Butch and I did a Saturday seminar and had decent weather to fly with a number of northern Alberta pilots before and after. A1Skinner was able to make the seminar but late harvest prevented the Flying.
I taught as much centerline between legs and defaulting rudder only for longitudinal alignment as apparent brisk walk rate of closure approach, but most use Hotrod 180's, and Butch's steep and slow approach here anyway.
The energy management turn was the most popular technique with the several pilots I flew with.
My greatest take home from the entire week was Butch's slow flight technique to investigate the air in continuous deep glaciation flat floor canyons (actually just steep sided mountains) intersected with joining canyons. Air, like water finds the least resistant path and doesn't necessarily all continue over the downwind ridge. Compared with these mountains, ours are a step, gradual incline, alluvial piece of cake.
The scariest thing for ol contact was that he almost never knew which way was down hill. The glaciated bottom of these mountains is either lake or S turns on a pool table. You can really get sucked in by continuous lower than our altitude requirement and a maze of cross canyons with everything running every direction.
I strongly recommend Butch's several day mountain flying clinic in Vancouver for flight in the BC mountains.
