M6RV6 wrote:I've got to add!!
If the weather was so bad at the time the plane went down??
What the hell was this Gaggle of planes doing headed for AK?
And Why did the Buddy have to land to phone the police?
Shit did he not have a radio and know how to dial it to 121.5
or even 122.00
I am flabbergasted!
I just can't fathom what I have read!!
I think I'll just go!
Sorry for the rant!!!
I think the point for us on this board is that none of us has all the facts, or the answers to your questions.
I do a lot of flying in the empty areas of New Mexico (which is most of the state), and there are lots of places where you can't raise ATC on the radio here, or show up on ATC radar ... and forget cell phone calls in the mountains ... I expect the same is true in many parts of backcountry Montana too.
Why were they flying in conditions of low ceilings? Maybe some or all of the pilots were flying VFR over the top, or IFR, when the Seneca pilot experienced trouble of some kind (mechanical? disorientation? medical emergency? who knows exactly?) and was forced to descend below the cloud layer into the trees and terrain. Very fortunately, none of the other pilots in his group was forced to do the same.
Again, as reported by the local Sheriff, the pilot who was paired up with the downed aircraft pilot apparently did the right thing and landed immediately to inform the local authorities, and then they took over from there. To criticize the other pilots under the circumstances is unfair and unfortunate, because we don't know all the facts. Even if you would have done something different under the same exact circumstances, there is only one pilot-in-command of each aircraft, and he or she has to do what he or she believes is appropriate. No other person's judgment matters.