The drought of snow down lower this year, so far, kinda made it stand out more then usual. 11 miles later, over the summit and looking back at my neighborhood,
I found a couple nice bowls that would make perfect ski landing sites.
I made a few mock approaches and then got out of there and flew home, where I had to put the wheels down (lift the skis up actually) to land as I don't have enough snow!This peak is on a nearby Indian reservation, and getting caught screwing around there would mean losing the airplane,
and that is why it has always been off my radar as far as fooling around there. I sure was tempted yesterday, but I restrained myself. Not really on the land, on the snow, would be the justification? After landing back at my place, I started to pull the plane back into the hangar, and found I could barely move it. Thinking maybe I had somehow left the parking brake on, I checked and it was off. I pulled again, same deal, real hard to move.....finally after close examination, I noticed I had a flat tire (
in my defense, it was somewhat hidden by the ski). I have new more powerful brakes, and most have gotten on them pretty good, and have finally gotten all the air out of them (an awkward caliper placement due to the skis makes initial bleeding tough), and had failed to run a high enough air psi to keep the tube from rotating.Now the attention getter here is, the ski/wheel junction is somewhat dependant on having air in the tire, and while I'm not sure what would happen if landing on skis WITH a flat tire, I would rather not find out at 9K high somewhere I shouldn't be anyway (not that I even considered it, not even for a second). I also don't know if the tube rotated/lost air on landing or before taking off, meaning whether I had the problem while over the res or not, doesn't matter as I didn't land anyway. Doing the right thing pays off
