Sun Oct 14, 2018 8:23 pm
#1644686
After a pleasant night’s sleep, it was time for the final few legs. We were well back in to the real world by now. The first flight took us down to just north of Winnipeg to visit my Belgian friend, who some years ago had decided to move to Canada to work as a pilot and bought a quarter section of land in central Manitoba. He’d recently finished putting in his own grass strip, so clearly I had to go and check it out.
Packing up the final camp site:
Morning mist on climb out:
There were some forest fires as we continued south. We double checked again with flight service to make sure no TFRs had popped up.
Visibility was somewhat affected.
Approaching Tribble Ranch:
Arrival at Tribble Ranch:
We spent a relaxing weekend at Joachim’s, just what we needed after a couple of weeks roaming around the arctic.
Time for an oil change in the Tribble Ranch hangar, built by Joachim!
Hanging out on the quarter-section:
Inside a local establishment:
The penultimate flight was the 1+ hour to the Piney Pinecreek border crossing; this runway is half in the US, half in Canada, and the same applies to the ramp; you can clear customs in either direction. This had the pleasing result of making my friend’s new strip an international airport.
From here it was an 800+nm, non-stop leg back to base, just in time for a welcome-home steak dinner at the airport! A good tailwind had us landing after just 6 hours, with 35 gallons left on board.
Departing Tribble Ranch:
Headed for Pittsburgh:
Finally back at base!
Overall, the trip took about 6 weeks, and we covered about 17,000 miles in 152 hours of flying. There are many interesting places up there left to explore and I am thinking of heading back up in summer 2020, hopefully with a few aircraft. If anyone is interested in tagging along, let me know…
The end.
Packing up the final camp site:
Morning mist on climb out:
There were some forest fires as we continued south. We double checked again with flight service to make sure no TFRs had popped up.
Visibility was somewhat affected.
Approaching Tribble Ranch:
Arrival at Tribble Ranch:
We spent a relaxing weekend at Joachim’s, just what we needed after a couple of weeks roaming around the arctic.
Time for an oil change in the Tribble Ranch hangar, built by Joachim!
Hanging out on the quarter-section:
Inside a local establishment:
The penultimate flight was the 1+ hour to the Piney Pinecreek border crossing; this runway is half in the US, half in Canada, and the same applies to the ramp; you can clear customs in either direction. This had the pleasing result of making my friend’s new strip an international airport.
From here it was an 800+nm, non-stop leg back to base, just in time for a welcome-home steak dinner at the airport! A good tailwind had us landing after just 6 hours, with 35 gallons left on board.
Departing Tribble Ranch:
Headed for Pittsburgh:
Finally back at base!
Overall, the trip took about 6 weeks, and we covered about 17,000 miles in 152 hours of flying. There are many interesting places up there left to explore and I am thinking of heading back up in summer 2020, hopefully with a few aircraft. If anyone is interested in tagging along, let me know…
The end.
Cessnas have feelings too!