denalipilot wrote: tele skis
These are the tailwheel aircraft of the ski world.
Welcome to the board.
denalipilot wrote: tele skis

1SeventyZ wrote:denalipilot wrote: tele skis
These are the tailwheel aircraft of the ski world.
Welcome to the board.

Welcome to the board, Simon, try not to make everyone else too jealous of us up heredenalipilot wrote:1SeventyZ wrote:denalipilot wrote: tele skis
These are the tailwheel aircraft of the ski world.
Welcome to the board.
Great board- Thanks for maintaining it!
Wheel-replacement skis really are sorta free-heel, if you think about it... (I just hope I never drop a knee!)

denalipilot wrote:Yay TwinPOS for bringing up this multisport holy grail!
Any day you're flying your skiplane, wearing your avalanche beacon, pretty much has to be a great day, in my experience. Sounds like you're in Colorado, which I don't know much about (sorry), but I can emphatically say that it's worth chasing the dream.
I have always flown into lakes beneath terrain, and skinned for my turns. Sometimes I have made multiple trips to bring in friends, and sometimes rendezvoused with friends on snowmachines. (The second option is a great way to get a departure runway packed.
Have a great winter!
mtv wrote:Okay, POS,
And, the Idaho backcountry is called civilization, in my book. Criminy, I'd never think of landing on AIRPORTS occupied by five airplanes, let alone fifty, as happens at some of the Idaho "backcountry" airstrips, and have the gall to call it "backcountry aviation".
If you REALLY want to get away from the crowds, try OFF AIRPORT flying, not "backcountry" flying, whatever that is--4000 foot long airstrips, complete with sprinkler systems.
Oh, but that's not approved in most of the lower 48 either. Duh.
MTV
sector15 wrote:I land off airport all the time in in California, have over 20 different off airport locations I've landed in Nevada and Arizona... So it is possible in the lower 48 to do off airport landings legally... Hell I know if five off airport locations close to Vegas... As for the rest of the country, that might be a different story, but here in the southwest, it isn't a problem...mtv wrote:Okay, POS,
And, the Idaho backcountry is called civilization, in my book. Criminy, I'd never think of landing on AIRPORTS occupied by five airplanes, let alone fifty, as happens at some of the Idaho "backcountry" airstrips, and have the gall to call it "backcountry aviation".
If you REALLY want to get away from the crowds, try OFF AIRPORT flying, not "backcountry" flying, whatever that is--4000 foot long airstrips, complete with sprinkler systems.
Oh, but that's not approved in most of the lower 48 either. Duh.
MTV
once&futr_alaskaflyer wrote:Not to be argumentative (no, really) but if you are talking about "locations" then I wonder if they are really "off-airport." Strips don't count.
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