Monday, 16 April 2018

Santa Fe to Grand Canyon via Monument valley - words can say no more!!!



Santa Fe to Grand Canyon via Monument valley - words can say no more!!!

It's 2 o'clock at night and I can't sleep. This happens nearly every night. So be it.

 I didn't get round to upload all the hundreds of incredible photos and videos from our stunning flight as internet was really slow. So hopefully it's better now. (it is!!)
 changing desert landscape


I won't write much, as the photos speak for themselves! It was breathtaking and certainly a highlight of the entire trip!
one of the peaks of Monument valley as seen from the Beech
There cannot be a better way to appreciate the majesty and vastness of this ancient and world-famous landscape than from the air!


Flippie does a fantastic job of navigating us safely over the peaks and 13,000ft high mountains of monument valley and then over the rather turbulent Grand Canyon.

The tiny looking tributary river to the Colorado
Phil also has his fair share of being 'hands on' including a nice turn over the valley.
Flippie and Phil busy in the cockpit



We are super lucky with the weather and sunshine over Monument valley but approaching high cloud over Grand Canyon takes some of the colors away. 
visitor center at Monument valley
The river Colorado and it's tribute look like tiny streams against the back drop of these massive rocks. 
the Colorado river from the Beech
close up shot of the Colorado river


It's one of our planets oldest landscapes and some layers date back 1 billion and 840 thousand years!





Winds pick up again to 20kt or more for our landing at the busy Grand Canyon airport.


Helicopters and small aeroplanes are whizzing in and out here to take masses of tourists for sightseeing flights. Mostly Asians from Korea, China and Japan.

We briefly take refuge waiting for refueling in a surprisingly basic FBO. Then it's a 5 minutes drive to the 'Grand Hotel' and time for a well deserved beer for the boys to celebrate this amazing flight ....

.....whilst I quickly catch a bus to get to the canyon and take some more photos!  The views are awesome and the sun is back out!The return trip though is a nightmare as all buses are full...


Winds are forecast to be very strong again tomorrow and it's uncertain whether we can reach our final destination of Carson city.

Keep fingers crossed!



There are dozens more videos on my main camera, these are only from the ipad and it will takes days to sort through the footage but I hope you enjoyed those few!




Saturday, 14 April 2018

To New Mexico and hippie Santa Fe!




To New Mexico and Santa Fe!!

over Texas in the Beech
A much better day than yesterday, that’s for sure!
Sweet Vicky and her mum pick us up in the pitch dark at 6.30 and take us to our aeroplane.

the illuminated wind sock at Menard airstrip
We are amazed the strip is even lit and the windsock as well! Whilst the wind is slightly better than yesterday it’s still blowing and it’s also freezing cold!!


Flippie gets the plane ready and by 7.10am we are up in the air! Vicky and her mum wave us good-bye and Vicky takes this great video of our take off. Thank you both so much for your kindness!

Our first sector lasts only 25mins as we dip into San Angelo to refuel. We warm ourselves with some coffee and cookies (no breakfast again) and get going after only a short stop.
at San Angelo finally!
The flight of nearly 3 hours now takes us over the vast empty countryside of north-western Texas with its extensive farm land and ‘nodding donkey’ oil pumps.

The patterns of the round shaped fields with its irrigation machinery and the colours of the soil was captivating and I take plenty of shots.




It is freezing cold in the cabin and I wrap myself into everything I can find, blankets, search for my long trousers and pullies and socks!

Until Phil finally manages to put on the heating…pew, that feels better.

We are cruising between 8,500 and 10,000ft and we noticed that the outside air temperature was -10 degrees! What a contrast to the places we had only been a few days before!
Luckily the flight is much more stable and calm at this level and I manage to catch up on my diary and enjoy just watching the scenery whilst Phil and Flippie discuss farming and air traffic issues in the front.

Then the land suddenly changes. We are entering the state of New Mexico. High snow-capped mountains appear on the horizon and the land gradually rises to 7000ft amsl.
first sight of the mountains and canyons of New Mexico
It’s time to prepare for a landing at Santa Fe – our destination for today. Flippie makes a perfect approach –filmed on gopro but too long to upload here – and we are down!
the snow mountains of Santa Fe!
One look at the refueling boys tells me, that this place will also be freezing cold and I put on my down jacket when I open the door. Bright sunshine and gin clear skies though promise a lovely day.
welcome by the cosy Jet Center FBO at Santa Fe
As there is one hour time change it’s now only 11 am! Brilliant. A friendly FBO lounge welcomes us with hot coffee whilst three Hueys do a low level fly past.


By lunch time we arrive at the noble looking Inn of the Governors in the old city of Santa Fe. Despite a very late official check in time of 4pm we are kindly offered our rooms and dump our luggage.
plenty of pueblo and adobe style hotels here 
Phil and I busy ourselves with a tour of the town where we remember a few places from our honeymoon drive through the States – 14 years ago. It's spring time and the flowers and blossoms are wonderful to see!


It’s still a very quirky, hippie place full of arts and crafts shops and great pubs and restaurants.


Flippie stays in the hotel and prepares for the next sector to the Grand Canyon and Monument valley and catches up with phone calls and other business.
beautiful art deco and some old wood carving


We regroup in the early evening for dinner and discussions. The first plan for now is to rest and sleep and NOT to get up too early….


Friday, 13 April 2018


Stuck in Texas!!!
kids welcoming us in Brownsville airport
One of the worst days of the entire trip including the Trans-Atlantic crossing for me!

I just sent the boys off to eat dinner whilst I will try and rack the last remains of my dead brain and body together to type a few lines before I will definitely collapse.
just before take off from Brownsville
It’s Friday the 13th and we are in the absolute middle of nowhere in Texas – stuck – due to wind!!!

Hard to believe that we managed to brave the cold freezing weather and storms of Canada and the east coast of New York, flew over massive oceans, crossed high mountain ridges of 10,000ft, mastered towering CBs, landed in tight airstrips and unknown territory but now we are finally defeated by strong winds gusting up to 35kt and with severe cross winds on the runways!
the airstrip of Brownsville on take off
It’s actually a pretty similar story to what happened on last year’s Trans-Atlantic where we also managed to get through all the challenging places from Iceland to Greenland to northern Canada only to finally get stuck in rain and low could in Montreal!




But let’s start from the beginning…

We wanted to give ourselves finally a bit more of a leisurely start but it still meant an 8 o’clock breakfast at the Texas Inn, then a hunt for batteries and finally the drive back to the aeroplane.

The winds are howling. Worse even than yesterday. Flippie checks the aeroplane and the worrying defect but declares it safe to fly. In the meantime a school group with dozens of young six year olds turns up.
enthusiastic local school kids infront of Betty the Beech
Southmost Aviation, the local FBO, has invited them to climb into some aeroplanes and learn about aviation. What a lovely idea! So why not see our old lady? I bring the kids around to Betty and we have some fun together.
a new pilot in the future?
All those could be future pilots!

Finally time for take off heading for San Angelo. The first two hours are pretty uneventful and smooth flying at 7,500ft – not no strong tail wind as expected. But then things suddenly get bad – and worse…
howling winds from the wrong direction!!!
As Flippie calls ATC in San Angelo he is told that they also have very strong winds and that the one useful runway that would be good on this wind direction is closed.

I am sitting in the back sadly having no chance to listen to what’s going on and have to make my own guesses. I noticed we were dipping down to ca 4000ft and that we only had 10mins to run. ‘Great’ I thought and I can cope with 10mins of turbulence if it then means the end of the flight.
The strip at Menard with a 20kt cross wind
What I didn’t know was, that the team upfront was by then told not to land at San Angelo but to turn around and try another strip.

What followed was the worst 45mins of the entire trip since we left Bristol. Bumping up and down, sideways, here and there… I hate aeroplanes when they do that!!! I am actually not at all even keen to be in them but the trip has been so fascinating and incredible that I somehow cope with everything.
fencing in Texas
But this was way beyond my liking. In the meantime Flippie and Phil battled with another problem as they approached the suggested airstrip: the wind was as strong as in the other place and also with a severe crosswind of around 20kt!!

welcome to the country of cowboys and ranchers!
A very sharp turn into finals turns my guts upside down but brings us finally to land on a most isolated airstrip in the middle of nowhere. We are in Menard Texas. I open the door and run down the length of the runway to relieve my stress.
Ed and Phil chatting about our trip
Car mechanic Ed very kindly greets us. There is nothing here. No Avgas, no facilities, just a car repair shop. The women’s toilet greets me with spider! 


Certainly the most extraordinary airfield I have ever seen!


Flippie quite rightly decides to give it a wait. Winds might just drop and maybe we can fly back to San Angelo later today and at least get the refueling done. The bumpiness actually was due to rising ground from nearly sea level at Brownsville to 4000ft here in central Texas. So whilst the cloud base in theory remained the same we were squeezed lower down and got stronger winds.
Jacudy and Jakayly
Whilst we debate what best to do, a lovely couple - Jacudy and Jakayly Sealy - turn up and we get chatting. They are local Ranchers and he is also a pilot and they spotted our aeroplane sitting there. It was great to meet you guys!    
           
Ed then kindly drives us 7minutes into the town of Menard where we find refuge from the baking heat of 35degrees and the howling winds in the ‘Lazy Ladle’ CafĂ©. Good internet and a coffee always help. After an hour Ed brings us back to the strip.

But the winds are still far too fierce to go anywhere and we decide to call it a day.  Here luck strikes in the form of lovely Vicky and her 85 year old mum LaVerne.  Vicky is also a pilot flying a Bonanza (also a type of Beech!) and she has just come down from Oklahoma visiting her mum when she spotted our aeroplane!
LaVerne and Betty - only 20 years of age difference!
Both of them are so sweet and kindly drive us to the recommended Hilltop Motel. Vicky even offers to pick us up at 6.30 in the morning to take us back to the plane. What great Texan hospitality!
from left: Phil, LaVerne, Vicky and Flippie
Missing my running and swimming so much and still feeling terrible, I decide to run down and explore the town.


Those 45mins of turbulence knackered me more than a 3 days trek up Kilimanjaro could.

But what a day: from young kids aged 5 in the aeroplane to an 85 year old!

This trip is certainly to a great extend made by all you great people that we bump into and meet along the way! Thank you all soo much!




And just a reminder: if you want to get in touch with us please find Flippie here on his website: http://www.springbokclassicair.co.za

And Phil and myself on: www.gonewiththewind.uk.com