a flight to catch illegals crossing the border.

The phone call came early Saturday morning. I was already busy at my desk, preparing for a day’s work on the-book-that-must-not-be-named. I wasn’t looking forward to it.

The woman on the other end sounded defeated. She was looking for a helicopter to take two passengers along the Arizona/Mexico border, from Yuma to Nogales. One passenger was a photojournalist, interested in taking pictures of the border. Was I available?

When?

I’d need to be in Yuma to depart by 3 PM that day.

Yikes!

I knew from some research for another gig (that never came through) that flying on the border was tricky for two reasons:

  1. If you fly over the border, into Mexican airspace, and fall off U.S. radar (which you’re likely to do when you’re only a few hundred feet off the ground in mountainous terrain), your aircraft could get stripped down to components by Customs when you land.
  2. The Goldwater Range, a huge military restricted area, comes right up to the border for the first 50 or so miles of the flight from Yuma eastbound. They test weapons in there, the kind of weapons that could shoot a 4-seat helicopter right out of the sky without anyone noticing. (Oops.)

I told all this to the caller. She said that they’d done it before and the other helicopter pilot usually avoided the military area by flying in Mexico. That made the whole thing a Customs issue. I’d never flown in Mexico, but was sure there were some kind of rules about it. I had to find out what they were.

I told the caller I’d have to make some calls, took her number, and hung up.

Then I started making my calls.

First I called Customs, in Riverside, CA, which is responsible for the border in the Yuma area. They asked a lot of questions about the flight, then recommended that I call Flight Service in Prescott and get a discrete squawk code for the flight. (A “squawk code” is a 4-digit transponder code that distinguishes my aircraft from all others.)

I called Flight Service in Prescott and told them what I had in mind. They told me I should check the status of the Goldwater Range with Albuquerque Center. That if the range was not in use, I could probably fly right through it.

This was good news. I didn’t really want to fly in Mexico. If we flew eastbound on the north side of the border, I could sit the photographer behind me. If I flew eastbound on the south side of the border, the photographer would need to be in the opposite seat. If we switched sides of the border, I’d have to land somewhere so my passenger could switch seats. I didn’t want to deal with it.

I called Albuquerque Center and gave them my story. I was told that R-2301E was not in use and that I could fly through it. I took the name and number of the person who gave me this information, just in case I got in trouble. He understood completely and gave it to me with confidence, making me confident that going through would be okay.

“What about R-2301W?” I asked. That was the other half of the Goldwater Range, the bigger, western half.

“Not in our area,” he told me. “You’ll have to call Los Angeles Center.”

So I called LA Center and gave them my story, which I was now very good at telling. R-2301W was indeed active. But since I was so close to the border and flying so low, perhaps I could get permission from Range Control to fly through.

I called Range Control and told them what I had in mind. I was passed on to two other people. I was asked when I wanted to do this and what altitude I’d be flying at. I told them. They told me that Border Patrol helicopters would be in the same area below 200 feet. I told them I’d stick to 300 to 500 feet. They told me I could fly through, but that I needed to call Range Control on the radio when I was approaching the space before I entered. No problem. I got the frequency and hung up.

I called the client and told her I could take the job. I made sure she still wanted me. She did. I told her I needed to make a few more calls and would call her back, but she should tell the passengers that I’d be there at 3 PM. I took the passengers’ names and weights for my flight plan.

I used Duats to check the weather, plan my flights, and file a flight plan. I filed one plan from Yuma to Nogales and another one from Nogales to Tucson, where I’d be leaving the passengers. The weather forecast looked surprisingly good, although there would be some thunderstorm activity out to the eastern part of the state. I also did my manifests for both flights — that’s required by Part 135 — and handed them off to my secondary flight plan person, Mike.

Then I called Prescott Flight Service again. I brought them up to date on what I was up to and told them I’d just filed a flight plan with Duats for 3 PM. I told them that Customs had suggested that I get a discrete squawk code. They put me on hold for a moment, then came back with a number. I wrote it down.

At that point, Mike came into my office. I spent less than 5 minutes telling him what was going on (I was really good at telling the story by then) then went to the phone to call Customs and give them my squawk code. They already had it. Whew! I asked for the radio frequencies that the Border Patrol helicopters would be using — just in case I came in close contact with one of them and wanted to talk. They gave it to me. Then I asked what would happen if I fell off radar.

“You probably will fall off, if you’re flying that low in the mountainous areas,” they told me. “Your flight will be manually monitored.”

“So if I fall off radar, someone should be able to figure out where I’ll appear next and know something’s up if I’m not where I’m supposed to be?”

“That’s right.”

It was better than flight following. (Flight following is when you ask air traffic control to monitor your flight and advise you if there’s anything you should be aware of as it develops enroute. I can never get flight following because in Arizona, where it’s so mountainous, I can’t stay on anyone’s radar long enough to make it possible. I could fly higher, but what fun would that be?) At least I knew that if I had a mishap out there, they’d find us pretty quickly.

I did some more research online. I called an FBO at each airport I’d be using — Yuma, Nogales, and Tucson — and made sure they had fuel and would be open. I also got their location on the field. Then I printed out diagrams of all three airports — I’d never landed at any of them before and one (Tucson) was Class C.

Then I called my client again and gave her the names of the FBOs I’d be using in Yuma (for picking up the passengers) and Tucson (for dropping off the passengers). I also got a credit card number for billing, so I’d have some guarantee of payment if they didn’t pay the invoice promptly enough. This looked like it would be at least a 6 hour charter and I wasn’t about to get stiffed.

By that time, it was time to go home and put on something more professional for the flight. I’d dressed comfortably — that means gym shorts and a tank top in the summertime — so I’d feel comfortable at my desk while working on the-book-that-must-not-be-named. So I said goodbye to Mike and rushed home. A while later, I was wearing light cotton slacks (white, of course) and my new helicopter shirt and preparing the helicopter for the flight.

Preparing the helicopter meant taking all four doors off, adding extra bottles of water, making sure the emergency and first aid kits were on board, and tucking the cockpit cover under one of the back seats. I also unplugged all the headsets except mine and stuck them under the front passenger seat, fastened all seatbelts, put a bottle of frozen water by my seat, and stowed my overnight bag under my seat. Then I did my preflight, in the hangar, using the ladder to climb up and check the rotor hub.

Finally, at around 1 PM, I was ready to go. I pulled the helicopter out of the hangar and dragged it over to the fuel island. I’d top off at Wickenburg, where fuel was relatively cheap, before heading down to Yuma. I expected a 90-minute flight down there and I wanted to get there early.

It was not to be. The FBO guy, who I was counting on to fuel me up while I unfastened the helicopter and brought the cart back to my hangar, was busy doing something else. (I think he started doing it when he saw me coming.) So I had to fuel myself. He arrived at the fuel island just as I finished up, then tried to engage me in conversation. By that time, I was running late. I unfastened the helicopter, skinning one knuckle pretty good in the process. Then I drove the cart back to the hangar, where I parked it inside behind my car and locked up.

I got off the ground just after 1:30 PM. The flying was miserable. I was hot — it was over 100°F — and the wind and thermals bounced me around something fierce. I was just past Vulture Peak when I managed to program in a waypoint I’d created for the flight to Yuma. The problem with flying to Yuma from Wickenburg is the restricted areas along the way. This waypoint would take me to the beginning of a narrow corridor near I-8 that ran between two restricted areas.

The air settled down about 45 minutes into the flight. I aimed for my waypoint, realized from my GPS that I was clear of the northern restricted area, and followed a railroad track westbound. The desert went from absolutely nothing beneath me to farmland. Then I got close to the Gila River. The railroad veered to the south and I followed the river. I was about 10 miles out when I called Yuma tower.

There was no one else there. The tower cleared me to land on Runway 17. I consulted my chart. I looked at my vertical compass. And I still managed to land on Runway 26. Sheesh. How embarrassing is that? I was glad that no one else was there. The controller was very patient and guided me to where I was supposed to be. He’ll think twice before he tells an unfamiliar helicopter to land on a runway. And next time I’ll look at my compass while I’m on final.

It was just after 3 PM when I arrived. I couldn’t raise the FBO on the radio, but by the time I’d shut down, the FBO guy was there with the fuel truck, waiting to fuel me up. Then my passengers arrived. The 190 lb passenger was really 200 lbs and the 220 lb passenger was really 250 lbs. (And I’d only added 10 pounds for each of them in my flight plan.) The photographer’s bag weighed more than a small child — and was considerably larger. (I’d figured on 20 pounds for that.) They had a third person with them, but he wasn’t coming. (He couldn’t even if he wanted to.) I did some mental math. I’d still be under gross weight and able to hover out of ground effect.

The photographer strapped in his bag and started removing three of the biggest digital cameras I’d ever seen. He told me he was used to flying in a LongRanger, where he had more space to move around (I’ll say!). He also said that he thought turbines were safer.

“Don’t go there with me,” I warned him, only half kidding.

After a quick pit stop, I gave them the safety briefing, making sure they knew where the emergency gear was. We climbed aboard and strapped in. The photographer, Howard, sat behind me. His companion, Jorge, sat beside me. I started the engine. The helicopter was already warmed up. (At 107°F, cooling down would be the challenge.) I punched in my squawk code. I called the tower, got clearance to take off directly to the south, and we took off.

Thank heaven he didn’t assign a runway.

I called Prescott Flight Service on the radio and activated my first flight plan. I mentioned my squawk code. Then I dialed in the frequency for Goldwater Range Control, so it would be ready when I needed it.

We headed due south, passing over farm fields. I kept an eye on my GPS. After a moment, the border between the U.S. and Mexico appeared as a jagged white line.

“Is that the border?” Jorge asked me, pointing to the GPS.

“I think so.” I realized after I said it that it sounded pretty stupid. I was hoping that was the border, since that’s what I’d be flying alongside.

We got to the white line and I turned left. We confirmed with Howard that we were at the border. There was a fence there, but it didn’t look very substantial. It was around this time that they told me they’d done this many times before, but that they’d never passed through the Goldwater Range.

Meanwhile, Howard was already taking pictures. I’d had to turn off the voice activated intercom feature because of all the wind in the cabin — most of which seemed to be going into Howard’s mike. We had to push buttons to talk. Not a big deal, but I would have gone nuts listening to that wind for more than two hours.

I tried to raise Range Control. They responded on my second try, telling me to stand by. I did. They were talking to someone else who I couldn’t hear. Then they talked to me. I told them who I was and what I planned.

“Confirming that you will be between 300 and 500 feet AGL within one mile of the border at all times,” the voice said.

“That’s affirmative,”I replied. “300 to 500 feet, within one mile of the border.”

He cleared me to enter, then gave me a phone number to call when I left his space. I told him I couldn’t use the phone while in the helicopter. He told me to call when I landed. I told him I needed to get a pen. Jorge pulled out his cell phone. The guy had to tell us the phone number three times before he got it. I told him I’d call in about 2 hours, when we landed in Nogales.

And then I flew into a restricted area for the first time.

Of course, the restricted area looked just like any other area. It looked just like the area about a half mile south of us, in Mexico. So although Jorge and Howard had never flown through the Goldwater Range, they hadn’t missed a thing. It was the same empty desert on both sides of the border.

On the other side of the border, however, was a highway. Highway 2, Jorge told me. There were lots of trucks on it, driving east or west less than a mile from the United States. There were also a few abandoned buildings and rather sad truck stops. No Flying J.

It started out flat, with a few small sand dunes and scattered scrubby trees and bushes. Then the rocks got volcanic in nature and the small hills started. Then there was a 2000+ foot mountain to climb over. I couldn’t go around it to the south because that was Mexico and Customs expected me to stay north of the border. And I couldn’t go around it to the north because Range Control expected me to stay within a mile of the border. So I waited until the last minute and climbed.

The mountains were sharp and jagged. The kind of things that you wouldn’t want to have to land on with a big airplane. They reminded me of teeth.

The fence ended with the mountain. After all, how could they build a fence up a mountain?

There was a road that followed the border, then went around the mountain to the north and joined up with the border again on the other side of the mountain. The road was the only sign of the border. There was no fence. We’d seen some Border Patrol vehicles on the western part of the road, but not here. This was “out there,” perhaps too far from the closest Krispy Creme.

But the land was barren and hot. Anyone crossing here would have to cross miles and miles of open desert — in a military practice range! — in the summer heat. Talk about desperate.

We were in a flatter area when some movement caught my eye. A black SUV on the Mexican side of the border. There was a flimsy fence there and that’s where it was parked. But when it saw — or perhaps heard — us coming, it made a U-Turn and drove south. I pointed it out. Howard took lots of pictures.

“I think we ruined their day,” he said.

We crossed more empty desert, more flat areas, more mountains. In one area, the hills had a distinctly volcanic look about them, like little calderas or craters. I pointed them out to Jorge and Howard. Jorge seemed very interested. Howard took pictures.

More movement out of the corner of my eye. This time it was another helicopter — perhaps a JetRanger or A-Star — I didn’t get a good look at it — heading west. Border Patrol. It was at least 200 feet below us and closer to the border. I tried to raise them on the radio but got no response. Howard took pictures. He had monster lenses on all of his cameras and could probably ID the pilot if he needed to from the photos.

We passed through both restricted areas and entered the Organ Pipe National Monument. The vegetation beneath us was lusher, with those distinctive cacti. More stuff on the south side of the border. Then Lukeville and an official border crossing.

We continued east. We’d been flying for at least an hour. It had gotten cloudy and was considerably cooler. I’d stopped sweating. I was only halfway finished with my second bottle of frozen water, which was melting just faster than I could drink it. We’d been climbing slowly the whole time. The terrain turned mountainous again.

Then my radio came to life. I’d switched to the eastern Border Patrol frequency and we heard two pilots talking about a pair of suspicious vehicles they were trying to find. One said he’d start searching the washes. I looked at Jorge. He seemed pleased with the conversation. That’s when I realized that they were trying to photograph people crossing the border and Border Patrol doing its job.

We flew on. It was after 5 PM — prime time this time of year for crossings. They’d get cross late in the afternoon and travel north as it got dark. They’d get picked up north of the border by “coyotes” who’d get them out of the area. Or they’d keep walking, in the dark, to clear the border area on foot.

But you can’t really sneak up on someone with a helicopter. They hear you coming. Even if you’re flying low to the ground at 95 knots. All it takes is a tree or bush. If they’re smart, they’ll lie still. Then they’re invisible as you whiz past.

We saw a white SUV or minivan — it was one of those weird vehicles that tries to be both at the same time — in a wash. We all knew it was one of the vehicles that Border Patrol was trying to find. I circled it. Howard took pictures. I tried to raise Border Patrol on the radio but the luck was with those people in the vehicle below us. I continued east.

At one point, we circled what appeared to be a camp fire. No people, unless they were hiding pretty good. We concluded that it was lightning-started and kept going.

It was nearly 6 PM when we got into Nogales. I had about 45 minutes of fuel left, but we landed right away anyway. I closed my flight plan with Prescott Flight Service on the way in. On the ground, I had the FBO guy top off both tanks again. There was more to come. I checked in with Mike, telling him I’d call again when I got to Tucson.

There was weather in the area. Rain falling to the southwest, not far from where we’d been flying a while ago, but in Mexico. Low, dark clouds to the north, near Tucson. I consulted a chart with my passengers. There was no airport between Nogales and Tucson. If weather moved in and we couldn’t get to Tucson, we’d have to backtrack. For a short delay during daylight hours, a parking lot in Green Valley would do the job. But for a longer delay or if night closed in, we’d have to go back to Nogales.

We took off a while later. My passengers wanted to comb the area around Arivaca, which is a common transfer area for illegals coming up from Mexico. We flew up and down washes and, for a while, became an object of interest for a Border Patrol Hummer. We saw lots of waiting places, where the illegals wait not far from the road for their ride north. These areas are easy to spot from the air — they’re completely littered with discarded clothing and other belongings. Like someone dumped a goodwill bin under the trees in a desert wash. Howard took pictures.

The sun made a final appearance before slipping behind some clouds on the horizon. Howard told me to head toward Tucson, as he was losing his light.

I was losing my light, too. I flipped my navigation lights on and followed a road to I-19, then followed that northbound. I tuned into the ATIS (Automated Terminal Information System; an airport conditions recording) and learned that there was a thunderstorm south of the airport, heading west. In our path.

I could see it clearly as we flew over Green Valley. Cloud to ground lightning and a wall of rain. It was heading west and my first instinct was to fly around it on its backside, on the east. But the way ahead of me, just over I-19, was still clear. I could probably get up there before it reached me. I decided to go for it.

If you can see through it, you can fly through it.
That’s what we used to say at the Grand Canyon, anyway.

It started raining a little later. I had to divert a little to the west. By then, I was talking to Tucson tower and less than 10 miles from the airport. It was raining heavily to our right, on the east.

“Do you see the runway?” the tower asked.

I looked. All I saw were the lights of Tucson. No runway lights, no rotating beacon. My GPS said the runway was straight ahead, but I couldn’t see it.

“Negative,” I replied. “I think I’m too low.”

“Stay on your heading,” the tower advised. “The runway is at 12 o’clock.”

In the back, Howard was holding his camera toward the inside of the helicopter to keep it dry. He had already handed another one to Jorge, who was covering it with my chart. I was looking for the airport.

I saw a large plane moving on what had to be the runway. I was about five miles out and past the storm. The rain had pretty much stopped.

“Tower, this is helicopter Zero-Mike-Lima. I have the runway in sight.”

“Zero-Mike-Lima, proceed direct to the Tucson Executive ramp. It’s to the left of the rotating beacon, about 500 feet. Cleared to land at one of the helipads there.”

I repeated back the instructions, looking in vain for the rotating beacon. I knew where the Tucson Exec ramp was from my airport diagram and used that to find where the beacon should be. I finally found it atop the tower and went in. We made a very gentle landing on one of the helipads as a Southwest Airlines jet taxied by behind us.

It was good to be on the ground.

I called the FBO and asked for fuel and a ladder. I was told they were on a lightning hold, but someone would be out with a cart and a ladder. I shut down and climbed out of the helicopter onto the still-dry pavement. Jorge and Howard were already packing up.

The FBO guy came and I used his ladder to put on both of my blade tie-downs. Then, when we had everything out of the helicopter that we needed, he helped me put on the cockpit cover, which would cover all four doors in the event of rain. Rain looked very possible — there was another storm moving in from the east as we worked. Then we all climbed onto the cart — it had three rows of seats — and got a lift back to the FBO.

I said goodbye to Jorge and Howard. The guy who’d dropped them off in Yuma was there to pick them up. They all left. I made arrangements for fuel and a ride to my hotel, which we had trouble tracking down at first.

The reason we had trouble with the hotel was because I thought I’d made reservations at a Holiday Inn Express but I really had reservations at a Quality Inn. Boy, was I surprised when I got dropped off.

The place was all by itself on Valencia, about three miles from the airport. The nearest restaurant was a Denny’s, two long blocks away. It was still close to 100°F out. I was sweaty and tired. I’d flown 5.2 hours that day and the last little bit had been a tiny bit stressful. It was 8:30 PM and I hadn’t eaten since about 10 AM. I decided to order out.

I got to my room. It wasn’t anything special, but it was clean and quiet. At $50/night, it was better than I expected.

Right about then, I remembered that I’d left my keys in the ignition for the helicopter. The good thing about leaving your keys in a helicopter is that a would-be thief has to know how to fly a helicopter to steal it. I wasn’t especially worried. After all, the cockpit was covered and the keys couldn’t been seen by anyone trying to peek in.

I tried to order Domino’s Pizza, got fed up with the brain-dead person trying to take my order, and hung up. Then I called Papa John’s and got the Domino’s guy’s slightly smarter brother. It took 15 minutes (no exaggeration) to order a pizza, bottle of soda, and “apple crisp.” I took a shower while I waited. I felt much better when I got out. I was talking to Mike when the pizza came. It was good — at $18, it better be — but I’m not convinced that it had anything to do with the “superior ingredients.”

I had a pleasant flight back to Wickenburg in the morning. I took off at 6:30 AM and had to speak to 4 different controllers to exit the Tucson airspace. It isn’t as if the place was hopping. It was dead. Departure control, Tower, Departure Control again (at a different frequency), and Tracon. They all had to talk to me. There’s a longer story here, but I’m too tired to relate it now.

Total billable time: 6.7 hours. But it was more than just flight time and money in the bank for me. It was a great experience dealing with the bueaucracy, planning a 4-segment flight in areas I’d never flown, flying into three new airports (two of which had controllers calling the shots), and learning about illegal aliens and the border.

Would I do it again? Just tell me when!

Birdwatching at Grand Canyon

The three condors of the day.

Actually, there were four. But since the subtitle matches the photo and it’s a great play on words, I couldn’t resist. But now I’m getting ahead of myself.

I had a Grand Canyon charter yesterday. It was a pleasant surprise. Wickenburg is pretty much dead this time of year, so getting a call from someone who wants to fly up to the big ditch for a day isn’t actually expect. Of course, this person doesn’t live in Wickenburg. He’s visiting someone here. This would be a day trip during the visit.

I had three passengers — two adults and an 8-year-old girl — and they were extremely pleasant people. (I can say that honestly about the vast majority of my charter passengers.) They wanted a helicopter tour over the canyon, but since I can’t do that, I fixed them up with Grand Canyon Helicopters, which flies new EC 130 helicopters. After that, the plan was to go into the park and spend a few hours on lunch, walking along the rim, etc. I wasn’t in a hurry to get back to Wickenburg. At the Grand Canyon’s south rim, it would be 85°F. In Wickenburg, it would be over 100°. My helicopter does not have air conditioning.

We left Wickenburg at 8 AM sharp and had an extremely cool and pleasant flight up to Grand Canyon Airport. We walked over to GC Helicopter’s terminal and my passengers checked in. I waited with them until they boarded their flight, then left to place a fuel order and do some scavenging for brochures I needed for the info packets on my Southwest Circle Helicopter Adventure package. My passengers had selected the long tour of the east side — which really is the best tour of the canyon and well worth the money (if you can afford it) — so I had plenty of time. Still, I was back at the terminal reading a paperback when their flight came in.

We took the Xantera shuttle into the park. It took almost as long to get through the entrance gates as it had taken to fly up there. (Okay, so I’m exaggerating. It took an hour and fifteen minutes to fly up there and forty-five minutes to get through though the gates.) I took them through Bright Angel Lodge to the Rim. I pointed out where they could find restaurants, bathrooms, shops, and rim trails. Then I left them on their own until 4:30.

I grabbed some lunch in the Arizona Room. It’s a crime that they put so much food on your plate there. No wonder Americans are obese. I ate about a quarter of what I was served and drank two full glasses of iced tea in an attempt to ward off dehydration without drinking local tap water. Outside, things were much more interesting than the food on my plate. The condors were flying.

The Grand Canyon has been home to a group of California Condors for some time now. Once on the verge of extinction, the condors were reintroduced to the canyon and are reproducing. They spend their summers at the South Rim and their winters at the Vermillon Cliffs area, about 80 or so miles to the northeast, not far from Page.

The birds are amazing, primarily because of their size: they can have a wingspan up to 9-1/2 feet.

To see a bird like this in soaring flight is something not to be missed. And I was sitting in a restaurant in front of too much food while the show was going on outside.

I left the restaurant.

Outside, the condors had stopped flying. I walked west along the rim, hoping to catch a glimpse of them in the canyon. What I found was even better: two of them were perched on the wall at the edge of the canyon at the Lookout Studio.

The lookout studio is a stone building at the edge of canyon. It’s a gift shop that sells a lot of rocks and t-shirts. You can walk through the building onto a back patio. From there, you can follow steps down to a series of lower patios. The birds were perched on the lowest patio’s surrounding wall with a crowd of people remarkably close to them.

Three California CondorsI took a photo from the rim, then moved in closer. Another photo. Closer. Another photo. Through the building to the edge of the first patio. There were three of them now. Another photo. Down the first flight of stairs. There were four of them now, although one of them was hiding behind a tree. Another photo. Closer. Another photo. I was 15 feet away now, on the outskirts of a crowd. I watched as a young girl who didn’t look much bigger than the birds, got within 5 feet of them to take a photo with her disposable camera. One of the birds was watching her closely, with beady little eyes. I think he was imagining how she would taste.

Now matter how beautiful condors look in flight, they’re downright ugly when on the ground. They look like vultures — very big, very ugly vultures. It was interesting to watch them watch the literally dozens of people around them. They were obviously as entertained by us as we were of them. The only difference is, they didn’t have cameras.

From the moment I first saw them, I wondered where the ranger was. With wildlife this close, there had to be a ranger nearby. Well, the ranger arrived late to the show. As he came down the steps, he said, “Sorry folks, but I’m going to have to chase these boys away. Can’t have them getting used to people.”

Somebody made a comment that I didn’t hear. The ranger replied, “You want them closer? Just lie down here and play dead.” That, of course, was a reference to a condor’s favorite food: dead animals.

California Condor in FlightThen he clapped his hands gently a few times while walking forward. The birds jumped off the cliff and into flight.

That’s when the real show began. The four birds flew together in a group, soaring through the sky, climbing and circling. The only camera I had with me was the little Canyon PowerShot I keep in my purse, but it was enough. I got a few photos of the birds in flight. This was far more interesting than watching birds and tourists stare at each other on the patio.

California Condor in FlightThroughout the rest of the day, I kept my eye out for the condors. I caught sight of them a few times when I returned from a short hike and settled down in the grass near Bright Angel Lodge. I was lying back on the grass, looking through the leaves of the tree over my head, when they flew by.

I was thrilled to overhear a young boy tell his mother that the difference between a vulture and a condor was that the condors had white on the bottom of their wings. I’m sure that’s oversimplified, but who cares? The kid was looking at wildlife, thinking about it, showing real interest and stating his observations. I overheard a lot of little things like that, things that showed that kids were getting something positive out of their trip to the canyon and view of nature.

My passengers found me a while later. It was just after 3 PM, but they were pooped and ready to go. We relaxed a while in the shade, then called for the shuttle, climbed aboard, and went back to the airport. A while later, we were on our way back to Wickenburg. I caught sight of the Grand Canyon Railroad’s steam engine and train on its way back to Williams and did a flyby for my passengers. Then, to make the return flight a little more interesting, I flew over Prescott and down the Hassayampa River. We were back in Wickenburg by 5 PM.

It had been a nice day out for all of us. But then again, how many days that include flying are not nice days?

helicopter, Grand Canyon, condor, California Condor